Extensive and Eclectic and we hear them as is with scratches, crackles and pops.
Being a radio and mobile DJ for a decade and a half, I collected several hundred albums. I had nothing on my dad who owned more than 500 (33 1/3) LPs and over 100 78 RPMs at the time of his death in December 2019. I had no idea he had so many. We found them spread all over the house when we prepared for the estate sale. I went through every one and categorized them on an app called Discogs. I thought so many were unique, I decided to start a podcast called Spinning My Dad’s Vinyl. Each episode will feature an album. I’ll tell stories about the family listening to these albums and I’ll give other info about the album and the time it was released.
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Extensive and Eclectic and we hear them as is with scratches, crackles and pops.
Being a radio and mobile DJ for a decade and a half, I collected several hundred albums. I had nothing on my dad who owned more than 500 (33 1/3) LPs and over 100 78 RPMs at the time of his death in December 2019. I had no idea he had so many. We found them spread all over the house when we prepared for the estate sale. I went through every one and categorized them on an app called Discogs. I thought so many were unique, I decided to start a podcast called Spinning My Dad’s Vinyl. Each episode will feature an album. I’ll tell stories about the family listening to these albums and I’ll give other info about the album and the time it was released.
Dixieland Veterans
My dad loved his Dixieland music. Even when he had no idea who was performing it. This is a perfect album for that mindset, because this budget label doesn’t even get all of the tunes listed correctly on the cover and label, let alone tell us who’s performing on it.
And even though the title of this episode leans toward anonymous musicians, today’s technology might have helped. And then again. It might not have.
So, get ready to hear some hot jazz recordings from an album re-released without naming the artists in Volume 239: Unknown Dixieland.
For more information about this album, see the Discogs webpage for it.
Credits and copyrights
Unknown Artist – Dixieland!Label: Omega Disk – OSL 63Format: Vinyl, Stereo, LPReleased: mid 1960s best my research could tellGenre: JazzStyle: Dixieland
We will hear all 7 songs from this album.
Buck Clayton - trumpetJo Jones - drumsVic Dickenson - trombonePee Wee Russell - clarinetLou Carter - pianoBud Freeman - tenor saxophone
Omega was a budget record label based in Hollywood run by the International Pacific Recording Corporation, which also produced reel-to-reel tapes on their Omegatape label.
Battle Hymn Of The Republic[Traditional]
Pee Wee Blueswritten by Pee Wee Russell, Nat Pierce
Synthetic Blueswritten by Tim McEwan and Tyler Lyle
Strike Up the BandNOT Chiribiribin as both discogs and the record album itself listed here.written by George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin
Billboard Marchwritten in 1901 by John N. Klohr, and dedicated to the Billboard music-industry magazine.
Blue Blueswritten by Nick Mulder
When The Saints Go Marching InTraditional
I do not own the rights to this music. ASCAP, BMI licenses provided by third-party platforms for music that is not under Public Domain.
#dixielandmusic #musichistory #vinylcollecting #vinylrecords #musicalmemories
Spinning My Dad’s Vinyl
Extensive and Eclectic and we hear them as is with scratches, crackles and pops.
Being a radio and mobile DJ for a decade and a half, I collected several hundred albums. I had nothing on my dad who owned more than 500 (33 1/3) LPs and over 100 78 RPMs at the time of his death in December 2019. I had no idea he had so many. We found them spread all over the house when we prepared for the estate sale. I went through every one and categorized them on an app called Discogs. I thought so many were unique, I decided to start a podcast called Spinning My Dad’s Vinyl. Each episode will feature an album. I’ll tell stories about the family listening to these albums and I’ll give other info about the album and the time it was released.