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1939-1940

 
Album Review: 1939-1940

  • Artist: Billie Holiday
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1996
  • Total Time: 64:45
  • Type: Compilation (best of)
  • Genre: Vocal Music

Review

This volume of the Classics Chronological series places Billie Holiday's music in historical context to an unusual degree, as her recordings for the Columbia and Commodore labels have until now been reissued separately because of copyright and catalog ownership. The songs parceled together here were recorded at a crossroads in Holiday's career. The setting for the first -- in what would constitute great changes in her life and music -- was Barney Josephson's Café Society Downtown. Located at 2 Sheridan Square, this was Manhattan's first fully integrated nightclub. Its clientele included a number of politically progressive intellectuals and social activists. When she first appeared at the club on December 30, 1938, Billie Holiday was known as a spunky vocalist who presented lively renditions of pop and jazz standards in what was considered an unusual yet accessible style. It was in the year 1939 that Lady Day gradually began to create a subtler if at times more provocative persona. Part of this equation was profoundly political, and the singer's activism is most stunningly present in "Strange Fruit," a powerfully disturbing setting of a poem by Lewis Allen describing in careful detail the appearance of a lynching victim. The specter of a black body hanging from a poplar tree was and still is a powerful image that can and should haunt the listener long after the song has ended. The fact that Holiday chose to incorporate this piece into her live performances puts her in a much different category from her preexisting cabaret image of a cheerful young jazz vocalist. It is a fact that after she began presenting "Strange Fruit" to the public -- and singing at benefits for politically progressive causes -- Billie Holiday became an object of FBI surveillance. John Hammond, generally regarded as the man who discovered Holiday and helped develop her career, is known to have disliked "Strange Fruit" and was behind Columbia's refusal to record this controversial song. Fortunately for posterity, Billie, backed by an ensemble drawn from the house band at Café Society, was able to wax four of her all-time best records -- including "Strange Fruit" -- on April 20, 1939, for Milt Gabler's innovative Commodore label. On the other hand, even when heard without the benefit of these historical insights, the music included in this part of the chronology is simply some of the best jazz of its day, rendered by some of the greatest players on the scene. An overview of the trumpeters, for example, includes Frankie Newton, Hot Lips Page, Charlie Shavers, Buck Clayton, Roy Eldridge, and Harry "Sweets" Edison. Billie's first collaborations with a tenor sax player were with Kenneth Hollon during the early '30s. Hollon was on hand at Café Society and can be heard on the first three sessions presented here. Tab Smith sounds particularly fine on soprano sax during "Long Gone Blues." The band backing Billie on December 13, 1939, was essentially Count Basie's Orchestra with Joe Sullivan sitting in at the piano. And the most precious element of all is the presence of Lester Young. The combined personalities of Pres and Lady Day transformed every song into a collective ritual filled with magic and poetic grace. ~ arwulf arwulf, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Why Did I Always Depend on You? Paul Greenwood, Teddy McRae, R. Smith Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (2:35)
Long Gone Blues Billie Holiday Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:09)
Strange Fruit Lewis Allan Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:09)
Yesterdays Jerome Kern, Otto Harbach Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:21)
Fine and Mellow Billie Holiday Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:13)
I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues Harold Arlen, Ted Koehler Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (2:50)
Some Other Spring Arthur Herzog, Jr., Irene Kitchings Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:04)
Our Love Is Different Billie Holiday, S. White Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:17)
Them There Eyes Maceo Pinkard, Doris Tauber, William Tracey Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (2:53)
Swing, Brother, Swing Walter Bishop, Clarence Williams, Lewis Raymond Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (2:59)
Night and Day Cole Porter Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:01)
The Man I Love George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:08)
You're Just a No Account Sammy Cahn, Saul Chaplin Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:01)
You're a Lucky Guy Sammy Cahn, Saul Chaplin Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (2:48)
Ghost of Yesterday Arthur Herzog, Jr., Wesley Wilson, Irene Kitchings Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (2:41)
Body and Soul Johnny Green, Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Frank Eyton Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:02)
What Is This Going to Get Us? Arthur Herzog, Jr., Irene Kitchings Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (2:43)
Falling in Love Again Frederick Hollander, Sammy Lerner Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (2:53)
I'm Pulling Through Arthur Herzog, Jr., Irene Wilson, Irene Kitchings Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:13)
Tell Me More Billie Holiday Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:11)
Laughing at Life Charles F. Kenny, Bob Todd, Cornell Todd, Nick A. Kenny Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (2:57)
Time on My Hands Vincent Youmans, Mack Gordon, Harold Adamson Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (3:04)

Credits

Hot Lips Page (Trumpet), Bill Bowen (Sax (Alto)), Billie Holiday & Her Orchestra (Performer), Charlie Shavers (?), Stanley Payne (Sax (Tenor)), Anatol Schenker (Liner Notes), Harry "Sweets" Edison (Trumpet), Sonny White (Piano), Ken Kersey (Piano), Lester Young (Sax (Tenor)), Roy Eldridge (Trumpet), Joe Eldridge (Sax (Alto)), Kermit Scott (Sax (Tenor)), Lawrence Lucie (Guitar), Carl Frye (Sax (Alto)), Eddie Dougherty (Drums), Jimmy McLin (Guitar), Tab Smith (Sax (Alto)), Earle Warren (Sax (Alto)), Teddy Wilson (Piano), John Williams (String Bass), Walter Page (String Bass), Billie Holiday (Vocals), Jimmy Powell (Sax (Alto)), Freddie Green (Guitar), Joe Sullivan (Piano), Jo Jones (Drums), Hal West (Drums), Bernard Addison (Guitar), Frankie Newton (Trumpet), Tab Smith (Sax (Soprano)), Jack Washington (Sax (Alto)), Kenneth Hollon (Piano), Buck Clayton (Trumpet)
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Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more

 

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