Red Nichols - Feelin No Pain (1927)  @bsgs98
Red Nichols - Feelin No Pain (1927)  @bsgs98
bsgs98 | Red Nichols - Feelin' No Pain (1927) @bsgs98 | Uploaded November 2012 | Updated October 2024, 10 hours ago.
Feelin' No Pain
(Fud Livingston)
Performed by Red Nichols and His Five Pennies
August 15, 1927
Brunswick 3623

Red Nichols, Leo McConville, Mannie Klein (trumpet)/ Miff Mole (trombone)/ Pee Wee Russell (clarinet)/ Fud Livingston (tenor sax)/ Adrian Rollini (bass sax, goofus)/ Lennie Hayton (piano)/ Dick McDonough (guitar)/ Vic Berton (drums)

Red Nichols and Miff Mole became a fixture in New York's jazz scene, recording frequently with a regular band that included Jimmy Dorsey, Artie Schutt and Vic Berton. On Brunswick, the band was christened Red Nichols and his Five Pennies, a name that stuck with Nichols throughout his recording career regardless of the actual number of musicians in the band. On Columbia the band was given a standard house band pseudonym The Charleston Chasers. On Columbia's budget Harmony label the band was The Arkansas Travellers. On the Perfect label they were The Red Heads. On the OKeh label they were Miff Mole and his Little Molers. When they recorded for Edison or Victor they were Red and Miff's Stompers.
Red Nichols - Feelin No Pain (1927)Joe Sullivan - Just Strolling (1935)Red Nichols & his Five Pennies - Boneyard Shuffle (1926)Harold Van Emburgh -  Where The Blue of the Night Meets the Gold of the Day (1931)Nick Lucas - The Only, Only One (1925)Georgie Price - California Here I Come (1924)Cotton Pickers -  Got to Cool My Doggies Now (1922)Paul Whiteman Orch. -  Alabamy Bound (1924)Anne Brown - My Mans Gone Now (1940)McKinneys Cotton Pickers - Never Swat A Fly (1930)Phil Hughes, High Hatters, vocal Tommy Stacks - Do You? Thats All I Want To Know (1928)Mississippi Music Makers -  It Goes Like This (1928)

Red Nichols - Feelin' No Pain (1927) @bsgs98

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER