Gene Krupa & His Orchestra - 1949-1951
![]() | Primary Artist |
| Gene Krupa & His Orchestra | |
| Album Title | |
| 1949-1951 | |
| Release Date | |
| July 20, 2004 | |
| Time | |
The 15th installment in the Classics Gene Krupa chronology opens with a big-band arrangement of a "madcap" melody by Soviet composer Dmitri Kabalevsky. The last of Krupa's Columbia records were cut in Los Angeles on May 9, 1949, with sanguine spoken outbursts and wild trumpet solos by Roy Eldridge. There's creamy singing from Bill Black and a stilted group vocal -- a routine borrowed from Tommy Dorsey -- during "Why Fall in Love with a Stranger." Delores Hawkins, heard at her sultriest on "Watch Out!," appears to be emulating Ella Fitzgerald. Read More
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Content provided by All Music Guide R , a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC.
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