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The Genius Of The Electric Guitar,Charlie Christian
    • The Genius Of The Electric Guitar
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    • Good Enough To Keep (Air Mail Special)
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    • I Surrender, Dear
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    • The Sheik Of Araby

songs

  • Song order /frag/AlbumSongListBlock/?SortBy=title&AlbumId=ddfe0800-0100-11db-89ca-0019b92a3933&blockName=AlbumSongListBlock&id=_albumSongs&PageIndex=&EndMarker=&StartMarker=&
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    • Flying Home
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    • Rose Room
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    • Stardust
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    • Memories Of You
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    • Soft Winds
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    • Seven Come Eleven
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    • Shivers
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    • AC/DC Current
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    • I'm Confessin' (That I Love You)
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    • Till Tom Special
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    • Gone With What Wind
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    • The Sheik Of Araby
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    • Untitled Tune
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    • Poor Butterfly
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    • I Surrender, Dear
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    • Boy Meets Goy (Grand Slam)
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    • These Foolish Things
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    • Flying Home
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    • Memories Of You
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    • Soft Winds
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    • Shivers
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    • Gone With What Wind
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    • The Sheik Of Araby
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    • I Surrender, Dear
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    • Boy Meets Goy (Grand Slam)
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    • These Foolish Things
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    • Six Appeal (My Daddy Rocks Me)
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    • Good Enough To Keep (Air Mail Special)
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    • Ad Lib Blues
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    • Wholly Cats
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    • Charlie's Dream
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    • I Never Knew
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    • Lester's Dream
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    • Wholly Cats
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    • Wholly Cats
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    • Royal Garden Blues
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    • As Long As I Live
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    • Benny's Bugle
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    • Gilly
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    • Six Appeal (My Daddy Rocks Me)
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    • Six Appeal (My Daddy Rocks Me)
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    • Six Appeal (My Daddy Rocks Me)
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    • Good Enough To Keep (Air Mail Special)
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    • Good Enough To Keep (Air Mail Special)
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    • Wholly Cats
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    • Wholly Cats
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    • Wholly Cats
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    • Royal Garden Blues
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    • Royal Garden Blues
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    • As Long As I Live
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    • Gilly
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    • Gilly
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • I Can't Give You Anything But Love
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • On The Alamo
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    • I Found A New Baby
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    • Gone With What Draft
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    • A Smo-o-o-oth One
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    • Air Mail Special (Good Enough To Keep)
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • I Can't Give You Anything But Love
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    • I Can't Give You Anything But Love
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • I Found A New Baby
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    • Gone With What Draft
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    • Gone With What Draft
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    • A Smo-o-o-oth One
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    • A Smo-o-o-oth One
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    • Air Mail Special (Good Enough To Keep)
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    • All Star Strut
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    • Honeysuckle Rose
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    • Li'l Boy Love
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    • Solo Flight
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    • All Star Strut
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    • Li'l Boy Love
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    • Solo Flight
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    • Untitled Tune
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    • Poor Butterfly
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    • I Surrender, Dear
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    • I Surrender, Dear
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    • Six Appeal (My Daddy Rocks Me)
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    • Six Appeal (My Daddy Rocks Me)
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    • These Foolish Things
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    • Tune Up & Blues
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    • Wholly Cats
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • Breakfast Feud
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    • Gilly
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    • All Star Strut
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    • Benny's Bugle
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    • Benny's Bugle

album review

OK, admittedly, just by looking at the way this set is presented, the way the music is assembled, and the manner in which it is sequenced, it's obvious who this set is supposed to appeal to: jazz freaks and guitar nerds who think that either Benny Goodman was the be all and end all of swing; or that Charlie Christian was god's gift to the electric guitar in the same way that Wes Montgomery was; or both. And no doubt it will appeal to members of all three camps, but that shouldn't prevent the rest of music lovers and wanna be swing aficionados from enjoying it too, right? First, a few myths get cleared up by the very existence of this box, which goes far beyond the original Columbia compilations with the same name. For starters, Columbia goes a long way to setting the record straight that Christian was not the first electric guitarist or the first jazz guitarist or the first electric guitarist in jazz. Thank goodness. For another, they concentrate on only one thing here: documenting Christian's seminal tenure with Benny Goodman's various bands from 1939-1941. While in essence, that's all there really is, various dodgy compilations have been made advertising Christian playing with Lester Young or Lionel Hampton. It's true that he did, but only in the context of the Goodman band. There are 98 tracks spread over four CDs, all of which have been remastered from original sources -- the sound is nothing short of breathtaking. These are some of the best-engineered CDs ever to be produced. The tracks include the well-known master takes, all 70 of them, as well as 17 never before released alternates and 28 cuts that have only been issued on European or Japanese compilations. What all of this compiling proves is one thing certainly: That all single-disc collections cannot begin to do justice to the legend and methyl that surrounds Christian's genius. The single-disc ventures are merely shadows, not even photographs or snaps of the massive wealth of musicality that this collaboration between these two men, and the various bands and orchestras they were involved in. Chronologically laid out, the notes are exhaustive enough to include take numbers for the guitar nerds to drool over and jazz historians to argue about. For the rest of us, we get to delve deep into the Goodman band's treasure trove with "Flying Home," "Rose Room," "Memories of You," "AC-DC Current" -- with a killer Lionel Hampton vibes solo, as well as Christian's fat-shaped chords that sound downright funky -- "Gone With What Wind," and more masters with those slippery solos and lilting clarinets. Plus, we get nine alternate takes just on disc one. Disc two brings Lester Young and Buck Clayton to the Goodman sextet, as well as players like Georgie Auld and Cootie Williams -- pre-Ellington. These sides in 1940 are the most cooking, as Christian has to actually get in and mix it up with the horns. Among the most noteworthy are "Ad Lib Blues," "Lester's Dream," "Wholly Cats," and "Royal Garden Blues." The alternates are three takes of "Six Appeal (My Daddy Rocks Me)" and two of "Good Enough To Keep (Air Mail Special)," which must have been hell to pick between for the original issues -- they all smoke. Disc three puts the Goodman sextet in a new funkier groove, with Count Basie making the scene briefly with Williams and Auld. The trading of fours between Basie and Christian on "Breakfast Feud" -- of which there are even steamier alternate takes -- is one of the highlights of either's career, and the only place on record where Goodman himself gets lost in the beat. Finally, disc four presents the Goodman Orchestra, Metronome All-Star Review, and his own big band. The sheer talent on these sides is dizzying to even list: Gene Krupa, Harry James, Jack Teagarden, Benny Carter, Pete Mondello, Fletcher Henderson, and on. Christian shines on all of these sides. Backed by a rhythm guitarist (acoustic), and a big rhythm section, his solos are wracked with fluttering arpeggios that seem to meander before sideswiping the listener with their on-target incision into the melodic framework of the tune and their absolutely in-the-pocket sense of time. Along with alternate takes, there are sextet false starts and breakdowns included, as well as the Goodman Orchestra's rehearsals. Whew! Four is easily the most exhausting disc of the set to listen through, but it also has the most astonishing music. This set is an archivist's dream, to be sure, but it nonetheless offers the rest of listeners plenty as well: a complete education in Goodman, as well as Christian and the eras, and to be sure, the most potent music outside the Ellington band from those years. In addition, Peter Broadbent's encyclopedic biographical notes and Loren Schoenberg' s obsessively (yes, that's a good thing) musical notes make for an indispensable package both historically and aesthetically. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

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