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Tommy Dorsey and His Clambake Seven: The Music Goes Round and Round.


Tommy Dorsey and His Clambake Seven: The Music Goes Round and Round (BMG/Bluebird 3140-2-RB). Like Glenn Miller Noun 1. Glenn Miller - United States bandleader of a popular big band (1909-1944)
Alton Glenn Miller, Miller
, Tommy Dorsey sentimentalized and watered down the jazz elements in his style. But his technique on the trombone trombone [Ital.,=large trumpet], brass wind musical instrument of cylindrical bore, twice bent on itself, having a sliding section that lengthens or shortens it and thus regulates the pitch. The descendant of the sackbut, it was developed in the 15th cent.  was superlative--"He almost makes it sound like a violin," one jazz musician said to me at the time--and he had some very fine sidemen: Bud Freeman Lawrence "Bud" Freeman (April 13, 1906 in Chicago, Illinois - March 15, 1991 in Chicago) was a U.S. jazz musician, known mainly for playing the tenor saxophone, but also able at the clarinet. , Max Kaminsky, and the greatest of all white jazz drummers, Dave Tough. The Clambake Seven was a small group out of his big ban, rooted in the jazz tradition, and they made real music out of the pop tunes of the late 1930s. This record is not going to crowd the titans off the shelf, but it does bring back a now forgotten tune, "The Music Goes Round," which moved out of 52nd Street, NYC NYC
abbr.
New York City


NYC New York City
, and helped introduce the swing era by its slightly zany push and lyrics.
COPYRIGHT 1992 National Review, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1992, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:De Toledano, Ralph
Publication:National Review
Article Type:Sound Recording Review
Date:Mar 16, 1992
Words:151
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Tommy Dorsey.

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