Saturday, April 27, 2019


Face the Music 5.02.19:
James P. Johnson & Fats Waller 
Handful of Keys x 2

You’ve Got to be Modernistic
James P. Johnson 1930

Handful of Keys
Fats Waller 1929

What Is This Thing Called Love?
James P. Johnson 1930

Jailhouse Blues
Thomas Waller {player piano roll} 1924

Backwater Blues
James P. Johnson 1943

Numb Fumblin’
Fats Waller 1929

Arkansas Blues
James P. Johnson 1943

Viper’s Drag
Fats Waller 1934

Aunt Hagar’s Blues
James P. Johnson 1942-44

Sweet Savannah Sue
Fats Waller 1929

Mule Walk
James P. Johnson 1943

African Ripples
Fats Waller 1934

Jersey Sweet {aka Just Before Daybreak}
James P. Johnson 1942-44

Ain’t Misbehavin’
Fats Waller 1929

J.P.Boogie
James P. Johnson 1943

Alligator Crawl
Fats Waller 1934






Tuesday, April 23, 2019


Face the Music 4.25.19
Harlem Woogie

A Real Slow Drag
from Scott Joplin’s opera “Treemonisha”
played by Richard Zimmerman

Lenox Avenue Blues
Thomas Waller, pipe organ solo

Snowy Morning Blues
James P. Johnson, piano solo

Muscle Shoals Blues
Thomas Waller, piano solo

Birmingham Blues
Thomas Waller, piano solo

Harlem Strut
James P. Johnson, piano solo

Alligator Crawl
Fats Waller, piano solo

Sweet Sue
Mills Brothers

A Real Slow Drag
from Scott Joplin’s opera “Treemonisha”
played by the Max Morath Quartet

Hungry Blues
words by Langston Hughes
Anna Robinson with
James P. Johnson & his Orchestra

Squeeze Me
Bessie Smith

St. Louis Blues
Thomas Waller, pipe organ solo

Wild Cat Blues
Clarence Williams Blue Five
with Sidney Bechet

Black Bottom Dance
James P. Johnson, player piano roll

18th Street Strut
Fats Waller, player piano roll

Harlem Woogie
Anna Robinson with
James P. Johnson & his Orchestra


Biography of Anna Robinson, written for All Music Guide by arwulf arwulf

Most of what we know about Anna Robinson comes from Bass Lines, the autobiography of bassist Milt Hinton, who remembers her as "Ann Robinson." Hinton landed in New York during the late 1920s, and met her when she was living in a swank apartment on Sugar Hill, in a neighborhood largely populated by successful Afro-American entertainers. Robinson, who at the time was employed by the Cotton Club as a dancer in a group billed as the Three Rhythm Queens, appears to have been a strikingly outspoken and sexually liberated woman. Hinton recalls visiting her at home where she thought nothing of receiving visitors in the nude while smoking marijuana and singing along with phonograph records. She appears to have been a tough, joyous, anarchic libertine. Perhaps her way of life has something to do with the sketchiness of her available history. Information regarding exact dates is almost completely absent.

After the end of the run at the Cotton Club, her next regular gig involved appearing as a solo act at Monroe's Uptown House, where she danced less and focused more on comedic singing. According to Hinton, Robinson wrote original tunes and also had a way of composing "clever hip lyrics" which she set to established standard popular melodies. (This procedure would later become known during the '50s and '60s as vocalese, a style most famously demonstrated by King Pleasure, Eddie Jefferson, and Lambert, Hendricks & Ross.) Hinton specifically noticed how "Nat Cole and a couple of other stars recorded a few of her tunes" long afterwards, but that she did not receive credit for her compositions or innovative ideas.

Hinton also remembered "show business people from downtown" visiting Monroe's seeking "fresh material for their own acts." He insisted that Martha Raye actually based some of her routines on Robinson's material. Hinton also compared the two women saying that both were dancers with unusually wide mouths, who incorporated this physical characteristic into their comedic performances. Sometime during the late '30s, Robinson performed her own songs as a star in some sort of "New Faces" revue, about which nothing more has been discovered. She also made a couple of three-minute records on March 9, 1939 with Jimmy Johnson & His Orchestra, a band whose members included Henry Red Allen, J.C. Higginbotham, Gene Sedric, and Sid Catlett. The other vocalist on the date was Ruby Smith. Johnson's "Hungry Blues," a song from the short-lived pro-labor stage show De Organizer, had poignant anti-racist lyrics by Langston Hughes. Robinson's method of handling this politically outspoken opus was powerful, gutsy, and hauntingly bittersweet. "Harlem Woogie" preserved for all of time the rowdy, "party animal" aspect of Anna Robinson. She lashed out with guttural scatting and turned a hot record into a fairly twisted display of raucous, wild abandon. Aside from a second version of "Hungry Blues" recorded June 15, 1939, this is apparently all that survives of Anna Robinson on record.

Hinton claimed to have assembled a band and backed her up as she sang her original tunes on her own recording session "at one point in the mid-forties," but he wasn't aware of what became of those discs, and doubted that they had ever been issued to the public. The rest of her story is grim; Robinson became addicted to heroin, stopped performing but continued to sell her songs, caring not at all if she'd ever receive composer credits or royalties, but only looking for cash in order to finance her habit. Anna Robinson was murdered in an alley behind her Harlem apartment building in a homicide apparently linked to the underground narcotics trade. Someone cut her throat and left her there to die. The rest is silence.











Friday, April 12, 2019


Face the Music 4.18.19
Moon Tunes for Lindy

Dixie Moon
Fletcher Henderson & his Orchestra 1923

Chicken You Can Roost Behind the Moon
Frank Stokes 1927

Moon Going Down
Charley Patton 1930

Blood on the Moon
Hot Lips Page with Sidney Bechet 1945

Shine On, Harvest Moon
Count Basie & his Rhythm 1947

By the Light of the Silvery Moon
Fats Waller & his Rhythm
with the Deep River Boys 1942

There’s Honey on the Moon Tonight
Fats Waller & his Rhythm 1938

What a Little Moonlight Can Do
Billie Holiday 1935

Blue Moon
Billie Holiday 1952

Moon Over Cuba
Duke Ellington & his Famous Orchestra 1941

Moonglow
Barney Bigard Quartet 1944

Moon Mist
Duke Ellington & his Famous Orchestra 1942

Devil in the Moon
Art Tatum 1935

I Wished on the Moon
Coleman Hawkins 1957

It’s Only a Paper Moon
John Kirby Sextet 1941

It’s Only a Paper Moon
Lester Young 1946

It’s Only a Paper Moon
Eddie Jefferson 1959

How High the Moon
Art Tatum 1951


Friday, April 5, 2019


Face the Music 4.11.19: One Word Wonders

Complainin’
Luckey Roberts 1958

Solace
Scott Joplin 1909/William Albright 1989

Passionette
Willie the Lion Smith 1939

Jingles
James P. Johnson 1930

Trenches
Turner Parrish 1933

Angry
Dud Meecam’s Wolverines 1925

Snookum
Halfway House Orchestra 1926

Stowaway
Earl Hines 1928

Zonky
Mary Lou Williams 1940

Tomboy
Red Norvo’s Wing Septet 1934

Melancholy
Johnny Dodds & his Chicago Boys 1938

Lafayette
Hot Lips Page & his Band 1940

Voodte
Coleman Hawkins & his Orchestra 1943

Tonk
Duke Ellington & Billy Strayhorn piano four hands 1946

Thelonious
Thelonious Monk Quintet 1947

Wow
Lennie Tristano Sextet 1949