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THE BOSWELL
SISTERS
Shout Sisters Shout! 1925-34
Jazz Legends
Jaz 2007
Ella Fitzgerald, The Beach Boys and Manhattan Transfer are just three
of the monumentally popular singers who directly or by osmosis were influenced
by The Boswell Sisters. Unfortunately, the three singing sisters from
New Orleans are little remembered today.
But if the Boswells hadn't helped establish a market for close harmony
singing with a rhythmic thrust more than 70 years ago -- along with other
pioneers like the Mills Brothers -- so-called jazz and later R&B and
pop-rock vocalizing wouldn't have developed the way it did.
Martha (1908-1958), who plays piano on many of these sides, Vet, shortened
from Helvetia (1909-1988), and Connie, later Connee (1907-1976), Boswell
quickly went from performing in vaudeville houses to recording with some
of the top studio jazzmen of the day. Although "Nights When I Am
Lonely", recorded in 1925 with only Martha on piano sounds more like
a 19th century parlor song, the other 20 numbers on the CD, recorded between
1930 to 1934 are Hot Jazz without dispute.
The Boswells not only showed off tandem harmonies, that would influence
later sister acts like The Andrews Sisters, not to mention groups from
the Four Freshmen to the Beach Boys, but excelled in finessing tunes with
frequent tempo, key and mood changes. That style presaged later bop vocal
groups such as Lambert, Hendricks & Ross, the model for the Manhattan
Transfer. Furthermore Connie's scatting, in particular, was the foundation
on which Fitzgerald built her mature style.
While some performances are pretty show-bizzy and contain touches of minstrelsy,
the three's sophisticated vocalizing allows them to trade breaks with
hot jazzers on other tunes. For instance, on "Hand Me Down My Walkin'
Cane" Connee scats along with Joe Venuti's fiddle, while the tempo
changing "Roll On, Mississippi, Roll On", features solos by
clarinetist Jimmy Dorsey and guitarist Eddie Lang. "We've Got To
Put That Sun Back In The Sky" is contemporary Dixieland with contributions
from trumpeter Bunny Berigan, Dorsey on clarinet and his brother Tommy
on trombone. "There'll Be Some Changes Made" is a high-toned
blues sung by Connie, with raucous plunger contributions from trumpeter
Manny Klein.
By this time the three could also be rhythmically exciting almost by themselves
as they demonstrate on "Crazy People", backed only by Dick McDonough's
guitar and Artie Bernstein's bass. Besides harmonizing with words, the
sisters also play so-called mouth trumpets, imitating swinging horn parts.
The act broke up in 1936 though, with only the renamed Connee Boswell
going on to be a band singer during the Swing Era and afterwards.
The history of improvised music is rife with rediscoveries and reevaluations.
The Boswell Sisters are innovators who should be better known.
-- Ken Waxman
Track Listing: 1. Nights When I Am Lonely 2. Heebies Jeebies 3. When I
Take My Sugar To Tea 4. Roll On, Mississippi, Roll On 5. Shout, Sister,
Shout 6. Shine On, Harvest Moon 7. River Stay 'Way From My Door 8.Was
That The Human Thing To Do 9. We've Got To Put That Sun Back In The Sky
10. There'll Be Some Changes Made 11. If It Ain't Love 12. Hand Me Down
My Walkin' Cane 13. Old Yazoo 14. We Just Couldn't Say Goodbye 15. Among
The Sheltering Palms 16. Minnie The Moocher's Wedding Day 17. Crazy People
18. Forty-Second Street 19. Shuffle Off To Buffalo 20. If I Had A Million
Dollars 21. Dinah
Personnel: Manny Klein or Jack Purvis or Bunny Berigan (trumpet); Tommy
Dorsey (trombone); Jimmy Dorsey (clarinet or alto saxophone); Babe Russin
or Larry Binyon (tenor saxophone); Martha Boswell or Jacques Lubowski
or Arthur Schutt or Sammy Prager or Fulton McGrath (piano); Dick McDonough
or Carl Kress or Bobby Sherwood or Eddie Lang (guitar); Joe Venuti or
Harry Hoffman (violin); Artie Bernstein or Joe Tarto (bass); Stan King
or Chauncey Morehouse (drums); Morehouse (vibes); Jimmie Greer's Orchestra
; Connie, Martha and Vet Boswell (vocals)
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