
Frankie “Half Pint” Jaxon accompanied by the Harlem Hamfats
Title Recording Date Recording Location Company Chocolate To The Bone (I’m So Glad I’m Brownskin) (Frankie Jaxon) 7-20-1937 Chicago, Illinois Decca 7360 A I Knocks

Title Recording Date Recording Location Company Chocolate To The Bone (I’m So Glad I’m Brownskin) (Frankie Jaxon) 7-20-1937 Chicago, Illinois Decca 7360 A I Knocks

Title Recording Date Recording Location Company Fan It (Frankie Jaxon) 2-1-1929 Chicago, Illinois Vocalion 2553-A Fifteen Cents 7-29-1933 Chicago, Illinois Vocalion 2603-A Mama Don’t Allow

Title Recording Date Recording Location Company My Secret Flame Vocal Chorus by Hilda Rogers (Lil Armstrong / Avon Long) 3-17-1940 New York, New York Decca 7739

Title Recording Date Recording Location Company Baby Daddy (Lil Armstrong / Williams) 4-4-1950 Chicago, Illinois Gotham G 241 A Baby Daddy (Lil Armstrong) 4-4-1950 Chicago, Illinois

Title Recording Date Recording Location Company Everything’s Wrong, Ain’t Nothing Right Vocal Chorus by Lil Armstrong (Lil Armstrong / Evans) 9-8-1938 New York, New York Decca 2542

Lil’s Hot Shots was a pseudonym for Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five. This name was used when recording for Vocalion. Title Recording Date

Sugar Johnnie’s New Orleans Creole Orchestra was a somewhat forgotten, yet important band that played at the De Luxe Cafe at 3503 South State Street

Ray Charles had a hit record with Lil Armstrong’s song “Just For A Thrill” in 1959. Title Recording Date Recording Location Company Bluer Than Blue Vocal

Title Recording Date Recording Location Company Confessin’ (Doc Dougherty / Ellis Reynolds) 1-9-1945 New York, New York Black & White 1210-A East Town Boogie (Lil

This is likely a photo of the Midnight Serenaders that recorded for Paramount in 1928. If so they were led in the studio by Bill

Bill Haid played banjo for the Coon Sanders Nighthawks Orchestra and led several small recording sessions in Chicago and New York for Paramount and Broadway

Clifford Hayes was born in Green County, Kentucky. He moved with his parents to Jeffersonville, Indiana, before 1910 and then relocated to Louisville. He played

Long before Guy Lombardo with his Royal Canadians became famous for playing “Auld Lang Syne” at New York’s Waldorf Astoria on New Year’s Eve they

The top White band in Buffalo, NY during the 20s was the Buffalodians aka the Yankee Six and the Yankee Ten Orchestra. Founded by ex-Earl

In the 1920s, the top African-American band in Buffalo, NY was the Blue Ribbon Syncopators. They recorded in their hometown for Okeh Records in 1925,

Title Recording Date Recording Location Company Bugle Call Rag (Elmer Schoebel / Jack Pettis / Meyers) 8-1-1923 Los Angeles, California Golden B-1865 No No Nora

The Clicquot Club Eskimos was a banjo orchestra under the direction of Harry Reser. The band was quite well known because of its nationwide weekly half-hour

Although Irving Mills is remembered mostly as a music publisher and for being the manager of the Duke Ellington Orchestra he was also a singer and songwriter. Mills contributed vocals to

Here is a nice little recording that was never released and existed only as a test pressing. “Everything Is Hotsy Totsy Now” was a very

Irving Mills was a music publisher and owner of Mills Music with his brother Jack. He also was a singer, songwriter, A&R; man and manager of

Clarence “Pine Top” Smith (June 11, 1904 – March 15, 1929) was one of the earliest pianists to recorded a boogie-woogie” piano solo. His 1928

Lucille Bogan’s recording career came to an end in 1935 and she eventually returned to Birmingham where she reverted to her real name and performed

Dolly Kay (12 June 1900? – 26 August 1982) was a vaudeville and cabaret singer who started performing sometime around 1920 on the Orpheum curcuit

Frank Guarentesīs World Known Georgians were playing in Switzerland during the months of March through November of 1926. These Records where only released in Switzerland