| | Fats Waller Ain't Misbehavin' CD - Import Fats Waller Discography of CDs
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Our Price: $11.79 CDFor Sale Limited Availability
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Ain't Misbehavin' Music | List Price | $14.99 (You save $3.20) | | Category | Jazz Traditional Albums | | Label | Phantom | | CD Universe Part number | 7451866 | | Catalog number | 692329 | | Discs | 1 | | Release Date | Jun 05, 2007 |
Ain't Misbehavin' Review
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$18.99 Music was always a big part of my family. My dad’s folks were both classical musicians, and my mom sang up a storm in front of the kitchen sink nearly every night of my toddler-hood. There were four of us offspring; all of us played some kind of instrument. And my dad was THE best whistler I have ever heard, anywhere -- period.I was a little shy, though. I loved to play and sing, and was pretty good at it, but singing in front of people was terrifying! My friend Bub and I joke that we love performing, but wish we could recover our anonymity by putting a bag over our head after the show!Somehow I managed to muscle through my bashfulness and by my early 20’s (and I’m not sayin’ how long ago THAT was!) I was up on stage with a cover band, paying my way through the last couple years of college. I graduated with a degree in something-or-other, but my real interest was in continuing to SING!Without much experience, I had the audacity to make a living for several years in the mysterious and wonderful music business. I sang in wedding bands, I played and sang in hotel bars, I jobbed in for corporate gigs, and I emceed a Karaoke bar when no one knew what that was. Thanks to lessons with Evanston jazz pianist Jack Hubble (who has helped countless Chicago musicians get their start), I learned enough theory to play a few 7th and 9th chords on the piano and became a lounge lizard for a while. I also did a lot of weddings and church services, including one memorable musical skit at a “retreat” in Benet Lake, WI (thanks to Mike Graff)! I found my folk and bluegrass roots singing with the ever-irreverent “Hartland Express” for several years. All along, I wrote songs - good ones, bad ones, silly ones, and sad ones – and would perform them when I had the chance. Folks kept telling me that I should record them, and the idea skittered around the back of my mind. One Sunday I performed at Unity Northwest Church in Des Plaines, Illinois. There I met singer and voice teacher Meredith Colby, whose husband happens to be Derrick Procell (who has too many talents to label). She introduced us, I hired him to produce my record, and the journey of “Starstruck” began.My original plan for “Starstruck” was to do a homemade recording of a few tunes on a mini-deck in my living room, just to have a little something to sell at gigs. Hah! Derrick had much bigger ideas. His creativity, experience, energy and drive were exactly what I needed. There were many, many days when I wanted to put that bag over my head and run, but ...
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