If I Could Be With You (One Hour Tonight) - Creamer, Henry
Shine - Brown, Lew
When It's Sleepy Time Down South - Muse, Clarence
Dixie Rhythm
Body and Soul - Eyton, Frank
Tiger Rag - Costa, Harry Da
Central Avenue Breakdown - Hampton, Lionel
T-Bone Blues - Hite, Les
Jump for Joy [Excerpts] - Ellington, Duke
Blues on Central Avenue - Turner, Joe [1]
Benny's Bugle - Goodman, Benny
Flying Home - Goodman, Benny
Mean Old World - Walker, T-Bone
Jumpin' in the Groove
Track Listings (23) - Disc #2
Straighten up and Fly Right - Cole, Nat King
The Man I Love - Gershwin, George
Body and Soul - Eyton, Frank
I Wonder - Gant, Cecil
The Honeydripper Pts. 1 & 2
Swingin' the Boogie - Brooks, Hadda
That's My Desire - Loveday, Carroll
Harlem Nocturne - Hagen, Earle
Driftin' Blues - Brown, Charles [1]
Tutti Frutti - Gaillard, Slim
Laguna - Gaillard
Soothe Me
Don't Let the Sun Catch You Cryin'
These Foolish Things - Link, Harry
R.M. Blues - Milton, Roy
Groovin' High - Gillespie, Dizzy
Bugle Call Rag - Meyers, Billy
Ornithology - Harris, Benny [Trum
A Night in Tunisia - Gillespie, Dizzy
Jump Call - Carter, Benny [1]
Bedspread
Pipe Dream - Mingus, Charles
Smooth Sailing - Thompson, Lucky
Track Listings (23) - Disc #3
Dialated Pupils - McGhee, Howard
Up in Dodo's Room - McGhee, Howard
Crusin' With Cab - Wilson, Gerald
Dissonance in Blues - Wilson, Gerald
Mischievous Lady - Gordon, Dexter
The Chase - Gordon, Dexter
Chromatic Aberration - Gordon, Dexter
Bikini - Gordon, Dexter
I Thought About You - Mercer, Johnny
Fine Brown Frame - Cartiero, Guadalupe
Stormy Monday - Walker, T-Bone
Red Top - Hampton, Lionel
Ain't Nobody's Business - Grainger, Porter
Big Fine Girl - Witherspoon, Jimmy
Blues in Teddy's Flat
Teardrop Blues - Liggins, Jimmy
Hop, Skip and Jump - Milton, Roy
So Tired - Little, George A.
It's April
Collette
Blues After Hours - Parrish, Avery
Mingus Fingers - Mingus, Charles
These Foolish Things - Link, Harry
Track Listings (21) - Disc #4
Sippin' With Cisco
Gassin' the Wig - Ross
Little Wig
Double Crossing Blues - Otis, Johnny
Pink Champagne - Liggins, Joe
Move - Best, Denzil
Please Send Me Someone to Love - Mayfield, Percy
Black Night - Brown, Charles [1]
Money Blues - Wray, Link
Deacon's Hop - McNeely, Big Jay
Sweet and Lovely - Arnheim, Gus
Farmer's Market - Farmer, Art
Lover Man - Davis, Jimmy [4]
East of the Sun [Featuring Wardell Gray]
Thrust [Featuring Wardell Gray]
3-D - McNeely, Big Jay
Nervous Man, Nervous - Davis, Dwight
Too Marvelous for Words - Mercer, Johnny
Lover Man - Davis, Jimmy [4]
The Champ - Gillespie, Dizzy
De Silva Wig
Throughout the history of jazz, mythical places like New Orleans's Storyville, Chicago's South Side, Kansas City's Tenderloin district, and New York's Harlem and 52nd Street were celebrated as the legendary hotspots. Thank... more »fully, this impressive four-CD, 91-track collection featuring Nat "King" Cole, Louis Armstrong, and Benny Carter to name a few, puts Los Angeles's famous African-American enclave, Central Avenue, on the historical map and offers the listener a zoot-suited, jitterbugged jaunt through Club Alabam, The Downbeat, and other jumpin' joints where Hollywood stars rubbed shoulders with hep cats under a pulsating Pacific sky. The set covers an important period in the development of African-American music, from the conclusion of World War I to the birth of rock & roll: from the early New Orleans bouncy brass-band sounds of "Get Out of Here" by Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band and the Spanish-tinged, habanera syncopation on "Mamanita," courtesy of the pioneering pianist/composer Jelly Roll Morton to Lionel Hampton's boogie-woogie anthem "Flying Home" and the killer keyboard calisthenics on Art Tatum's "Tiger Rag." The Charlie Parker Septet's "Ornithology" blew into town on the wings of bebop innovation and hypnotized local up-and-comers like bassist Charles Mingus--under the moniker of Baron Mingus & His Octet on a rare side called "Bedspread"--and tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon's raw-boned tone on "Chromatic Aberration," which previewed John Coltrane's sheets of sound. Miles Davis's cool indigo-impressionism radiance on "Up in Dodo's Room," performed by the Howard McGhee Sextet, contrasts with the harmonic heights reached by the Gerald Wilson Orchestra's reading of "Groovin' High." There is a remarkable fluidity of transition from blues to R&B, as heard in the western wails on "Blues on Central Avenue" by Joe Turner with the Freddie Slack Trio, Nellie Lutcher's hip-bopping, tasty, and teasing "Fine Brown Frame" and the Texas-bred, guitar twang of T-Bone Walker's "Call It Stormy Monday," all of which highlight the sepia-toned, soulful syncretism that formed the bedrock of modern music and the marvelous black neighborhood that provided the foundation for it. --Eugene Holley Jr.« less
Throughout the history of jazz, mythical places like New Orleans's Storyville, Chicago's South Side, Kansas City's Tenderloin district, and New York's Harlem and 52nd Street were celebrated as the legendary hotspots. Thankfully, this impressive four-CD, 91-track collection featuring Nat "King" Cole, Louis Armstrong, and Benny Carter to name a few, puts Los Angeles's famous African-American enclave, Central Avenue, on the historical map and offers the listener a zoot-suited, jitterbugged jaunt through Club Alabam, The Downbeat, and other jumpin' joints where Hollywood stars rubbed shoulders with hep cats under a pulsating Pacific sky. The set covers an important period in the development of African-American music, from the conclusion of World War I to the birth of rock & roll: from the early New Orleans bouncy brass-band sounds of "Get Out of Here" by Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band and the Spanish-tinged, habanera syncopation on "Mamanita," courtesy of the pioneering pianist/composer Jelly Roll Morton to Lionel Hampton's boogie-woogie anthem "Flying Home" and the killer keyboard calisthenics on Art Tatum's "Tiger Rag." The Charlie Parker Septet's "Ornithology" blew into town on the wings of bebop innovation and hypnotized local up-and-comers like bassist Charles Mingus--under the moniker of Baron Mingus & His Octet on a rare side called "Bedspread"--and tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon's raw-boned tone on "Chromatic Aberration," which previewed John Coltrane's sheets of sound. Miles Davis's cool indigo-impressionism radiance on "Up in Dodo's Room," performed by the Howard McGhee Sextet, contrasts with the harmonic heights reached by the Gerald Wilson Orchestra's reading of "Groovin' High." There is a remarkable fluidity of transition from blues to R&B, as heard in the western wails on "Blues on Central Avenue" by Joe Turner with the Freddie Slack Trio, Nellie Lutcher's hip-bopping, tasty, and teasing "Fine Brown Frame" and the Texas-bred, guitar twang of T-Bone Walker's "Call It Stormy Monday," all of which highlight the sepia-toned, soulful syncretism that formed the bedrock of modern music and the marvelous black neighborhood that provided the foundation for it. --Eugene Holley Jr.
CD Reviews
Outstanding, historical jazz collection!
David E. Rogers | Los Angeles, CA USA | 09/07/2000
(5 out of 5 stars)
"Central Avenue Sounds is more than a compendium of Los Angeles-based jazz from the 1920s-1960s. It's an historical documentation of an age and cultural environment that is sadly long gone and nearly forgotten. Although it stands on its own as an outstanding collection, buy this set with the book of the same title--"Central Avenue Sounds" edited by Clora Bryant (available here at Amazon)--for a multimedia journey back to a unique time and place. Highest recommendations!"
Life in the Music
C. C. Koczka | Middletown, NY USA | 08/11/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"I just heard this set and loved it. Before the days of electronic modulation and ripping these artists put emotional soul into their art. Much of this set can qualify as a worthy soundtrack for life. To get the most played it on a system that can present the full dynamic range and breath of the artists efforts. Cheers."