Showing posts with label Herb Hall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Herb Hall. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Herb Hall - Old Tyme Modern

Styles: Clarinet Jazz
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:46
Size: 91,7 MB
Art: Front

(3:44)  1. Old Fashioned Love
(4:50)  2. All Of Me
(3:21)  3. Buddy Bolden's Blues
(4:54)  4. Crying My Hear Out For You
(4:12)  5. Swinging Down Shaw's Hall
(3:57)  6. Beale Street Blues
(2:34)  7. How Come You Do Me Like You Do
(3:36)  8. Willow Weep For Me
(4:53)  9. Do You Know What It Means To Miss New Orleans
(3:41) 10. Sweet Georgia Brown

A member of a distinguished New Orleans musical family, Herb Hall was the youngest of 5 brothers. His brother Edmund became a world-renowned clarinetist. After time in San Antonio and Philadelphia, Hall moved to New York and joined the Eddie Condon band in 1957. He toured France and North America with Sammy price and generated much excitement on Louisiana Lament, a studio session for Vogue. In '67 Hall shared the stage in Toronto with Don Ewell and a year later with The Jazz Giants (issued as Wild Bill Davison, the Jazz Giants, Sackville 3002). This all-star band returned to Toronto several times and it was on one of these tours that Herb recorded this quartet date on January 10, 1969. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Old-Tyme-Modern-Herb-Hall/dp/B000001741

Personnel: Herb Hall - Clarinet;  Claude Hopkins - Piano;  Arvell Shaw - Bass;  Buzzy Drootin - Drums

Old Tyme Modern

Saturday, May 9, 2015

Albert Nicholas & Herb Hall - Clarinet Duets With The John Defferary Jazztet & The Trevor Richards New Orleans Trio

Size: 140,2 MB
Time: 59:55
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz
Art: Front

01. Bugle Call Rag (2:47)
02. Moonglow (6:15)
03. Jazz Me Blues (3:39)
04. Winin' Boy Blues (4:48)
05. Dear Old Southland (3:15)
06. Stack O' Lee Blues (4:15)
07. Love Me Or Leave Me (5:24)
08. Wadsworth Mill Grind (4:26)
09. Mood Indigo (4:35)
10. Blue Skies (4:42)
11. What Is This Thing Called Love (3:31)
12. Creole Love Call (4:11)
13. Oh Baby (5:01)
14. Soho Jump (2:59)

Tracks 1 to 9: Albert Nicholas & The John Defferary Jazztet
ALBERT NICHOLAS, clarinet
JOHN DEFFERARY, clarinet
PAT HAWES, piano
PAUL SEALEY, guitar
BILL COLE, bass
TREVOR RICHARDS, drums
Recorded 1969

Tracks 10 to 14: Herb Hall & The Trevor Richards New Orleans Trio
HERB HALL, clarinet
JOHN DEFFERARY, clarinet
BOB BAERTON, piano
ALYN SHIPTON, bass
TREVOR RICHA, drums
Recorded 1981

Albert Nicholas (May 27, 1900, New Orleans, Louisiana – September 3, 1973, Basel, Switzerland) was an American jazz reed player.

Nicholas's primary instrument was the clarinet, which he studied with Lorenzo Tio in his hometown of New Orleans. Late in the 1910s he played with Buddy Petit, King Oliver, and Manuel Perez. He spent three years in the Merchant Marines and then joined up again with Oliver in Chicago from 1925 to 1927. After time in East Asia and Egypt, he returned to New York City in 1928 and played with Luis Russell until 1933, playing there with Red Allen, Charlie Holmes, and J. C. Higginbotham. Later he played with Chick Webb, Louis Armstrong (with Russell) and Jelly Roll Morton (recorded 1929, 1939).

The Dixieland jazz revival of the late 1940s reinvigorated his career; he played with Art Hodes, Bunk Johnson, and Kid Ory, and had a regular gig with Ralph Sutton in 1948. In 1953 he moved to France; except for recording sessions in the U.S. in 1959-60, he remained there for the rest of his life.

Nicholas's uncle was Wooden Joe Nicholas.
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Herbert "Herb" Hall (March 28, 1907 – March 5, 1996) was an American jazz clarinetist and alto saxophonist.

Herb was the brother of Edmond Hall and the son of clarinetist Edward Hall. He began on banjo with the Niles Jazz Band (1923–25), then settled on reeds. In 1926 he played with Kid Augustin Victor in Baton Rouge, and moved to New Orleans the following year. He played briefly with Sidney Desvigne, then played for many years with Don Albert (1929–40), moving to San Antonio with him and remaining there until 1945.

After this he moved to Philadelphia, where he played with Herman Autrey; a few years later he was in New York, working with Doc Cheatham (1955) and did a European tour with Sammy Price (1955–56). He played often in the New York clubs of Jimmy Ryan and Eddie Condon in the late 1950s and 1960s. In 1968-69 he toured with Wild Bill Davison's Jazz Giants, and then a stint with an off-shoot band of The Jazz Giants, called "Buzzy's Jazz Family" which included Herman Autrey, Benny Morton, Sonny Drootin, Eddie Gibbs and leader Buzzy Drootin on drums. He did work with Don Ewell in the 1970s. He also appeared in Bob Greene's Jelly Roll Morton revue show that decade.

Clarinet Duets