Louis Armstrong - After you`ve gone (1929) video free download


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Duration: 03:38
Uploaded: 2009/07/20

Louis Armstrong - After You've Gone (1929)

(Henry Creamer / J. Turner Layton 1918) Louis Armstrong And His Orchestra

November 26, 1929, New York

Dickerson, Carroll (Conductor, Violin)

Armstrong, Louis (Trumpet, Vocal)

Hobson, Homer (Trumpet)

Robinson, Fred (Trombone)

Strong, Jimmy (Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone)

Curry, Bert (Alto Saxophone)

Washington, Crawford (Alto Saxophone)

Anderson, Gene (Piano)

Carr, Mancy (Banjo)

Briggs, Pete (Tuba)

Singleton, Zutty (Drums)

Comments

9 years ago

Karsten Rasmussen

What a tone Louis had/has - magnificient

9 years ago

Eduardo Moreau

Louis "Happy Face"Armstrong, what a delight to music!

9 years ago

Zachary Robinson

Do you know what I hate, when 11 year olds write in the comments that there a musical prodigy and that they can "play" (notice the quotations) the piano all the way to the sitar and all they say is " i am like better at trumpet than everyone else here, even you Louis, even you...

9 years ago

Whitneyville1

He was playing a coronet at this time of his career. He didn't play the famous "Pea-Shooter" trumpet until he went to the Hot Club of France to get out from under the control of several infamous gangsters who ran the nightclubs in New York and Chicago.

9 years ago

kalarr1

GOOD !!!!! THE BEST !

9 years ago

John Boun

A natural, Mr. Armstrong was born to play. Simply breathtaking, simply the best.

9 years ago

Alexander Moon

HOTCHA!!!

9 years ago

jazzwatch64

Got this. Zutty's drums was a LITTLE under recorded...the band sounded better and Satch was so powerful in this one.....3 1/2 stars......

9 years ago

Jon Pinter

#nolamusic #dwamusic 

9 years ago

loan nguyễn

After You 've Gone 

10 years ago

Wil Manric

In high school, and for a few years after, I played tuba in a Dixieland band. They still rank as the happiest days of my life.

10 years ago

Robert Burgin

On this day in 1929, Louis Armstrong recorded "After You've Gone."Louis Armstrong - After you`ve gone (1929)

10 years ago

merc0049

The magic of Louis Perhaps the greatest musician ever produced in this country The combination of his horn and voice is unmatched He had so much of "it" , he could have given away 90% of his "it" and still had more than everyone else...... Merc

10 years ago

amd77j

Amen!!!!

10 years ago

colin wells

I once met Louis back in the day;1966 i think. We were at a bar in the Devonshire Arms Hotel in Yorkshire. I was struck by his polite manner. I want to say though that he was no uncle Tom and he was, in my opinion deeply concerned about politics and the condition of his black American people.

10 years ago

Aad Juijn

Sustainability has become a dirty word. Today we live in a "disposable society", most of the modern music may unheard into the dustbin! I share your opinion...Grtz, Aad

10 years ago

TheBeerman43

Beautiful!! I wonder why there aren't any great composers anymore or am I longing for the past......there remains so many talented musicians that can play their beautiful renditions of the songs of yesteryear I agree, but present day shortage of the fabulous writers of great music. Is mediocrity creeping into our musical world, seems everything else is being destroyed by the so-called brilliant minds.

10 years ago

Ron DeBrule

After You"ve Gone Louis Armstrong 1929Louis Armstrong - After you`ve gone (1929)

11 years ago

Urbino237

Good ol' Pops, making an otherwise sad tune sound joyful and upbeat. Magical to us but natural to him: "No, I don't try to make an art of my music. Music is a day's work and we all ought to do a day's work. That buys the pork chops." Those street corners were quite the classroom weren't they?!

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