The 11th installment in the Classics
Earl Hines chronology charts the pianist and bandleader's professional progress during a time period running between May 1953 and August 1954. This entertaining segment of the
Hines story includes eight excellent sides cut for the King label in New York, 14 selections recorded in Los Angeles for the Nocturne label, and lastly a five-and-a-half minute interview with
Hines himself. The four King instrumentals ("Hot Soup," "Sleep Walking," "In the Attic," and "Space Ship") demonstrate how adaptable
Hines was during these transitional years. This compilation opens with two surprisingly fine and funny vocals by world-famous pugilist
Sugar Ray Robinson, while "A Pretty Girl Is Like a Melody" and "When I Dream of You" are sung by 30-year-old crooner
Johnny Hartman. "Crazy Rhythm" was done up by four members of the band (including trombonist
Dicky Wells!) who transformed themselves into a vocal group billed as
the Hines Varieties, while "Almost Like Being in Love" and "I Don't Hear Sweet Music Any More" were sung by sax and flute man
Jerome Richardson.
Hines himself was the featured vocalist on "New Orleans," "Pennies from Heaven," "I Can't Believe That You're in Love with Me," and "I'm a Little Blackbird Looking for a Bluebird." (This last number dates back to the mid-'20s when it was first recorded by
Eva Taylor and
the Clarence Williams Blue Five with
Louis Armstrong and
Sidney Bechet.) All of these diverse treats, along with cameo appearances by reedmen
Budd Johnson,
Morris Lane,
Aaron Sachs, and
Haywood Henry, make this one of the great "variety packs" in the
Earl Hines discography.
–
arwulf arwulf, Rovi