Ever Since You Been Gone. Recording places and dates: Tracks 1-3: Chicago, 12 July 1940 Tracks 4-13: Chicago, 21 March 1941 Tracks 14-23: Chicago, 5 December 1941 Track 24: Chicago, 12 February 1946.
Oh! My! Blues 6 Just One More Time 7 It's Been So Long 8 Move Back To The Woods 9 You've Got To Reap What You Sow 10 Wonder What I'm Doing Wrong 11 I Would Hate To Hate You (Like I Love You) 12 Santa Claus Blues 13 Got To See Her Every Night 14 So Long Baby (326-A) 15. Stop That Train In Harlem 16 You Are The One I Love 17 I Just Can't Help It 18 Lonely Nights. 19 Good Morning Baby 20 You Make The World So Bright 21 Tears Came Rolling Down 22 So Long Baby (E2VB-6866) 23 What May Your Trouble Be.
Complete Recorded Works . .has been added to your Cart. Exclusive discount for Prime members. Sample this album Artist (Sample). Audio CD (February 15, 1995).
Other albums by Walter Davis. 12 Santa Claus Blues Walter Davis 3:10. 13 Got to See Her Every Night Walter Davis 2:37. 14 So Long Baby Walter Davis 2:42. 15 Stop That Train in Harlem Walter Davis 2:49. 16 You Are the One I Love Walter Davis 2:47. 17 I Just Can't Help It Walter Davis 2:39.
Chronological Classics was a French compact disc reissue label. The original owner Gilles Pétard intended to release the complete master takes of all jazz and swing artists that were issued on 78 rpm records. By the time the label suspended operations in July 2008, its scope had extended into the LP era. Pétard also started a parallel label, R&B Classics, whose releases follow on from the jazz listing, to reissue postwar rhythm & blues recordings.
Walter Vinson (February 2, 1901 – April 22, 1975) was an American Memphis blues guitarist, singer and songwriter. He was a member of the Mississippi Sheiks, worked with Bo Chatmon and his brothers, and co-wrote the blues standard, "Sitting on Top of the World". Walter Vinson is variously erroneously known as Walter Vincson and Walter Vincent, and sometimes recorded as Walter Jacobs, thus using his mother's maiden name. Vinson was born in Bolton, Mississippi, and grew up performing music in his locality. After the Sheiks' split up in 1933, Vinson moved around the United States, recording with a variety of musicians, including Leroy Carter and Mary Butler. He moved from Jackson, Mississippi to New Orleans and ultimately to Chicago, although by the mid 1940s his appearances in blues clubs had dwindled away. A lengthy break from music saw his re-appearance in 1960.
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