Crazy Otto - In the Land of Make Believe (2021)

  • 13 Sep, 15:47
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Artist:
Title: In the Land of Make Believe
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Submarine Records
Genre: Easy Listening, Dixieland, Ragtime, Swing
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 01:13:21
Total Size: 369 / 170 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Medley: Whistle While You Work / Someday My Prince Will Come / With A Smile And A Song
02. Medley: Heigh Ho! / The Silly Song / I'm Wishing
03. Medley: When My Baby Smiles At Me / Wait 'Till the Sun Shines, Nellie
04. I Want A Girl
05. Bird In A Gilded Cage
06. Too Young
07. Paper Doll
08. Alley Cat
09. Five Foot Two, Eyes Of Blue
10. Cheerio Choo Choo
11. It's a Sin To Tell a Lie
12. Unchained Melody
13. Side By Side
14. Home Town
15. Don't Fence me in
16. Tammy
17. Near you
18. Mack the Knife
19. Answer me
20. Humoresque
21. Glow Worm
22. Till the end of Time
23. Sunrise Serenade
24. Hernando's Hideaway
25. Around the World
26. Autumn Leaves
27. Music! Music! Music!
28. Five Minutes more
29. Christmas Medley: Sleigh Ride / Winter Wonderland / White Christmas / Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer / I Saw Mummy Kissing Santa Claus / Jingle Bells

Fritz Schulz-Reichel (July 4, 1912 – February 14, 1990) was a German jazz and pop pianist. Schulz-Reichel's father was a classical musician, and he began playing piano at the age of six. He developed an unusual technique where he played the melody of a tune with the left hand and the rhythm with the right hand. While he trained to be a concert pianist, he chose a career in pop music, playing light jazz and pop tunes. He invented a device called the Tipsy Wire Box, which could be attached to a piano to make it sound like an out-of-tune barrelhouse upright. (Another interpretation is that 'Tipsy Wire Box' was a slang expression for the piano itself, which was merely 'detuned'; that is, one of the three strings that make up each note of the main section of the piano is slightly flatted, giving the piano the characteristic sound). In 1953 he adopted the moniker Schräger Otto (Crazy Otto), and recorded for Deutsche Grammophon. His tunes became hits in Germany, France, England, and America. In 1955, American musician Johnny Maddox played a medley of his songs, entitled 'The Crazy Otto Medley'; this went to #2 on the U.S. charts, and in the U.S. both Reichel and Maddox were subsequently known as 'Crazy Otto', to some confusion. Schulz-Reichel continued to perform live and on film, and remained a popular jazz favorite in Germany for many years. 'Crazy Otto' is referenced in the song 'Ramble On Rose' by Robert Hunter and performed by the Grateful Dead. 'Crazy Otto' was reported among hundreds of artists whose material was reportedly destroyed in the 2008 Universal Fire.


Crazy Otto - In the Land of Make Believe (2021)



  • mufty77
  •  20:51
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Many thanks.