Military Music And Banjo Solos
People entering a music store to purchase a Columbia record in 1900 would leave not with a flat disc, but a cylinder. Its content would consist of a military band instrumental (probably conducted by...

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  Man discovered how to make fire and changed the world; Henry Ford solved the problems of cheap mass transportation; and after The Boswell Sisters started singing together, close harmony groups were never the same again. They were born in Kansas City and raised in New Orleans, and after doing a two-hour-a-day, five-days-a-week radio program in Los Angeles, they came East and were signed to CBS radio by William Paley. Their earliest records weren't much, but as soon as Victor Young linked them with the Dorsey Brothers, it was instant karma-as on this track, which features a nifty solo by Connie and Bunny Berigan's electrifying trumpet.

(J. Palmer/S. Williams); Produced by Jack Kapp; Connie, Martha & Helvetia (Vet) Boswell, accompanied by Bunny Berigan, trumpet; Tommy Dorsey, trombone; Jimmy Dorsey, clarinet, alto saxophone; Martha Boswell, piano; Dick McDonough, guitar, Artie Bernstein, string bass; Stan King, drums; Rec. New York, February 24, 1932. Brunswick 78 RPM 6271 (mx B.11354-A); Originally Released 1932