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Boswell Sisters Collection, Vol. 1

Boswell Sisters Collection, Vol. 1
The Boswell Sisters

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Track Listing

  1. Wha'd Ja Do to Me? - Boswell Sisters, Jimmy Dorsey, Chauncey Morehouse, Jack Purvis
  2. When I Take My Sugar to Tea - Boswell Sisters, Jimmy Dorsey, Chauncey Morehouse, Jack Purvis
  3. Roll On, Mississippi, Roll On - Boswell Sisters, Jimmy Dorsey, , , Arthur Schutt, Joe Tarto, Joe Venuti, Victor Young
  4. Shout, Sister, Shout - Boswell Sisters, Jimmy Dorsey, , , Arthur Schutt, Joe Tarto, Joe Venuti, Victor Young
  5. Sing a Little Jingle - Boswell Sisters, , Victor Young
  6. I Found a Million Dollar Baby (In a Five and Ten Cent Store) - Boswell Sisters, Brunswick Studio Orchestra, Victor Young
  7. It's the Girl - Boswell Sisters,
  8. It's You - Boswell Sisters, Victor Young & His Orchestra
  9. Makin' Faces at the Man in the Moon - Boswell Sisters, The New Yorkers, The New Yorkers
  10. I Can't Write the Words - Boswell Sisters, The New Yorkers, The New Yorkers
  11. Shine on Harvest Moon
  12. Heebie Jeebies
  13. River, Stay 'Way from My Door
  14. Evening in Caroline
  15. Nothing Is Sweeter Than You
  16. I Thank You Mister Moon
  17. Was That the Human Thing to Do?
  18. Put That Sun Back in the Sky
  19. Stop the Sun, Stop the Moon
  20. Everybody Loves My Baby
  21. There'll Be Some Changes Made
  22. Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea
  23. If It Ain't Love
  24. Got the South in My Soul

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #431765 in Music
  • Released on: 2000-10-17
  • Number of discs: 1

Customer Reviews

A great cd of of the greatest vocal trio in jazz history!5
The Boswell Sisters were jazz singers in every sense of the word, yet they were also the most popular group of the 30's! Connee Boswell who was the lead vocalist, pianist and arranger, had a gorgeous and downright syncopating swing style(that could swing and put out blues feelong on the same lavel as jimmy Rushing!), the sisters vocal harmonizing is like a spider spinning a web, their syncopations and scat sequences are amazing, especially considering this was early 30's. This cd is highly recomended(as are all in the series), for it includes the difinitive Boswell preformances "It's The Girl"(the highlight of their career, and of classic jazz itself) which features the dorsey's Joe Venuti, Eddie Lang and the gand improvising taking hot solos, and almost dixielandish hot enembles at one point, while the Bossies scat, and the very hot "Everybody Loves My Baby"(try and figure out what they're saying on the bridge). Every track a gem, most backed by the incredibly, hot and swinging Dorsey, Venuti, Land, and Bunny Barigan gang, and a few with Victor Young's Orchestra. Try this cd and find out why The Boswells are practicly the only real vocal jazz group ever(other then the 50's Lambert, Hendricks & Ross--who I might add are also worth checking out). Buy this one(or any Boswell cd's, as they did not record any non jazz sessions), you won't be dispointed.

The start a brilliant career5
Although this is just one of five volumes, it actually contains nearly half their American hits. That doesn't make it necessarily any better than the others, but it shows that they, like the majority of singers in popular music history, achieved their greatest successes early on.

The ten hits here include When I take my sugar to tea, Roll on Mississippi roll on, I found a million-dollar baby, It's the girl and Was that the human thing to do, all of which made the top ten. Among the other songs here is River stay away from my door, a number one hit for Kate Smith with Guy Lombardo and the Royal Canadians, and the standard Shine on harvest moon.

As is characteristic of this series, some tracks appear on more than one volume, but there is not much overlap between this volume and the others. In any case, there is much great music here.

Most people have long since forgotten the Boswell sisters, but they were a major influence on Ella Fitzgerald, the Andrews sisters and many others. They were extremely versatile, able to swing with the best but also well capable of slowing things down to sing a ballad.

All five volumes are outstanding but this is the CD containing their earliest and most popular recordings.

Wha'dja Do?4
This is where the Andrew Sisters came from, to a large extent; what the Andrews were to World War II, the Boswells were to the Great Depression.

My fav is "An Evening In Caroline," a lovely lullaby of the old south which gets a good Manhattan brush-up at the end.