![]() ![]() *CLUB HANGOVER LOUIS ARMSTRONG REHEARSAL 1/16/54ĬLUB HANGOVER 2A(MUGGSY SPANIER 1043) 11/13/54ĬLUB HANGOVER 2B(MUGGSY SPANIER 1044) 11/20/54ĬLUB HANGOVER 2C(MUGGSY SPANIER 1045) 11/27/54ĬLUB HANGOVER 3A(EARL FATHA HINES ESQUIRE ALL STARS 1030) 1/30/54ĬLUB HANGOVER 3B(EARL FATHA HINES ESQUIRE ALL STARS 1031) 2/13/54ĬLUB HANGOVER 3C(EARL FATHA HINES ESQUIRE ALL STARS 1032) 2/27/54ĬLUB HANGOVER 3D(EARL FATHA HINES ESQUIRE ALL STARS 1004) 2/6/54ĬLUB HANGOVER 3E(EARL FATHA HINES ESQUIRE ALL STARS 1054) 9/10/55ĬLUB HANGOVER 3F(EARL FATHA HINES ESQUIRE ALL STARS 1061) 2/9/57 *CLUB HANGOVER LOUIS ARMSTRONG BROADCAST 1/16/54 Leads his band and the Hines-Spanier All-Stars** on several broadcasts. Muggsy Spanier spent his later years in the artistic community of Sausalito just north of San Francisco. ![]() and Petaluma, a chicken-ranching community north of S.F. Surprisingly many of these musicians were living in the Bay Area or on the West Coast at the time: Earl Hines and Jack Teagarden both lived in Oakland during the late '50s and early-'60s. More about Hines and rare Hines broadcasts, here. Originals dating back to the '30s, all featuring his stunning piano style. His shows ranged from Dixieland and swinging Bop to his own mp3 files are taken from the original 15 ips monophonic tapes in that collection.įor just the cream of these broadcasts, additional context & more see: Club Hangover Rarities. After Bob passed, the tapes were acquired for preservation by the San Francisco Traditional Jazz Foundation with the assistance of Ken Ackerman, another former KCBS employee, and they are now at the Stanford University Braun Music archive. Bob preserved the tapes for decades, loaning them out occasionally for issue by small record labels.Īfter hearing my local program of classic and traditional jazz on KALW-FM in San Francisco, Goerner made them available to me for broadcast in the early 1990s. The on-air host for these KCBS broadcasts Bob Goerner arranged for these "line checks" to be recorded at the radio station where the dedicated broadcast phone line brought the signal from the club. "Struttin' with Some Barbecue," "Over the Rainbow" and "Sleepy Time" are completely previously unissued. The Louis Armstrong broadcast & sound check of 1/16/54 is one-of-a-kind.*Īccording to the Louis Armstrong Archives, only portions of these performances have been issued over the years. Note the very shallow stage perched over the bar! 25 complete unedited half-hour broadcasts from Club Hangover, the premier nightspot forĭixieland and New Orleans music in San Francisco during the 1950s.Įxcerpts have been issued over the years on LPĪnd CD, but much of this material is available here for the first time, complete as originally broadcast.Ĭlarinet player Edmond Hall and pianist Ralph Sutton, were frequently featured.
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