The Complete Commodore & Decca Masters | |
---|---|
Box set by | |
Released | 2009 |
Recorded | April 20, 1939 – March 8, 1950 |
Genre | Vocal jazz |
Length | ???? |
Label | Hip-O Records Hip-O Select – BC013146-02 |
Producer | Milt Gabler |
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
All About Jazz | (favorable) [2] |
The Complete Commodore & Decca Masters is a 3CD box set of recordings by Billie Holiday, released by Hip-O Records in 2009, compiling all the master takes released as 78rpm singles by Commodore and Decca Records. It includes an essay by Ashley Kahn. [3]
In 1939, Columbia Records refused to let Billie Holiday record the anti-lynching protest song "Strange Fruit". Milt Gabler invited her to record it for his small specialty label Commodore Records, and Columbia granted her a one-time exemption from her contract to do so, in which she recorded four songs (material for two 78rpm records). "Strange Fruit", backed with "Fine and Mellow", turned out to be the biggest selling record of her career. Although she continued to record for Columbia, in 1944, following the 1942–44 musicians' strike, Holiday permanently left Columbia for Commodore. Small labels like Commodore had been quicker to settle with the musician's union than large labels like Columbia, thus Holiday was able to return to recording quicker by switching to the smaller label. The Commodore tracks were more dominated by torch songs and dramatic ballads than her swing oriented Columbia material had been, although her later Columbia sides (e.g. "God Bless the Child") show she had already been evolving in this direction.
Later the same year, Holiday then followed Gabler to Decca Records, to record "Lover Man". Decca had allowed Gabler to keep his own label, while also being employed by them, so long as he directed all potential hits to Decca. Both Holiday and Gabler suspected "Lover Man" had the potential to be a hit, thus it became her first Decca single, and indeed another of her biggest hits. "Lover Man" was notable for featuring a string section, and all her Decca tracks typically featured string arrangements and even choral backing, rather than jazz combos. This was Holiday's choice, as strings were often used in the white pop records of the day, and when she recorded "Lover Man" she wanted the same sound offered to artists like Bing Crosby, and specifically her friend Frank Sinatra. During this same period, Holiday began performing in concert halls rather than nightclubs, and her live performances became more theatrical than jazz, with many of these dramatic songs becoming centrepieces of her set. Holiday continued to record for Decca throughout the 1940s, before again switching to Norman Granz's Clef label (later Verve) in the next decade.
The orchestras Holiday recorded with while at Commodore and Decca were variously led by Toots Camarata, Bob Haggart, Bill Stegmeyer, John Simmons, Buster Harding, Sy Oliver, and Gordon Jenkins.
"Big Stuff" was a Leonard Bernstein single, with Billie doing a new vocal to a song Bernstein had written as the prologue to his 1944 ballet Fancy Free . The b-side was another Bernstein song from the ballet, without Holiday: "Fancy Free (Galop Variation And Finale)" performed by the Ballet Theatre Orchestra Under Direction of Leonard Bernstein.
"You Can't Lose A Broken Heart" and "My Sweet Hunk O' Trash" were collaborations with Louis Armstrong.
"Guilty" was the only track not originally released as a 78rpm record, first appearing on the much later compilation LP The Blues Are Brewin' (Decca – DL 8701) in 1958. [4]
Track | Recorded | Catalogue | Released | Song Title | Writer(s) | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | April 20, 1939 | Commodore 526-a | 1939 | Strange Fruit | Abel Meeropol | 3:12 |
2. | April 20, 1939 | Commodore 527-a | 1939 | Yesterdays | Jerome Kern, Otto Harbach | 3:24 |
3. | April 20, 1939 | Commodore 526-b | 1939 | Fine And Mellow | Billie Holiday | 3:16 |
4. | April 20, 1939 | Commodore 527-b | 1939 | I Gotta Right To Sing The Blues | Harold Arlen and Ted Koehler | 2:49 |
5. | March 25, 1944 | Commodore 569-b | 1944 | How Am I To Know | Jack King, Dorothy Parker | 2:43 |
6. | March 25, 1944 | Commodore 585-b | 1944 | My Old Flame | Sam Coslow, Arthur Johnston | 3:01 |
7. | March 25, 1944 | Commodore 553-b | 1944 | I'll Get By | Fred E. Ahlert and Roy Turk | 2:58 |
8. | March 25, 1944 | Commodore 559-a | 1944 | I Cover The Waterfront | Johnny Green, Edward Heyman | 3:29 |
9. | April 1, 1944 | Commodore 553-a | 1944 | I'll Be Seeing You | Sammy Fain and Irving Kahal | 3:30 |
10. | April 1, 1944 | Commodore 585-a | 1944 | I'm Yours | Johnny Green and Yip Harburg | 3:16 |
11. | April 1, 1944 | Commodore 7520-a | 1944 | Embraceable You | George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin | 3:15 |
12. | April 1, 1944 | Commodore 7520-b | 1944 | As Time Goes By | Herman Hupfeld | 3:10 |
13. | April 8, 1944 | Commodore 569-a | 1944 | He's Funny That Way | Richard Whiting, Neil Moret | 3:15 |
14. | April 8, 1944 | Commodore 559-b | 1944 | Lover Come Back To Me | Sigmund Romberg, Oscar Hammerstein II | 3:19 |
15. | April 8, 1944 | Commodore 7519-a | 1944 | I Love My Man (Billie's Blues) | Billie Holiday | 3:07 |
16. | April 8, 1944 | Commodore 7519-b | 1944 | On The Sunny Side Of The Street | Jimmy McHugh and Dorothy Fields | 3:01 |
Track | Recorded | Catalogue | Released | Song Title | Writer(s) | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | October 4, 1944 | Decca – 23391a | 1945 | Lover Man | Jimmy Davis, Roger ("Ram") Ramirez, and James Sherman | 3:15 |
2. | October 4, 1944 | Decca – 23483a | 1946 | No More | Toots Camarata and Bob Russell | 2:45 |
3. | November 8, 1944 | Decca – 23391b | 1945 | That Ole Devil Called Love | Allan Roberts and Doris Fisher | 2:52 |
4. | August 14, 1945 | Decca – 23565a | 1946 | Don't Explain | Billie Holiday and Arthur Herzog Jr. | 3:20 |
5. | August 14, 1945 | Decca – 23483b | 1946 | You Better Go Now | Bickley Reichner and Robert Graham | 2:29 |
6. | August 14, 1945 | Decca – 23565b | 1946 | What Is This Thing Called Love | Cole Porter | 3:09 |
7. | January 22, 1946 | Decca – 23673a | 1946 | Good Morning Heartache | Irene Higginbotham, Ervin Drake, and Dan Fisher | 3:05 |
8. | January 22, 1946 | Decca – 23673b | 1946 | No Good Man | Irene Higginbotham, Dan Fisher, Sammy Gallop | 3:04 |
9. | March 13, 1946 | Decca – 23463a | 1946 | Big Stuff | Leonard Bernstein | 2:29 |
10. | April 9, 1946 | Decca – 23957a | 1946 | Baby, I Don't Cry Over You | Morton Krouse | 3:09 |
11. | April 9, 1946 | Decca – 23957b | 1946 | I'll Look Around | George Cory and Douglass Cross | 3:12 |
12. | December 27, 1946 | Decca – 48259a | 1951 | The Blues Are Brewin' | Eddie DeLange and Louis Alter | 3:02 |
13. | December 27, 1946 | (unreleased on 78?) | 1958 | Guilty | Richard Whiting, Harry Akst, and Gus Kahn | 3:11 |
14. | February 13, 1947 | Decca – 24138a | 1947 | Deep Song | George Cory and Douglass Cross | 3:10 |
15. | February 13, 1947 | Decca – 23853a | 1947 | There Is No Greater Love | Isham Jones, Marty Symes | 2:56 |
16. | February 13, 1947 | Decca – 24138b | 1947 | Easy Living | Ralph Rainger and Leo Robin | 3:10 |
17. | February 13, 1947 | Decca – 23853b | 1947 | Solitude | Duke Ellington, Eddie DeLange and Irving Mills | 3:07 |
18. | December 10, 1948 | Decca – 24551a | 1949 | Weep No More | Gordon Jenkins and Tom Adair | 3:19 |
19. | December 10, 1948 | Decca – 24551b | 1949 | Girls Were Made To Take Care Of Boys | Ralph Blane | 3:11 |
Track | Recorded | Catalogue | Released | Song Title | Writer(s) | Time |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1. | December 10, 1948 | Decca – 24638a | 1949 | Porgy (I Love You) | George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin | 2:54 |
2. | December 10, 1948 | Decca – 24638b | 1949 | My Man | Jacques Charles, Channing Pollock, Albert Willemetz, and Maurice Yvain | 2:55 |
3. | August 17, 1949 | Decca – 24726a | 1949 | Ain't Nobody's Business If I Do | Porter Grainger and Everett Robbins | 3:19 |
4. | August 17, 1949 | Decca – 24726b | 1949 | Baby Get Lost | Leonard Feather and Billy Moore, Jr | 3:13 |
5. | August 29, 1949 | Decca – 27145a | 1950 | Keeps On A-Rainin' | Spencer Williams and Max Kortlander | 3:14 |
6. | August 29, 1949 | Decca – 27145b | 1950 | Them There Eyes | Maceo Pinkard, Doris Tauber and William Tracey | 2:49 |
7. | September 8, 1949 | Decca – 48259b | 1951 | Do Your Duty | Wesley 'Sox' Wilson | 3:14 |
8. | September 8, 1949 | Decca – 24947a | 1950 | Gimme A Pigfoot (And A Bottle Of Beer) | Wesley 'Sox' Wilson | 2:43 |
9. | September 30, 1949 | Decca – 24758a | 1949 | You Can't Lose A Broken Heart | James P. Johnson and Flournoy E. Miller | 3:13 |
10. | September 30, 1949 | Decca – 24758b | 1949 | My Sweet Hunk O' Trash | James P. Johnson and Flournoy E. Miller | 3:18 |
11. | September 30, 1949 | Decca – 24947b | 1950 | Now Or Never | Billie Holiday and Curtis Reginald Lewis | 3:15 |
12. | October 19, 1949 | Decca – 24796a | 1949 | You're My Thrill | Jay Gorney and Sidney Clare | 3:22 |
13. | October 19, 1949 | Decca – 24796b | 1949 | Crazy He Calls Me | Carl Sigman and Bob Russell | 3:02 |
14. | October 19, 1949 | Decca – 24857a | 1950 | Please Tell Me Now | Arnold Clawson and Toussaint Pope | 3:12 |
15. | October 19, 1949 | Decca – 24857b | 1950 | Somebody's On My Mind | Billie Holiday and Arthur Herzog Jr. | 2:55 |
16. | March 8, 1950 | Decca – 24972a | 1950 | God Bless The Child | Billie Holiday | 3:08 |
17. | March 8, 1950 | Decca – 24972b | 1950 | This Is Heaven To Me | Ernest Schweikert and Frank Reardon | 2:51 |
Billie Holiday's Commodore and Decca recordings have been compiled many times, beginning with 78rpm albums in the 1940s and then 10 inch vinyl LPs. Some compilations also include many alternate takes of the songs, but only the master takes originally released as 78rpm singles are included in this set.
Contributing musicians, in chronological order. [5]
The Dorsey Brothers were an American studio dance band, led by Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey. They started recording in 1928 for OKeh Records.
Digital III at Montreux is a 1979 live album featuring a compilation of performances by Ella Fitzgerald, Count Basie, Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen, Joe Pass, and Ray Brown, recorded at the 1979 Montreux Jazz Festival. It was produced and has liner notes by Norman Granz. The cover photo is by Phil Stern.
Negotiations and Love Songs is a compilation album of songs by the American singer-songwriter Paul Simon, released in 1988 by Warner Bros. Records. It consists of songs released from 1971 to 1986. The title of the compilation is taken from a line in the song "Train in the Distance".
Conception is a compilation album issued by Prestige Records in 1956 as PRLP 7013, featuring Miles Davis on a number of tracks. The album, compiled from earlier 10 inch LPs, or as 78rpm singles, also features musicians such as Lee Konitz, Sonny Rollins, Stan Getz, Gerry Mulligan, and Zoot Sims. The cover was designed by Bob Parent. In particular, the entirety of the 10"LP Lee Konitz: The New Sounds makes up all of side 1.
Donald Douglas Lamond Jr. was an American jazz drummer.
Cootie Williams and His Orchestra 1941–1944 is a compilation album of recordings by jazz trumpeter Cootie Williams from 1941, 1942, and 1944. It was released by Classics in 1995.
Otis! The Definitive Otis Redding is a 1993 four compact disc compilation album by American soul singer-songwriter Otis Redding. The first three discs focus on studio material recorded for Stax records. These recordings are all original mono single or LP mixes. Three pre-Stax recordings and a demo recorded at Muscle Shoals are also included. The fourth disc, labeled "The Ultimate Live Otis Redding Show" was compiled from various live sources in an attempt to gather "the best version" of every song Otis ever recorded live and is mixed in stereo. The 100-page booklet includes testimonials from musicians and individuals from Redding's life, essays, a photo album, track listings, discographies, personnel and recording information.
Early Years of a Genius, 44–48, also known as Earl Bud Powell, Vol. 1, is the first of eleven volumes of Bud Powell material released by Francis Paudras on his Mythic Sound label. It features a selection of Powell's early work from 1944 to 1948.
New York Big Band is a live album by George Russell released on the Italian Soul Note label in 1982, featuring performances by Russell with his New York Big Band recorded in 1978 and one track with The Swedish Radio Jazz Orchestra recorded in 1977 at the same concert that produced Vertical Form VI.
This article lists Charlie Parker's Savoy and Dial sessions as leader, which were recorded between 1945 and 1948.
Billie Holiday at Jazz at the Philharmonic is a live album by jazz singer Billie Holiday, originally recorded on February 12, 1945 and October 3, 1946 at the Jazz at the Philharmonic concert at the Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles, and at Carnegie Hall on June 3, 1946.
Easin' It is a studio album by Count Basie and his orchestra recorded between 1960 and 1962. The album contains a collaboration by Frank Foster, a well known member from Basie's big band. All tracks were composed, arranged and conducted by Foster and is a mixture of jazz and blues.
The Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz is a six-LP box set released in 1973 by the Smithsonian Institution. Compiled by jazz critic, scholar, and historian Martin Williams, the album included tracks from over a dozen record labels spanning several decades and genres of American jazz, from ragtime and big band to post-bop and free jazz.
The West Australian Youth Jazz Orchestra (WAYJO) is an Australian youth jazz orchestra based in Perth, Western Australia. WAYJO has 54 jazz musicians between 14 and 25 years of age and currently presents over 55 performances a year across Australia.
Posi-Tone Records is an American jazz record label founded by Marc Free, a producer and musician who runs the company with engineer Nick O'Toole. The label's first five albums were issued in 1995.
James Theodore Powell was an American jazz saxophonist who played alto sax.
Chet Baker Big Band is an album by jazz trumpeter Chet Baker recorded in 1956 and released on the Pacific Jazz label.
Dance Bash is a studio album by Charlie Barnet and his Orchestra released on Verve Records LP record MGV-2007 in 1956.
Four Star Favorites is a compilation album of phonograph records released in 1941 by Artie Shaw and His Orchestra on Victor Records, containing studio recordings by his second, third and fourth orchestras.
The Chocolate Dandies was the name of several American jazz combos from 1928 through the 1940s. The name was an outgrowth of the Broadway production, The Chocolate Dandies, that debuted in 1924.