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Erskine Hawkins albums featuring James Morrison

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| | Complete Erskine Hawkins: 1938-1939 CDs (2002)
$12.29 Recorded in New York, New York in 1938-39.
The Complete: 1938-1939 contains early big band sessions from trumpeter/bandleader Erskine Hawkins. Hawkins recorded excellent swing records for RCA into the '40s before later incorporating R&B as musical times changed, culminating with his ...
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| Tuxedo Junction CD (2008) (Import)
$11.89 Digitally remastered by Joe Lopes and Jay Newland (September 1991, BMG Recording Studios, New York).
During the Swing era, there were jazz-oriented orchestras and there were the more pop-oriented ones. Occasionally, there was a big band that combined the best of ...
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 Erskine Hawkins Lyrics and Songs
Popular or famous Erskine Hawkins songs: After Hours, Tippin' In, Good Dip, Uncle Bud, Cherry, Sweet Georgia Brown, Hawk's Boogie, Limehouse Blues. More music songs Gabriel's Heater, Song of the Wanderer, Gin Mill Special, Bicycle Bounce, Don't Cry Baby, Swing Out, Bear Mash Blues, Corn Bread. More music songs Blackout, I've Got a Right To Cry Lyrics, Five O'Clock Whistle Lyrics.
 Erskine Hawkins Biography
A gifted trumpeter, composer, and orchestra leader, Erskine Hawkins was one of the true luminaries of the swing era. A native Alabaman, Hawkins took over the 'Bama State Collegians jazz band and moved the unit to New York City in search of stardom. The newly minted Erskine Hawkins Orchestra began recording in the late '30s and by 1940, the "20th Century Gabriel" had a smash hit with "Tuxedo Junction," his most famous composition. While the band featured many of the era's best instrumentalists--including pianist Avery Parrish, trumpeter Dub Bascomb, and baritone sax player Haywood Henry--they downsized with the end of the swing era. Hawkins led smaller versions of his orchestra through the '80s until his death in 1993 of heart failure.
 Key Personnel
| Member Name | Worked With | | Erskine Hawkins | Ted Winn | | Julian Dash | Buck Clayton, Jimmy Rushing, Piney Brown, Jay Mcshann, Bobby Smith | | Avery Parrish | | Edward Sims | | Leemie Stanfield | | Marcellus Green | | William "Bill" Johnson | | William McLemore | | James Morrison | Lalo Schifrin, Gene Harris, Richard Hell, INXS, B.B. King, Martin Taylor, Ray Brown, Jason Mraz | | Robert Johnson | Robert Johnson, Bootsy's Rubber Band, Tom Hall, Harold Butler & Four Corners, Faith Hill, Martin Scorsese: Feel Like Going Home, Rissi Palmer, Steeleye Span, Tallis Scholars | | Charles Jones | Tommy Castro, Tony Gable, Amp Fiddler, Dirty Dozen Brass Band, Noel Gourdin, Justin James, Sir Charles Jones, Eddie Taylor, Phillip Walker | | Wilbur Bascomb | Hank Crawford, Andy Bey, Arthur Prysock, Big Mama Thornton, Duke Ellington & His World-Famous Orchestra, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Etta Jones, Grace Jones | | Heywood Henry | Big Maybelle, Charles Trio Brown | | Ace Harris | Sil Austin, Bobby Smith, Lucky Thompson | | Robert Range | Willie Bryant, Willis Jackson, Bobby Smith | | Paul Bascomb | Count Basie, Galt Macdermot | | Sam Lowe | Sundad | | Aaron Maxwell | | Jimmy Mitchele |
 Contemporaries
Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Dizzy Gillespie, Glenn Miller, Artie Shaw, Harry James, Roy Eldridge, Cabell "Cab" Calloway, Gene Krupa, Fletcher Henderson, Jimmie Lunceford, Charlie Barnet, Jay McShann, The Dorsey Brothers, Casa Loma Orchestra, Lucky Millinder, Bennie Moten, Chick Webb, Hot Lips Page
 Followers
Miles Davis, Charlie Parker, Ray Charles, Thelonious Monk, Charles Mingus, Sun Ra, Gil Evans
 Influences
Duke Ellington, Louis Armstrong, Benny Goodman, Earl Hines, Cabell "Cab" Calloway, King Oliver, Kid Ory, Jack Teagarden, Ben Pollack, Bennie Moten, Don Redman, Original Dixieland Jazz Band
 More Music Artists
Thomas Ades, Speed Theory
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1996 - 2009 CD Universe; Portions copyright 1948 - 2009 Muze Inc. For personal non-commercial use only. All rights reserved.
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