The Ultimate Jazz Archive Vol.66 – Meade Lux Lewis [1940-1944] [2005]
The Ultimate Jazz Archive Vol.66 – Meade Lux Lewis [1940-1944] [2005]
01.Honky Tonk Train Blues 02.Bass On Top 03.Six Wheel Chaser 04.Tell Your Story 05.Tell Your Story No. 2 06.Rising Tide Blues 07.Doll House Boogie 08.Denapas Parade 09.The Boogie Tidal 10.Randini’s Boogie 11.Lux’s Boogie 12.Yancey’s Pride 13.Glendale Glide 14.Yancey Special 15.Blues Whistle 16.Chicago Flyer
One of the three great boogie-woogie pianists (along with Albert Ammons and Pete Johnson) whose appearance at John Hammond's 1938 Spirituals to Swing concert helped start the boogie-woogie craze, Meade "Lux" Lewis was a powerful if somewhat limited player. He played regularly in Chicago in the late '20s and his one solo record of the time, "Honky Tonk Train Blues" (1927), was considered a classic. However, other than a few sides backing little-known blues singers, Lewis gained little extra work and slipped into obscurity. John Hammond heard Lewis' record in 1935 and, after a search, found Lewis washing cars for a living in Chicago. Soon, Lewis was back on records and after the 1938, concert he was able to work steadily, sometimes in duets or trios with Ammons and Johnson. He became the first jazz pianist to double on celeste (starting in 1936) and was featured on that instrument on a Blue Note quartet date with Edmond Hall and Charlie Christian; he also played harpsichord on a few records in 1941. After the boogie-woogie craze ended, Lewis continued working in Chicago and California, recording as late as 1962, although by then he was pretty much forgotten. Lewis led sessions through the years that have come out on MCA, Victor, Blue Note, Solo Art, Euphonic, Stinson, Atlantic, Storyville, Verve, Tops, ABC-Paramount, Riverside, and Philips. --- Scott Yanow, Rovi
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