Harlem Stride Piano 1921-1929

Harlem Stride Piano 1921-1929

Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com
James P. Johnson was a key musician among those synthesizing a jazz piano style out of the elements of ragtime in the early decades of the century; he also played a part in the rise of the Charleston dance craze. In Harlem in the 1920s, he reigned supreme as the king of the rent-party pianists, and the creative exuberance of that world comes through as authentically as it possibly can in these ancient recordings. An informal teacher of Fats Waller and Duke Ellington, Johnson was an absolute master of the stride technique of alternating bass notes and chords in the left hand, building tremendous energy with shifting syncopations. "Charleston (South Carolina)" is heard in a piano roll version, while there are both solo piano and band versions of Johnson's masterpiece "Carolina Stomp." The sound quality improves as the decade progresses, and the CD concludes with a lively band number featuring Johnson and Waller both playing piano in a group that included King Oliver. --Stuart Broomer

Harlem Stride Piano 1921-1929,James P Johnson,Epm Musique,Jazz,Jazz Music

Jazz Music:

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  2. House of the Rising Sun [Original recording remastered] [Import]
  3. Introspection: Bonfá Solo Guitar
  4. Jackson in Your House/Message to Our Folks [Original recording remastered]
  5. Jazzlore: At the Frankfurt Jazz Festival, Vol. 30 [Live]
  6. Just for You [Import]
  7. King Mango
  8. Knight Music
  9. Lay-Up
  10. Live at the Columns [Live]

Jazz Music

jazz music

Jazz Music

Fire [Enhanced] [Extra tracks] [Import]

Orchestral Music of Meyer Kupferman, Vol. 12

Sirius

Music: 1-900 Bubba [CD-single]

Soundtrack

Misled Youth

Pebbles 8

Nostalgia

Music of South America

Music for the Theatre

Natural Thing [Original recording remastered] [Import]

New York, NY 20.12.02

No Bounce, No Party

He's Working It Out For You

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