Money A2Z Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Rufus Harley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rufus_Harley

    Occupation (s) Musician. Instrument (s) Bagpipes. Years active. 1960s–2005. Labels. Atlantic. Rufus Harley Jr. (May 20, 1936 – August 1, 2006) was an American jazz musician known primarily as the first jazz musician to adopt the Great Highland bagpipe as his primary instrument.

  3. Down Home (Z. Z. Hill album) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Down_Home_(Z._Z._Hill_album)

    Down Home is an album by the American blues musician Z. Z. Hill, released in 1982. [2] [3] "Down Home Blues", the album's first track, was a crossover hit, and is regarded as a blues standard. [4] [5] The song is said to be the best selling blues single of the 20th century. [6] The album peaked at No. 209 on the Billboard 200. [7]

  4. Play the Blues: Live from Jazz at Lincoln Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Play_the_Blues:_Live_from...

    Mixed. Play the Blues: Live from Jazz at Lincoln Center is a 2011 live album by Eric Clapton and Wynton Marsalis. Released on September 13, it contains live recordings of the 2011 collaboration at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts between the British blues guitarist and the American jazz trumpeter. A video release accompanies the audio ...

  5. Blues on Bach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blues_on_Bach

    Blues on Bach is an album by American jazz group the Modern Jazz Quartet recorded in 1973 and released on the Atlantic label. The album includes five John Lewis arrangements of pieces by Johann Sebastian Bach, interspersed with four original blues pieces "on" [the name] "Bach"—in keys (and with titles) that spell out in order the name B-A-C-H.

  6. Jazz Gillum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jazz_Gillum

    Biography. Gillum was born in Indianola, Mississippi. He ran away from home at age seven and for the next few years lived in Charleston, Mississippi, working and playing for tips on street corners. He moved to Chicago in 1923, where he met the guitarist Big Bill Broonzy. [2] The duo started working at nightclubs around the city. [3]

  7. West End Blues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_End_Blues

    By far the best known recording of "West End Blues" is the 3-minute-plus, 78 rpm recording made by Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five on June 28, 1928. Gunther Schuller devoted page after page to it in his book Early Jazz, writing, “The clarion call of “West End Blues’ served notice that jazz had the potential capacity to compete with the highest order of previously known musical ...

  8. Blue yodel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blue_Yodel

    The blue yodel songs are a series of thirteen songs written and recorded by Jimmie Rodgers during the period from 1927 to his death in May 1933. The songs were based on the 12-bar blues format and featured Rodgers’ trademark yodel refrains. The lyrics often had a risqué quality with "a macho, slightly dangerous undertone." [1]

  9. Livery Stable Blues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Livery_Stable_Blues

    "Livery Stable Blues" is a jazz composition copyrighted by Ray Lopez (né Raymond Edward Lopez; 1889–1979) and Alcide Nunez in 1917. It was recorded by the Original Dixieland Jass Band on February 26, 1917, and, with the A side "Dixieland Jass Band One-Step" or "Dixie Jass Band One-Step" (a tune later better known as "Original Dixieland One-Step"), became widely acknowledged as the first ...