Jimmie Noones Apex Club Orch - Sweet Lorraine (1928)  @bsgs98
Jimmie Noones Apex Club Orch - Sweet Lorraine (1928)  @bsgs98
bsgs98 | Jimmie Noone's Apex Club Orch - Sweet Lorraine (1928) @bsgs98 | Uploaded February 2013 | Updated October 2024, 12 hours ago.
Sweet Lorraine
Words by Mitchell Parish, music by Cliff Burwell
Jimmie Noone's Apex Club Orchestra
Recorded August 23, 1928
Brunswick 80023

This reissue is from the second master of the original Vocalion 1207 recorded in 1928.

Jimmie Noone (clarinet), Joe Poston (alto sax), Earl Hines (piano), Buddy Scott (banjo), Lawson Buford (tuba), Johnny Wells (drums)

Jimmie Noone (1895-1944), one of numerous students of Lorenzo Tio, turned to the clarinet after first playing guitar. In the years immediately prior to World War I he played in bands led by notable New Orleans musicians such as Freddie Keppard and Buddy Petit. In 1918 he worked with King Oliver in Chicago and two years later was with Doc Cooke, remaining there for five years. In 1926 Noone took his own band into Chicago's Apex Club, thus beginning a remarkable period of sustained creativity during which he became the idol of countless up-and-coming young musicians, black and white, clarinetists and all. During part of its existence, the Apex Club band included Earl 'Fatha' Hines. Noone had made records during his stints with Oliver and Cooke, but now embarked on another series of recordings, including his theme, 'Sweet Lorraine', which remain classics of their kind.

In the early 40s he moved to Los Angeles where he worked with Kid Ory, led his own band and appeared as a member of the New Orleans All Stars on Orson Welles' weekly radio show, as well as playing with the Capitol Jazzmen. Noone appeared well poised to capitalize upon the upsurge of interest in traditional music heralded by the revival movement, but he died suddenly in April 1944. One of the most important of the New Orleans clarinetists, he had a remarkable technique and exercised full control of his instrument. Playing with a deep appreciation of the blues, his records stand as significant milestones in the history of jazz.

Source: The Encyclopedia of Popular Music by Colin Larkin.
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Jimmie Noone's Apex Club Orch - Sweet Lorraine (1928) @bsgs98

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