Another Word For It Patrick Durusau on Topic Maps and Semantic Diversity

March 10, 2016

1,000 Hours of Early Jazz

Filed under: History,Music — Patrick Durusau @ 8:28 pm

1,000 Hours of Early Jazz Recordings Now Online: Archive Features Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington & Much More

From the post:

David W. Niven spent his life amassing a vast record collection, all dedicated to the sounds of Early Jazz. As a kid during the 1920s, he started buying jazz records with money earned from his paper route. By World War II, Niven, now a college student, had thousands of LPs. “All the big names of jazz, along with lesser legends, were included,” Niven later said, and “I found myself with a first class treasure of early jazz music.” Louis Armstrong, Bix Beiderbecke, Duke Ellington, and much, much more.

For the sake of his children, Niven started transferring his record collection to cassette tapes during the 1980s and prefacing them with audio commentaries that offer background information on each recording. Now, years after his death (1991), his collection of “Early Jazz Legends” has made its way to the web, thanks to archivist Kevin J. Powers. If you head over to Archive.org, you can stream/download digitized versions of 650 cassette tapes, featuring over 1,000 hours of early jazz music. There’s also scans of liner cards for each recording.

Every recitation of history is incomplete but some are more incomplete than others.

Imagine trying to create a recitation about the mid to late 1960’s without examples of the music, posters, incense, body counts, napalm, etc.

Here’s one slice of the early 20th century for your listening enjoyment.

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