Louis Armstrong, Bing Crosby - Bing and Satchmo (Bonus Track Version) (1960/2019)
Artist: Louis Armstrong, Bing Crosby
Title: Bing and Satchmo (Bonus Track Version)
Year Of Release: 1960/2019
Label: New Jazz Society
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:14:04
Total Size: 170 mb | 400 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Bing and Satchmo (Bonus Track Version)
Year Of Release: 1960/2019
Label: New Jazz Society
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:14:04
Total Size: 170 mb | 400 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Louis Armstrong - Muskrat Ramble
02. Louis Armstrong - Sugar
03. Louis Armstrong - The Preacher
04. Louis Armstrong - Dardanella
05. Louis Armstrong - Let's Sing Like a Dixieland Band
06. Louis Armstrong - Way Down Yonder in New Orleans
07. Louis Armstrong - Brother Bill
08. Louis Armstrong - Little Ol' Tune
09. Louis Armstrong - At the Jazz Band Ball
10. Louis Armstrong - Rocky Mountain Moon
11. Louis Armstrong - Lazy River
12. Louis Armstrong - Bye Bye Blues
13. Louis Armstrong - Little One (Bonus Track)
14. Louis Armstrong - I Love You, Samantha (Bonus Track)
15. Louis Armstrong - Now You Has Jazz (Bonus Track)
16. Louis Armstrong - Gone Fishin' (Studio Version, Bonus Track)
17. Louis Armstrong - Blueberry Hill (Bonus Track)
18. Louis Armstrong - Lazy Bones (Bonus Track)
19. Louis Armstrong - A Kiss to Build a Dream On (Bonus Track)
20. Louis Armstrong - Gone Fishin' (Live Version, Bonus Track)
21. Louis Armstrong - Memphis Blues (Bonus Track)
22. Louis Armstrong - Pennies from Heaven (Bonus Track)
23. Louis Armstrong - Happy Birthday, Bing! (Bonus Track)
Could anything but warmth and playfulness result when the two most seminal, expressive voices of the 20th century found the room to stretch out on a full LP together? Previously responsible for one of pop history's finest duets ("Gone Fishin'"), Bing Crosby and Louis Armstrong teamed up in 1960 to record an LP for MGM. As if Brother Satch and Brother Cros weren't enough in the way of firepower, Johnny Mercer himself signed on (contributing two new songs plus a bounty of added lyrics), while for the arranging and conducting chairs, the equally explosive Billy May was retained. From the opener, there are plenty of nods to a place both of them held dear: New Orleans. There's not only "Muskrat Ramble" and "Way Down Yonder in New Orleans" and "At the Jazz Band Ball," there was also a new song ripe for the scatting, "Let's Sing Like a Dixieland Band," written by a young Alan Bergman expressly for the LP. New Orleans jazz was not only Armstrong's spiritual home, but it was also the venue for both singers' easiest and most playful lyricizing, replete with a raft of off-the-cuff lines (or seemingly off-the-cuff lines) and the easy give-and-take that came naturally to them, nearly (but never) stepping over each other's lines. Granted, Bing & Satchmo isn't quite as laid-back a date as it should have been; there's a peppy mixed vocal chorus to greet the train in the opening "Muskrat Ramble," and it reappears throughout the LP. But in the hands of May, Mercer, Crosby, and Armstrong, there is a parade of brilliant moments.