One O'Clock Jump

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"One O'Clock Jump"
One O'Clock Jump cover.jpg
Single by Count Basie
B-side "John's Idea"
Released1937
RecordedJuly 7, 1937, New York, NY
Genre Jazz
Length3:02
Label Decca
1363
Songwriter(s) Count Basie

"One O'Clock Jump" is a jazz standard; a 12-bar blues instrumental, written by Count Basie in 1937.

Contents

Background

The melody derived from band members' riffs—Basie rarely wrote down musical ideas, so Eddie Durham and Buster Smith helped him crystallize his ideas. The original 1937 recording of the tune by Basie and his band is noted for the saxophone work of Herschel Evans and Lester Young, trumpet by Buck Clayton, Walter Page on bass, and Basie himself on piano. [1] The song is typical of Basie's early riff style. The instrumentation is based on "head arrangements" where each section makes up their part based on what the other sections are playing. Individuals take turns improvising over the top of the entire sound. Basie recorded "One O'Clock Jump" several times after the original performance for Decca in June 1937. Notable live radio transcriptions of the song also exist, such as Basie's November 3, 1937 performance of the song at the Meadowbrook (Cedar Grove NJ). [2] Later, Basie recorded the song for Columbia in 1942 and 1950 and on a number of occasions in the fifties. "One O'Clock Jump" became the theme song of the Count Basie Orchestra. They used it to close each of their concerts for the next half century. It was reportedly titled "Blue Ball" at first but a radio announcer feared that title was too risqué. [3]

Accolades

In 1979, the song was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. [4] Later, it was listed in the Songs of the Century.

Other versions

Appearance in film and television

Web sources

  1. PBS
  2. Discogs site
  3. All About Jazz
  4. Green, Alfred (2015). Rhythm Is My Beat: Jazz Guitar Great Freddie Green and the Count Basie Sound. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. p. xxvi. 1979 Basie's signature tune, "One O'Clock Jump," is inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.
  5. At São Paulo, Brazil, when he was aged 78: One O'clock Jump with Eric Schneider and the 150 Band on "Fatha's Birthday" (source: Tom Lord, The Jazz Discography)
  6. Al Hirt, He's the King and His Band Retrieved April 6, 2013.

See also

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