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The American School Of Paris Jazz Band - I'll Have Your Neck (Or Here's That Rainy Day) flac album

The American School Of Paris Jazz Band - I'll Have Your Neck (Or Here's That Rainy Day) flac album
  • Performer The American School Of Paris Jazz Band
  • Title I'll Have Your Neck (Or Here's That Rainy Day)
  • Date of release 1973
  • Other formats VQF MOD FLAC MP3 AC3 TTA VOC
  • Genre Jazz
  • Size MP3 1898 mb
  • Size FLAC 1994 mb
  • Rating: 4.3
  • Votes: 375

Here's That Rainy Day" is a popular song with music by Jimmy Van Heusen and lyrics by Johnny Burke that was published in 1953. It was introduced by Dolores Gray in the Broadway musical Carnival in Flanders.

At the Jazz Band Ball. At the Mambo Inn. Au Privave. I Guess I'll Have to Change My Plan. I Had Myself a True Love. I Love You. (I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons.

Here, the best clubs to enjoy i. It’s experiencing a century-old part of French culture. Jazz arrived in France during World War I, when James Reese Europe led an army-band tour across the country, kicking off a dance-hall craze. In the 1920s, black artists migrated to Paris, gathering in Montmartre. Dancer Josephine Baker dazzled clubgoers in Pigalle; Langston Hughes worked as a busboy nearby. The soundtrack was jazz. But it was around World War II that jazz became embedded in the French psyche. During the war, the Vichy government banned American music, but you could still hear jazz in Paris: Bands just translated titles into French.

After a long day sightseeing in Paris, what could be better than making the most of the city’s jazz legacy and chilling out to live music in the evening? Whether you want to kick back to some blues on an authentic Parisian barge, dance to 1920s jazz in ancient underground cellars, or sit back and enjoy big band swing on a terrace overlooking the Eiffel Tower, our guide has you covered. Jazz Club Etoile is a stunning jazz bar with an impressive reputation. Opening in 1975 at Le Méridien Etoile hotel with just one pianist; a flurry of jazz musician friends, such as Maxim Saury, Géo Daly and Marcel Zanini, soon joined. After this, American soloists began joining the bill, along with top French musicians.

Here are the best activities and things to do on a rainy da. Keep a cozy throw on hand to snuggle under, a big bowl of popcorn to dip into, and settle in to enjoy the show(s).

It was introduced first in France by African American soldiers. Julia Browne Founder and CEO of Walking The Spirit Tours – Black Paris & Beyond tells the stor. uring World War 1, segregated troops of black soldiers marched their lively music through 2,000 miles of tiny farm villages and big concert halls across France. Everywhere he led his 369th Harlem Infantry Regiment band and they created an exciting musical revolution. The story is still repeatedly told how the first time the French heard jazz they couldn’t fathom what kind of music it was, or how the instruments were making those unheard-of sounds. But the Nazi occupation of Paris forced the American jazzmen and entertainers back home and outlawed the playing of what they called ‘degenerate Negro music’ on the airwaves and in public places. The Parisian fans however, weren’t about to let go of their newfound passion.

Tracklist Hide Credits

A1 Hello Dolly
Written-By – Jerry Herman, Johnny Warrington
A2 Goin' Out Of My Head
Written-By – Bobby Weinstein, Maloney*
A3 Girl Talk
Written By – PipkinWritten-By – Maloney*
A4 Watermelon Man
Arranged By – Maloney*Written-By – Hancock*
B1 This Could Be The Start Of Something
Written-By – Warrington*, Allen*
B2 Lowdown
Written-By – Seraphine*, Cetera*
B3 Moanin'
Arranged By – Maloney*Written-By – White*
B4 Here's That Rainy Day
Arranged By – Maloney*Written-By – Van Heusen*
B5 Beginnings
Written-By – Lamm*

Credits

  • Bass – Bob Rodgers
  • Conductor, Alto Saxophone, Vocals – Tim Maloney
  • Drums – Bob MacLean
  • Flute, Guitar – Owen Grossman
  • Guitar – Mark Anderson
  • Piano – Lee Anderson (tracks: A4, B2, B3, B5), Richard Coburn (tracks: A1, A2, B1)
  • Piano, Conductor [Assistant] – Chris Chater (tracks: A3, B4)
  • Tenor Saxophone – Mike Sullivan
  • Trombone – Doug McCann
  • Trumpet – Brian Link

Notes

On cover, Lowdown is B2 and Moanin' B3.

A3 written by Neil Hefti (uncredited).