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Lloyd Glenn - Blues & Rhythm Series 5069: The Chronological Lloyd Glen 1951-1952 (2003)

Lloyd Glenn - Blues & Rhythm Series 5069: The Chronological Lloyd Glen 1951-1952 (2003)

BAND/ARTIST: Lloyd Glenn

  • Title: Blues & Rhythm Series 5069: The Chronological Lloyd Glen 1951-1952
  • Year Of Release: 2003
  • Label: Classics Records
  • Genre: Blues, R&B, Jazz
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 65:29
  • Total Size: 158 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:
01. Sleigh Ride (2:43)
02. Savage Boy (2:53)
03. Jungle Twilight (2:40)
04. Day Break Stomp (2:27)
05. Yancey Special (3:00)
06. After Hours (2:59)
07. Honky Tonk Train (2:48)
08. Pinetop Boogie Woogie (2:29)
09. Boogie Woogie On St. Louis Blues (2:47)
10. Tickle Toe Two Step (2:28)
11. Angora (2:40)
12. Cuba Doll (2:34)
13. It Moves Me (2:45)
14. Night Time (3:10)
15. Ugh (1:43)
16. You're Not The Girl For Me (2:35)
17. The Sheik Of Araby (2:32)
18. True Blue Lou (2:55)
19. On The Sunny Side Of The Street (2:55)
20. Liza (2:56)
21. Deep Blue Monday (2:58)
22. Rockin' And Swingin' (2:37)
23. You Don't Love Me (2:55)
24. Tomorrow (2:50)

As an integral behind-the-scenes fixture on the L.A. postwar blues scene, pianist/arranger/A&R man Lloyd Glenn had few equals. His rolling ivories anchored many of Lowell Fulson's best waxings for Swing Time and Checker, and he scored his own major hits on Swing Time with the imaginative instrumentals "Old Time Shuffle Blues" in 1950 and "Chica Boo" the next year. Glenn was already an experienced musician when he left the Lone Star state for sunny California in 1942. His early sessions there included backing T-Bone Walker at the 1947 Capitol date that produced the guitarist's immortal "Call It Stormy Monday." Glenn recorded for the first time under his own name the same year for Imperial with his band, the Joymakers, which included guitarist Gene Phillips, saxist Marshall Royal, and singer Geraldine Carter.
Massively constructed guitarist Tiny Webb introduced Glenn to Swing Time owner Jack Lauderdale in 1949, inaugurating Glenn's five-year stint as A&R man at the firm. After Swing Time's demise, the pianist moved to Aladdin Records, issuing more catchy instrumentals for Eddie Mesner's firm through 1959. There was also an isolated session for Imperial in 1962 that produced "Twistville" and "Young Date." The pianist remained active into the '80s, often touring as Big Joe Turner's accompanist. ~Bill Dahl



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  • mufty77
  •  wrote in 12:08
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Many thanks for lossless.