Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:32
Size: 135,3 MB
Art: Front
(3:03) 1. Cheroke
(2:42) 2. Two O'clock Jump
(3:05) 3. Cuttin Out
(2:47) 4. Earl Blows A Fuse
(2:27) 5. Disc Jockey Nightmare
(6:11) 6. That A Groovy Thing Pts 1&2
(3:02) 7. Don't You Do It
(2:42) 8. Moonglow
(2:42) 9. Seven Steps
(3:01) 10. Steam Whistle Jump
(2:42) 11. Flamingo
(2:41) 12. Filibuster
(2:53) 13. Who Snuck The Wine In The Gravy
(2:34) 14. Mambostic
(2:32) 15. 8:45 Stomp
(3:12) 16. Sleep
(2:24) 17. Harlem Nocturne
(2:36) 18. Night Train
(2:42) 19. Tuxedo Junction
(2:25) 20. Special Delivery Stomp
Blows A Fuse
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:32
Size: 135,3 MB
Art: Front
(3:03) 1. Cheroke
(2:42) 2. Two O'clock Jump
(3:05) 3. Cuttin Out
(2:47) 4. Earl Blows A Fuse
(2:27) 5. Disc Jockey Nightmare
(6:11) 6. That A Groovy Thing Pts 1&2
(3:02) 7. Don't You Do It
(2:42) 8. Moonglow
(2:42) 9. Seven Steps
(3:01) 10. Steam Whistle Jump
(2:42) 11. Flamingo
(2:41) 12. Filibuster
(2:53) 13. Who Snuck The Wine In The Gravy
(2:34) 14. Mambostic
(2:32) 15. 8:45 Stomp
(3:12) 16. Sleep
(2:24) 17. Harlem Nocturne
(2:36) 18. Night Train
(2:42) 19. Tuxedo Junction
(2:25) 20. Special Delivery Stomp
Ah, Earl Bostic! The maestro of the alto sax whose rasping big-toned sax stylings shifted hundreds of thousands of singles, EPs and LPs throughout the 1950s. And not only in the US of A, as my uncle used to reminisce about dancing to a café juke box stacked with Bostic platters in the south side of Glasgow back in the ‘50s. The first time I heard the man himself was towards the end of the 1970s on his version of “Harlem Nocturne” which turned up on one of the Old King Gold LPs. It’s a masterpiece of moody sleaze which immediately transported me (in mind, if not in body) to an exotic strip club. If you’re looking for an instrumental record to set a mood or get the dancers a-swingin’ and a-swayin’ then you can’t go wrong with Bostic.
Blows A Fuse
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