Tea For Two (Youmans) - Red Nichols & His Five Pennies, 1930 video free download


30,876
Duration: 03:11
Uploaded: 2010/11/14

Tea For Two (Youmans /Caesar) from "No No, Nanette" - Red Nichols & His Five Pennies (Red Nichols, Ruby Weinstein (tp), Jack Teagarden, Glen Miller (tb), Jimmy Dorsey (cl)(as), Babe Russin, Adrian Rollini (ts), Jack Russin (p), Treg Brown (g), Gene Krupa (d)), Brunswick, 1930

NOTE: This is a later pressing made with the original Brunswick matrix, for Brunswick Collectors Series. Look at the list of names: wow! this band was simply a meeting point for the giants! Therefore, I am leaving it without comment. It's an ultra-hihgest-class rendition and a rare chance to see how the genius of the jazz-masters changes a rather simple hot dance hit from the Roaring 1920s into an object of the purest art.

Red NICHOLS (1905-1965) was a jazz legend, one of the most prolific recording artists in history. In the 1920s alone the cornetist appeared on over 4,000 recordings, working with almost every important musician of his time. Though his style of playing was influenced by Bix Beiderbecke, Nichols was a more polished musician. His contribution to the early days of jazz is immense and few artists can even come close to equaling his accomplishments. Born in Utah, Nichols studied music under his father, a college music professor, and mastered a variety of instruments, though he favored the cornet. As a teen he attended the Culver Military Academy and played in its band before being dismissed. In 1923 Nichols settled in New York, where he met trombonist Miff Mole, who became a permanent fixture in Nichol's various groups. Nichols most famously recorded under the name Red Nichols and His Five Pennies, but sometimes the same group of musicians recorded under different pseudonyms, including the Louisiana Rhythm Kings, the Charleston Seven, the Arkansas Travelers, Miff Mole and His Molers, the Hottentots. The list of top musicians who worked with Nichols include Benny Goodman, Jimmy & Tommy Dorsey, Glenn Miller, Jack Teagarden, Pee Wee Russell, Eddie Lang, Joe Venuti, Adrian Rollini, Gene Krupa. During the 1920s Nichols also played with other bandleaders, including Paul Whiteman, Don Vorhees, Cass Hagan, Vincent Lopez, Harry Reser, Benny Krueger and the California Ramblers. He continuously led his career thru 1930s until 1960s leading his own bands or working with other bandleaders (Anson Weeks, Glen Gray and His Casa Loma Orchestra). He suddenly died of a heart attack during his tour in Las Vegas.

Comments

9 years ago

Joe Carbery

I wonder who plays the baritone saxophone in the first chorus?

9 years ago

Derrick BanksDerrickB

This music played in show biz bugs and Friz freleng's the Looney Looney Looney bugs bunny movie

9 years ago

Max Seligmann

SHARE ALL VIDEOS ON TWITTER AND FACEBOOK THANKS....

10 years ago

garysaddleback

Well, folks . . . some of you may be unaware that the brilliant Russian symphonic composer, Dymitry Shostakovich, penned an arrangement of this trite tune, basically on a DARE.Which proves that on the HIGHEST level, a musical ear can handle ANY melody presented to it! Gary in Arizona 

11 years ago

Janette Walker

This wonderful posting came up as a suggestion. How do we access your earlier postings? When clicking on your subscribers list only fairly recent uploadings are offered.

13 years ago

1920sbuff

This version is amazing, sensuous and and so refinedly performed, great!

13 years ago

barbcard

The most sensuous version of this song I've ever heard.

13 years ago

240252

@LeRoi715 Dziękuję. Ten temat - i do tego w takim wspaniałym wykonaniu - sam nasuwa obrazy które najlepiej do niego pasują. Dobór ilustracji nie nastręczał kłopotu bo dokonywał się jak gdyby samoczynnie pod wpływem tej muzyki.

13 years ago

240252

@abendstunde49 Really, it's one of the most ourtstanding versions of that tune I ever heard. People usually sing it in a "luscious and careless" manner just like Doris Day or that sort of singers did - and here we have almost a haunting blues! Nichols and his gang managed to extract from it the beauty of a ballade rather than a dance hit and cleansed it from the whole kittenish unconcern .

13 years ago

240252

@genia106 Yes, it's my little tribute to LOVE LOVE LOVE - to the warmt6h of feeleings that we need so much, especially now, in these cold and rainy days in the very climax the East European Fall... :-(

13 years ago

240252

@bill3murr It's a haunting music indeed. Thanks Bill :-)

13 years ago

genia106

The song is great but the visual is a MASTERPIECE of LOVE! Love the LOVERS! What a SENSUOUS MOOD you create!

13 years ago

abendstunde49

Great record! Have never heard such a slow, leisurely version of this tune! Very nice!

13 years ago

LeRoi715

jakie to urocze zdjecia i muzyka ! cheers!

13 years ago

bill3murr

a cool jazz like sound in the age of hot stuff.... exquisitely executed by the best. i like both styles of jazz from that era, and this is a grand treatment of a classic tune. thanks for the images as always...a visual treat as well as aural.

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