Chick Webb - Golden Selection (Remastered) (2021)
Artist: Chick Webb
Title: Golden Selection (Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Master Tape Records
Genre: Jazz, Swing
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:14:09
Total Size: 567 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Golden Selection (Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Master Tape Records
Genre: Jazz, Swing
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:14:09
Total Size: 567 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Disc 1
01. When I Get Low I Get High (Remastered)
02. I Can'T Dance (I Got Ants in My Pants) (Remastered)
03. Midnight in a Madhouse (Remastered)
04. If Dreams Come True (Remastered)
05. Harlem Congo (Remastered)
06. Go Harlem (Remastered)
07. Blue Lou (Remastered)
08. Who Ya Hunchin'? (Remastered)
09. Cryin' Mood (Remastered)
10. A-Tisket, a Tasket (Remastered)
11. Rock It for Me (Remastered)
12. Rusty Hinge (Remastered)
13. Little White Lies (Remastered)
14. My Heart Belongs to Daddy (Remastered)
15. Sugar Pie (Remastered)
16. That Was My Heart (Remastered)
17. Blues in My Heart (Remastered)
18. Just a Simple Melody (Remastered)
19. That Naughty Waltz (Remastered)
20. That Rhythm Man (Remastered)
21. Undecided (Remastered)
22. Squeeze Me (Remastered)
23. Holiday in Harlem (Remastered)
Disc 2
01. Spinnin' the Webb (Remastered)
02. I'm up a Tree (Remastered)
03. I'm Just a Jitterbug (Remastered)
04. Don't Be That Way (Remastered)
05. In the Groove at the Grove (Remastered)
06. Clap Hands! Here Comes Charlie (Remastered)
07. You'll Have to Swing It (Remastered)
08. Rhythm and Romance (Remastered)
09. It's Slumbertime Along the Swanee (Remastered)
10. Sing Me a Swing Song (Remastered)
11. Liza (Remastered)
12. Go Harlem 2 (Remastered)
13. I Want to Be Happy (Remastered)
14. I'll Chase the Blues Away (Remastered)
15. Everybody Step (Remastered)
16. Love and Kisses (Remastered)
17. I Found My Yellow Basket (Remastered)
18. Pack up Your Sins and Go to the Devil (Remastered)
19. I Got a Guy (Remastered)
20. Have Mercy (Remastered)
21. Mcpherson Is Rehearsin' (Remastered)
22. One Side of Me (Remastered)
23. It's All over Because We're Through (Remastered)
Chick Webb represented the triumph of the human spirit in jazz and life. Hunchbacked, small in stature, almost a dwarf with a large face and broad shoulders, Webb fought off congenital tuberculosis of the spine in order to become one of the most competitive drummers and bandleaders of the big band era. Perched high upon a platform, he used custom-made pedals, goose-neck cymbal holders, a 28-inch bass drum and a wide variety of other percussion instruments to create thundering solos of a complexity and energy that paved the way for Buddy Rich (who studied Webb intensely) and Louie Bellson. Alas, Webb did not get a fair shake on records; Decca's primitive recording techniques could not adequately capture his spectacular technique and wide dynamic range. He could not read music, but that didn't stop him either, for he memorized each arrangement flawlessly. Although his band did not become as influential and revered in the long run as some of its contemporaries, it nevertheless was feared in its time for its battles of the bands in Harlem's Savoy Ballroom; a famous encounter with the high-flying Benny Goodman outfit at its peak (with Gene Krupa in the drummer's chair) left the latter band drained and defeated.
William Henry Webb bought his first set of drums with his earnings as a newsboy, and he began playing in bands on pleasure boats. After moving to New York in 1925, he led bands in various clubs before settling in for long regular runs at the Savoy beginning in 1931. Although Benny Carter and Johnny Hodges played with the band early on, the Webb band was oddly short on major soloists during its heyday from the mid-'30s onward; the young alto sax player Louis Jordan made the biggest impression after leaving the band. But the band made up for it with a crisp ensemble sound, Webb's disciplined, ferociously driving drum pyrotechnics, trumpeter Taft Jordan's impressions of Louis Armstrong, and most of all, a series of strong compositions and charts by Edgar Sampson ("Blue Lou" and "Stomping at the Savoy" among them). In 1935, Webb hired the teenaged Ella Fitzgerald after she won a talent contest at the Apollo Theater, became her legal guardian, and rebuilt his show around the singer, who provided him with his biggest hit record, "A Tisket-A-Tasket," in 1938. The band's fame continued to grow, fueled by its reputation as a giant-killer in the Savoy battles and a continuous string of Decca 78s that featured such irresistible numbers as "T'aint What You Do (It's the Way That You Do It)" and the B-side of "Tasket," "Liza." But Webb's precarious health began to give way, and after a major operation in Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, he died (his last words reportedly were, "I'm sorry, I've got to go."). After Webb's death, Fitzgerald fronted the band until it finally broke up in 1942. ~ Richard S. Ginell
William Henry Webb bought his first set of drums with his earnings as a newsboy, and he began playing in bands on pleasure boats. After moving to New York in 1925, he led bands in various clubs before settling in for long regular runs at the Savoy beginning in 1931. Although Benny Carter and Johnny Hodges played with the band early on, the Webb band was oddly short on major soloists during its heyday from the mid-'30s onward; the young alto sax player Louis Jordan made the biggest impression after leaving the band. But the band made up for it with a crisp ensemble sound, Webb's disciplined, ferociously driving drum pyrotechnics, trumpeter Taft Jordan's impressions of Louis Armstrong, and most of all, a series of strong compositions and charts by Edgar Sampson ("Blue Lou" and "Stomping at the Savoy" among them). In 1935, Webb hired the teenaged Ella Fitzgerald after she won a talent contest at the Apollo Theater, became her legal guardian, and rebuilt his show around the singer, who provided him with his biggest hit record, "A Tisket-A-Tasket," in 1938. The band's fame continued to grow, fueled by its reputation as a giant-killer in the Savoy battles and a continuous string of Decca 78s that featured such irresistible numbers as "T'aint What You Do (It's the Way That You Do It)" and the B-side of "Tasket," "Liza." But Webb's precarious health began to give way, and after a major operation in Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, he died (his last words reportedly were, "I'm sorry, I've got to go."). After Webb's death, Fitzgerald fronted the band until it finally broke up in 1942. ~ Richard S. Ginell