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Episode #17- Good Records: “Get Your Mind Out Of The Gutter”: Pre-War Hokum Blues and Jazz 78s.
Manage episode 287114599 series 2819064
Today’s show features some of my favorite 78s from my collection. I thought it would be fun to feature hokum blues and jazz records from the pre-war era. A subcategory of the blues, hokum was popular in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Hokum songs were often uptempo, funny, and on the raw to often raunchy side. The origins of this style of blues can be traced back to the vaudeville and minstrel show era of the late 19th Century, where songs of this type were performed with a touch of innuendo and comedy. This genre became wildly popular with adult audiences during the 20s and 30s. In the early days, common performers surfaced in jug bands that performed in the beer joints and brothels found up and down Beale Street, in Memphis, Tennessee.
Jug bands like the Memphis Jug Band and Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers played good-time, upbeat music on assorted instruments like washboards, fiddles, triangles, harmonicas, guitars and banjos, all anchored by bass notes of an empty jug. Later on, duets featuring the piano and guitar would become popular as well. I’ve always found these types of records entertaining and I thought it would make for a good show to combine these types of hokum records along with some early pre-war jazz records and a few piano stomps thrown in for good measure.
Please subscribe to the show if you haven't done so already and share with family and friends. Also, go take a visit to the show's new website olddingyjukebox.com and have a look around. Thanks for listening and I hope you enjoy the show. “Get Your Mind Out The Gutter”: Pre-War Hokum Blues and Jazz 78s.
Donate to the podcast: https://paypal.me/christiangallo1?locale.x=en_US
Website: https://www.olddingyjukebox.com/home
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/olddingyjukeboxpodcast
Instagram: @olddingyjukeboxpodcast
E-mail: olddingyjukebox@gmail.com
- Clarence Williams’ Jug Band. “You Ain’t Too Old” 1933
- Lil Johnson “My Stove’s In Good Condition” 1936
- Jelly Roll Morton “Mr. Jelly Lord” 1924
- Hokum Boys “Keep Your Mind On It” 1936
- Duke Ellington and His Cotton Club Orchestra “When A Black Man’s Blue” 1931
- Sweet Violet Boys “Sweet Violets” 1936
- Sidney “Pops” Bechet with Noble Sissle’s Swingers “Viper Mad” 1938
- Eddie Lang (Blind Willie Dunn) and Lonnie Johnson 1929
- Django Reinhardt Hot Club of France “Paramount Stomp” 1937
- Pigmeat Pete and Catjuice Charlie “Get Your Mind Out The Gutter” 1929
- Lonnie Johnson and Clarence Williams “Wipe It Off” 1930
- Fats Waller “Serenade For A Wealthy Widow” 1934
- Georgia Tom and Hannah May “What’s That I Smell?” 1934
- Red Nichols and His Five Pennies “Boneyard Shuffle” 1927
- Stuff Smith and
http://olddingyjukebox.com
https://www.instagram.com/olddingyjukeboxpodcast/
https://www.youtube.com/@theolddingyjukeboxpodcast/featured
https://www.philvillerecords.com/
33 episoder
Manage episode 287114599 series 2819064
Today’s show features some of my favorite 78s from my collection. I thought it would be fun to feature hokum blues and jazz records from the pre-war era. A subcategory of the blues, hokum was popular in the late 1920s and early 1930s. Hokum songs were often uptempo, funny, and on the raw to often raunchy side. The origins of this style of blues can be traced back to the vaudeville and minstrel show era of the late 19th Century, where songs of this type were performed with a touch of innuendo and comedy. This genre became wildly popular with adult audiences during the 20s and 30s. In the early days, common performers surfaced in jug bands that performed in the beer joints and brothels found up and down Beale Street, in Memphis, Tennessee.
Jug bands like the Memphis Jug Band and Gus Cannon's Jug Stompers played good-time, upbeat music on assorted instruments like washboards, fiddles, triangles, harmonicas, guitars and banjos, all anchored by bass notes of an empty jug. Later on, duets featuring the piano and guitar would become popular as well. I’ve always found these types of records entertaining and I thought it would make for a good show to combine these types of hokum records along with some early pre-war jazz records and a few piano stomps thrown in for good measure.
Please subscribe to the show if you haven't done so already and share with family and friends. Also, go take a visit to the show's new website olddingyjukebox.com and have a look around. Thanks for listening and I hope you enjoy the show. “Get Your Mind Out The Gutter”: Pre-War Hokum Blues and Jazz 78s.
Donate to the podcast: https://paypal.me/christiangallo1?locale.x=en_US
Website: https://www.olddingyjukebox.com/home
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/olddingyjukeboxpodcast
Instagram: @olddingyjukeboxpodcast
E-mail: olddingyjukebox@gmail.com
- Clarence Williams’ Jug Band. “You Ain’t Too Old” 1933
- Lil Johnson “My Stove’s In Good Condition” 1936
- Jelly Roll Morton “Mr. Jelly Lord” 1924
- Hokum Boys “Keep Your Mind On It” 1936
- Duke Ellington and His Cotton Club Orchestra “When A Black Man’s Blue” 1931
- Sweet Violet Boys “Sweet Violets” 1936
- Sidney “Pops” Bechet with Noble Sissle’s Swingers “Viper Mad” 1938
- Eddie Lang (Blind Willie Dunn) and Lonnie Johnson 1929
- Django Reinhardt Hot Club of France “Paramount Stomp” 1937
- Pigmeat Pete and Catjuice Charlie “Get Your Mind Out The Gutter” 1929
- Lonnie Johnson and Clarence Williams “Wipe It Off” 1930
- Fats Waller “Serenade For A Wealthy Widow” 1934
- Georgia Tom and Hannah May “What’s That I Smell?” 1934
- Red Nichols and His Five Pennies “Boneyard Shuffle” 1927
- Stuff Smith and
http://olddingyjukebox.com
https://www.instagram.com/olddingyjukeboxpodcast/
https://www.youtube.com/@theolddingyjukeboxpodcast/featured
https://www.philvillerecords.com/
33 episoder
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