Maggie Jones - Anybody Here Want To Try My Cabbage? скачать видео бесплатно


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Длительность: 03:23
Загружено: 2012/09/09

From the Maggie Jones: Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order Volume 1 (August 1923 To April 1925)...Document Records DOCD-5348

Recorded December 10, 1924, in New York City, NY; Maggie Jones, vocal; Louis Armstrong, cornet; Fletcher Henderson, piano...Originally issued on Columbia 14063-D

Maggie Jones, pianist and vocalist, was born Fae Barnes in Hillsboro, Texas, around 1900. The daughter of sharecroppers, she moved in the early 1920s to New York City, where she began to perform in local clubs. Billed as the "Texas Nightingale," she also worked a circuit of traveling shows for the Theater Owners Booking Association, including performances at the Princess Theater in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. On July 26, 1923, she became one of the earliest female Texas singers to record a song. She recorded two more sides in August and followed those with two more cuts the following month. She continued to record blues for various labels, including Black Swan, Victor, Pathé, and Paramount. Some of her best-known songs are "Undertaker's Blues," "Single Woman's Blues," and "Northbound Blues."

She recorded with several musical legends between 1924 and 1926, including Louis Armstrong, Fletcher Henderson, and Charlie Green, and participated in a touring review in 1928--29. She was frequently forced to earn her living outside the world of music, however, and operated a dress store in New York for a time. In the early 1930s she moved to Dallas and formed her own revue, which performed at such spots as the All-American Cabaret in Fort Worth. In the mid-1930s she disappeared from the music scene and from the written record. ~ James Head, Texas State Historical Association

Photography by E.J. Bellocq

Комментарии

9 years назад

joe stucatz

i just heard this, but a 'faster' version LOL...it was a recording by woman prisoners recorded by Library of Congress

9 years назад

Hugo Kuijpers

Do you have more recordings of Maggie Jones together with Louis Armstrong?

10 years назад

Dennis Askey

Cabbage ain't food. Like rock and roll ain't about rocks and rolls. Cause. you gotta' rock and roll to plumb. Although, butter or, gravy is good on rolls.

10 years назад

Joe Kushner

Gives new meaning to the whole corned beef and cabbage meme.

11 years назад

Douglas Fairbanks

I'd like try her tomatoes !

11 years назад

fillra01

Paul Slade, a Briish broadcaster, writes: "Anything sweet like jelly roll - or jam roll as we'd call it - was used to describe the sweet pastime of sex... and as cash, too, was sweet to have, the slang term for money ("cabbage") was similarly employed." I myself like cabbage, especially Delia Smith's cabbage, ie, well done with some lovely butter.

11 years назад

fillra01

Thanks. Dippermouth blog refers to how Satch and Louis Jordan recorded Life Is So Peculiar: "Don't miss the first of this session's many references to "cabbage." I'm sure Johnny Burke meant it in the "corned beef and cabbage" way but one listen to Louis's aside, "I love cabbage," and you know that Louis isn't talking about food. If you still don't know what I'm talking about, Louis took part in a recording in the 1920s by Maggie Jones titled Anybody Here Want to Try My Cabbage? Case closed."

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