Scat Man Crothers - The Scat Man Crothers R&B Legacy 1944-1956 (2021)
Artist: Scat Man Crothers
Title: The Scat Man Crothers R&B Legacy 1944-1956
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Fresh Sound Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:21:52
Total Size: 685 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Scat Man Crothers R&B Legacy 1944-1956
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Fresh Sound Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:21:52
Total Size: 685 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Fine
02. Shoo Shoo Baby
03. One O'clock Jump
04. Riff's Blues
05. The Thing
06. Mabel The Lush
07. Dead Man's Blues
08. Have You Got The Gumption (To Make The Assumption)
09. Just Lookin'
10. Blue-Eyed Sally
11. I'm The Only Man (The Buscuit Song)
12. Do Something
13. I'd Rather Be A Hummingbird
14. Chattanoogie Shoe-Shine Boy
15. Wondering
16. Exactly Like You
17. It's You
18. Keep It Hot
19. Unemployment Blues
20. Shuffleboard Blues
21. I'd Rather Be A Rooster (With A Flock Of Chicks)
22. Television Blues
23. Beale Street On A Saturday Night
24. King Berman's Stomp
25. A-Gruntin' And A-Groanin' (The Wrestler's Song)
26. Free Samples
27. Just Like Two Drops Of Water
28. Elaine
29. Man, Have I Got Troubles
30. It's A Sin To Tell A Lie
31. Hot Rod Harry (The Coolest Cat In Town)
32. Hot Rod Cowboy
33. Saturday Night Drag Race (Part 1)
34. Saturday Night Drag Race (Part 2)
35. Papa (I Don't Treat That Little Girl Mean)
36. I Like Your Mother Better
37. Easy Money
38. Easy Money (Alt. Take)
39. Waiting For My Baby
40. Beale Street On Saturday Night
41. Walkin' My Baby Back Home
42. Honeysuckle Rose
43. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
44. A Smile Will Go A Long Way
45. Keep That Coffee Hot
46. Dearest One
47. Pork 'N' Beans
48. When Oh When
49. Do You Love Me?
50. Sweet Lips (Jazz Lips)
51. Waitin' For My Baby (Savoy Blues)
52. The Death Of Emmett Till (Part 1)
53. The Death Of Emmett Till (Part 2)
Scat Man Crothers was amulti-talented entertainer of the old school. In addition to acting, he sang, danced, did comedy and played a number of musical instruments, including drums, ukulele and guitar.
Born Benjamin Sherman Crothers on May 23, 1910, at fifteen he got a job playing drums in a local speakeasy. Four years later he was touring the Midwest and wound up in Dayton, Ohio, where he found a job on radio station WFMK, where his style of singing earned him the name Scat Man.
His career gained momentum in 1943 with a booking at Chicago’s Capitol Lounge, and from there, he was off to Hollywood and Billy Berg’s famous Swing Club. Things slowed down after the war, until he recorded “Dead Man’s Blues” for Capitol in 1948, the same year he became the first black performer to host a TV Program in Los Angeles.
Playing as a single at the Oasis club, his big break came in 1952 when producer Albert J. Cohen offered him a part in his upcoming movie, Meet Me at the Fair, which started Crother’s extensive film career, including such classics as The Shining and One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest. But TV was where Crothers really found fame, beginning with Disney’s The Aristocats.
Until his death in 1986, he participated on countless shows, a work which earned him a star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Including accurate liner notes by singer and music historian Billy Vera in a well-documented 20-page boolet. Scat Man Crothers' early recorded works are presented here for the first time, in his unique and personal Swing, Blues and R&B-tinged style. Enjoy his important but largely forgotten contribution to music history!
Born Benjamin Sherman Crothers on May 23, 1910, at fifteen he got a job playing drums in a local speakeasy. Four years later he was touring the Midwest and wound up in Dayton, Ohio, where he found a job on radio station WFMK, where his style of singing earned him the name Scat Man.
His career gained momentum in 1943 with a booking at Chicago’s Capitol Lounge, and from there, he was off to Hollywood and Billy Berg’s famous Swing Club. Things slowed down after the war, until he recorded “Dead Man’s Blues” for Capitol in 1948, the same year he became the first black performer to host a TV Program in Los Angeles.
Playing as a single at the Oasis club, his big break came in 1952 when producer Albert J. Cohen offered him a part in his upcoming movie, Meet Me at the Fair, which started Crother’s extensive film career, including such classics as The Shining and One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest. But TV was where Crothers really found fame, beginning with Disney’s The Aristocats.
Until his death in 1986, he participated on countless shows, a work which earned him a star in the Hollywood Walk of Fame.
Including accurate liner notes by singer and music historian Billy Vera in a well-documented 20-page boolet. Scat Man Crothers' early recorded works are presented here for the first time, in his unique and personal Swing, Blues and R&B-tinged style. Enjoy his important but largely forgotten contribution to music history!