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67312 / Daten zuletzt bearbeitet von: SJO allgemein
Musiker: Dunn, Blind Willie
Nationalität: US
Instrumente: g voc

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Anzahl Alben: 3

Alben auf denen " Dunn, Blind Willie" mitwirkt:
X = Album im einem SJO-Shop erhältlich
 Album-Bezeichnung: Interpret  —  Titel
LabelLabel-NummerAufnahme-Jahr 
 Blind Willie Dunn's Gin Bottle Four  —  Blind Willie Dunn's Gin Bottle FourColumbiaSCM 51001929EP
 Eddie Lang & Joe Venuti  —  Stringing The Blues Volume OneCBSBPG 621431926-1929LP
 Eddie Lang & Joe Venuti  —  Stringing The Blues Volume TwoCBSBPG 621441928-1933LP
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Anzahl Tracks: 6

Tracks auf denen " Dunn, Blind Willie" mitwirkt:
Track-TitelX = Album im SJO-Shop erhältlich
 Album
Label 
A handful of riffs Eddie Lang & Joe Venuti  —  Stringing The Blues Volume TwoCBSLP
I wanna count Sheep till the Cows come home Eddie Lang & Joe Venuti  —  Stringing The Blues Volume TwoCBSLP
Jet Black Blues Eddie Lang & Joe Venuti  —  Stringing The Blues Volume OneCBSLP
Two tone stomp Eddie Lang & Joe Venuti  —  Stringing The Blues Volume OneCBSLP
Blue Blood Blues Blind Willie Dunn's Gin Bottle Four  —  Blind Willie Dunn's Gin Bottle FourColumbiaEP
Jet Black Blues Blind Willie Dunn's Gin Bottle Four  —  Blind Willie Dunn's Gin Bottle FourColumbiaEP
6 Einträge

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Info:

Influential jazz guitar pioneer Eddie Lang (born: Salvatore Massaro) (1902-1932) adapted the alias Blind Willie Dunn, for a series of recordings, that he made as a member of the Gin Bottle Four, in 1928 and 1929. An all-star group, that included blues guitarist Lonnie Johnson, cornet player King Oliver and, occasionally, Hoagy Carmichael, on percussion and vocals, the Gin Bottle Four served as one of the first inter-racial jazz bands to record.

First using the pseudonym for a recording session, with pianist Frank Signorelli and chimes player Justin Ring, in 1928, Lang revived the Blind Willie Dunn persona the following year, cutting such classic tunes as "Blue Guitars", "A Handful Of Riffs", "Midnight Call Blues", "Jet Black Blues" and "Hot Fingers".

The three recording sessions with the Gin Bottle Four represented only a small slice of South Philadelphia-born Lang's brief, but prolific, career. It's estimated that he worked with more than four hundred musicians before dying prematurely, after losing too much blood following a routine tonsillectomy, at the age of thirty. In addition to playing on groundbreaking recordings with jazz violinist Joe Venuti, a childhood friend, he rarely passed up an invitation to play. Seemingly color-blind, he worked with white musicians, including Cliff "Ukulele Ike" Edward, Ruth Ettig, Paul Whiteman, Bix Beiderbecke, Benny Goodman and Bing Crosby, as well as with such African-American artists as Louis Armstrong, Bessie Smith, Clarence Williams, Victoria Spivey and Ray Charles.

The legacy of Blind Willie Dunn continues to be celebrated by Detroit-based vocalist/guitarist Joe Serrapere and his band, the Willie Dunns.