「Dixieland」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
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tinue playing, alternating with the Original | Dixieland, after that band's return to New York. |
910 - January 30, 1959) was an American jazz | dixieland alto saxophonist born in Chicago, Illinois, |
hmond, Victoria, Australia) is an Australian | dixieland and classical jazz pianist, composer and ban |
short for "traditional jazz" - refers to the | Dixieland and Ragtime jazz styles of the early 20th ce |
New Orleans where she recorded with several | Dixieland and traditional jazz bands and made regular |
yers performing (and jamming to) an array of | Dixieland and Ragtime classics plus hits of the early |
ith a smattering of world music; there is no | Dixieland, and unlike so-called jazz festivals such as |
He played bop, | dixieland, and other styles. |
layed with Louis Cottrell, Jr., the Dukes of | Dixieland, and the Onward Brass Band (1968). |
lis, Indiana) was a jazz trumpeter known for | Dixieland and swing music. |
orchestra, as well as arrangements for Jazz, | Dixieland and dance bands. |
3, 1887 - c. 1927) was an early New Orleans | dixieland and jazz drummer. |
ndards and original pieces influenced by the | Dixieland artists of the 1910s and 1920s as well as th |
concert film Jazz On A Summer's Day playing | Dixieland as they drove around Newport in a convertibl |
Dixieland At The Roundtable, Salt City Six (1958) | |
It was a famous Yale College | Dixieland band of the 1950s that played the boisterous |
lms and shorts, and also was a member of the | Dixieland band Firehouse Five Plus Two, playing the pi |
he Air Force, Bates played with Wally Rose's | Dixieland Band in 1955 and then replaced his brother i |
father, a jazz trumpet player who had led a | Dixieland band in the Boston area in the 1930s and 194 |
made at the Copacabana in New York with the | Dixieland band of the Village Stompers and the Joe Mel |
x-Bobcat Nappy Lamare in a highly successful | dixieland band that lasted until 1960, after which Bau |
German Seaside Jazzmen - a | Dixieland band from Norden - benefit concert. |
He formed a | Dixieland band called Billy and his Bachelors. |
s satirized as Pee Wee Runt and his All-Flea | Dixieland Band in Tex Avery's animated MGM cartoon Dix |
In 1956, he joined George Girard's | Dixieland Band at the Famous Door in New Orleans. |
ar guest artist at the concerts of the Benko | Dixieland Band and the Budapest Ragtime Band. |
jazz (he played Carnegie Hall with Kid Ory's | Dixieland band in 1949). |
He also played the banjo in the seven-piece | Dixieland band called Firehouse Five Plus Two, formed |
In the 1950s he played with Eddie Condon's | Dixieland band, and played with Ruby Braff, Bud Freema |
zoo, complete with a special cake and a live | dixieland band. |
rmany playing professionally with a Scottish | Dixieland band. |
four Soundies films featuring Henry Levine's | Dixieland band. |
n NYC working mostly as a sideman with other | Dixieland bands playing at festivals and various New Y |
Bing and the | Dixieland Bands - Bing Crosby |
He has also performed with many | Dixieland bands in the greater New Orleans area, inclu |
d pops programs encompassing Broadway, Jazz, | Dixieland, Big Band, and other popular forms. |
ch 25, 1902-August 15, 1976) was an American | dixieland clarinet player. |
randson of Alciede "Yellow" Nunez, a pioneer | Dixieland clarinetist who performed with the Original |
trumpeter.In 1938, Vogel played trumpet in a | dixieland combo. |
t Inn from late 1961 until 1965, including a | Dixieland combo. |
ist born in Boston who backed numerous jazz, | dixieland, doo-wop and R&B artists |
Benedict's work can be seen in | Dixieland Droopy, The First Bad Man, and Deputy Droopy |
ic leader and arranger of the Theresienstadt | Dixieland ensemble called Ghetto Swingers. |
Claudia Schmidt Quartet, Dick Fizzell & the | Dixieland Express, Tim Cunningham, Francis Kofi, Betty |
The Tarragona International | Dixieland Festival in Spain is not listed or the Inter |
sidered it as one of the four most important | dixieland festivals in Europe: Breda (The Netherlands) |
A tour, the Legends of American | Dixieland, followed in May 1989 with the same line-up. |
trombone-based, inspired by jazz, blues and | Dixieland, gospel and old-time spirituals: a more soul |
68 to form the World's Greatest Jazz Band, a | Dixieland group which performed for the next ten years |
sic career with the Jazz Minors, a six-piece | Dixieland group at Disneyland in Anaheim. |
in 1964 and played at Preservation Hall and | Dixieland Hall. |
Although he is associated with | dixieland he was in fact one of the finest rhythm bass |
wanting to be a jazz journalist, discovering | Dixieland in the Danny Kaye movie The Five Pennies and |
y Hills Unlisted Jazz Band, and the Dukes of | Dixieland in New Orleans. |
to New York City to fill in for the Original | Dixieland Jass Band at Reisenweber's Cafe. |
, which was to become famous as the Original | Dixieland Jass Band, but Nunez left the band shortly b |
om Brown's band, before joining the Original | Dixieland Jass Band in November 1916. |
ore than once about how enjoyed the Original | Dixieland Jass Band records as a young man, noting the |
"Tiger Rag/Skeleton Jangle" by the Original | Dixieland Jass Band |
s first gig under its new name, the Original | Dixieland Jass Band. |
He played with a | Dixieland jazz ensemble known as The Six in 1953, and |
Gowans' earliest work was on the | Dixieland jazz scene, playing with the Rhapsody Makers |
Balcones Fault was a 1970s comedic | Dixieland jazz band from Austin, Texas who took their |
clarinetist, associated principally with the | Dixieland jazz scene. |
st, and bandleader active principally on the | Dixieland jazz revival circuit. |
After the mid-1940s he led his own | Dixieland jazz groups which featured many well-known E |
There he played in several | Dixieland jazz revival groups, working with Kid Ory, B |
In 1917, the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band released "Livery Stable Blues", wh |
was famous for the live broadcasts of local | Dixieland jazz bands, including such notables as Papa |
ctober 26, 1894-7 June 1968) was an American | dixieland jazz pianist born in Bowling Green, Kentucky |
d as a trombonist who played traditional and | dixieland jazz in San Francisco. |
l Victor recording in which he sang with the | Dixieland Jazz Band". |
style that combined traditional New Orleans | Dixieland jazz with the big-band-style trumpet, and a |
He remained a fixture of | Dixieland jazz performance for most of his life, playi |
He joined the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band for their initial recordings in 19 |
ut returned to banjo in the 1950s during the | Dixieland jazz revival. |
umbia Records to be recorded by the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band, who released it as a Columbia 78, |
1946, where he played with his brothers in a | Dixieland jazz band until his retirement. |
rinetist after being exposed to Big Band and | Dixieland Jazz by his trumpet playing father, Mars mig |
er 1954 in Newbury, Berkshire) is an English | dixieland jazz clarinetist, alto and soprano saxophoni |
nte's New Orleans Jazz Band and the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band (the latter formed shortly afterwa |
He recorded with Jack Sheedy's | Dixieland Jazz Band in 1950. |
Dink Johnson, | dixieland jazz pianist, clarinetist, and drummer. |
950s and 1960s Fatool found much work on the | Dixieland jazz revival circuit, playing with Pete Foun |
DeArango was an autodidact, and played in | Dixieland jazz bands while attending Ohio State Univer |
to Chicago and joined the reformed Original | Dixieland Jazz Band. |
Sherwood "Shakey" Johnson personally played | dixieland jazz piano to entertain patrons. |
The Oregon Jazz Band is a | dixieland jazz band based in Coos Bay, Oregon. |
e played with Merritt in the Brunie Brothers | Dixieland Jazz Band. |
This | Dixieland jazz ensemble continued playing in St. Louis |
layed in the revived version of the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band. |
n Street Blues" is a song often performed by | Dixieland jazz bands, written by Spencer Williams. |
The Uptown Lowdown Jazz Band is a | Dixieland jazz band from the Bellevue, Washington area |
ob" Schulz (born July 1, 1938) is a jazz and | Dixieland jazz cornetist. |
ayed tuba in the Oxcentrics, an Oxford-based | Dixieland jazz band. |
ist, he played in the reconstituted Original | Dixieland Jazz Band's 1940s recordings. |
He helped give Whiteman an idea of the | Dixieland jazz style. |
ince hearing Larry Shields with the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band." |
He is most associated with | Dixieland jazz and was a long-term performer with the |
They are America's longest established | dixieland jazz band, founded by Dr. Bill Borcher in Co |
an jazz cornetist, active principally on the | Dixieland jazz scene. |
Bose's early experience came with | Dixieland jazz bands in his native Alabama before movi |
age of seven, generally with traditional or | dixieland jazz ensembles. |
(October 28, 1892 - November 29, 1954) was a | dixieland jazz pianist, clarinetist, and drummer. |
er 4, 1937, Portland, Oregon) is an American | Dixieland jazz revival cornetist, pianist, and singer. |
Orchestra, and Nick LaRocca in the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band. |
e he played saxophone with The Oxcentrics, a | Dixieland jazz band. |
cornetist noted for his contributions to the | Dixieland jazz tradition. |
ve as a performer into the 1980s, playing in | Dixieland jazz revival groups in his last years. |
He held a regular gig from 1966 at the | Dixieland jazz club Your Father's Mustache in New York |
er (June 10, 1894 - December 2, 1971), was a | Dixieland jazz trumpeter. |
il 27, 1907 - June 14, 1978) was an American | Dixieland jazz clarinettist, saxophonist and arranger |
The song was introduced by the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band in 1920 as Victor 78, 18717-A, in |
J. Russel Robinson, a member of the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band. |
a and Brunswick, Benny Goodman, the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band, Duke Ellington, Bix Beiderbecke, |
he became a self-taught saxophonist, playing | Dixieland jazz in many big bands, leading his own, The |
Sacramento Jazz Jubilee, the world's largest | dixieland jazz festival. |
mphis Five in 1917, then joined the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band briefly in 1921. |
1894-21 July 1935) was a | dixieland jazz trombonist born in New Orleans, Louisia |
in 1922-25, and also played in the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band in 1922-24. |
the 1920s, where he played with the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band and Emil Coleman. |
d December 2, 1998 in Venice, Florida) was a | dixieland jazz double bass player, composer and arrang |
9, 1961) was an African-American ragtime and | dixieland jazz composer, bandleader, and clarinetist. |
from Luis Tio, and played with the Original | Dixieland Jazz Band, Papa Jack Laine's Reliance Brass |
xford, where he played with The Oxcentrics a | Dixieland jazz band. |
rt lay with the sound of Nyhavn; traditional | Dixieland jazz, and he was active until his death in S |
nds during festivals, strongly influenced by | Dixieland jazz. |
The | Dixieland Jug Blowers were a popular American musical |
The | Dixieland Jug Band was originally formed through the c |
, Howard K-8 School, La Vina K-8 School, and | Dixieland K-8 School. |
aying clarinet with the Main Street Maniacs ( | Dixieland), mandolin with the Thunder Mountain Boys (b |
He remained an important figure in | Dixieland music until his death in 1995, aged 83. |
ena Jazz Band in the "West Coast revival" of | Dixieland music. |
twentieth century, sometimes referred to as | Dixieland music. |
on this page has a place in their heart for | Dixieland music. |
fornia) was a jazz trumpeter associated with | Dixieland music. |
k, jazz, indie pop, soul, celtic, bluegrass, | dixieland, olde tyme, reggae and many forms of world m |
While Russell was most often associated with | Dixieland or swing music, their quartet performed more |
His lifestyle and the decline of | Dixieland or New Orleans jazz led to his return to mos |
mpet and violin, and equally at home playing | Dixieland or bebop or cool jazz." |
me, blues, folk and minstrel, early ragtime, | dixieland, ragtime-stride, blues-boogie, swing, prebop |
The | Dixieland Ramblers are a Dixieland revival jazz ensemb |
1905 S. | Dixieland Rd Rogers, Arkansas 72758 |
In his time, Muggsy made numerous | Dixieland recordings that still serve as favorites tod |
A | Dixieland revival began on the west coast in the late |
69, he played in the Firehouse Five Plus Two | Dixieland revival band, an ensemble formed by animator |
1939 and it would be a leading force in the | Dixieland revival for the next 11 years, with a small |
In the 1950s, he played in various swing and | Dixieland revival groups, including Wilbur De Paris's. |
the Yerba Buena Jazz Band is the name of the | Dixieland revival band founded by Lu Watters. |
ke Daniels (born 13 April 1928) is a British | dixieland revivalist jazz trumpeter and bandleader bor |
he became a studio musician leading his own | Dixieland sessions. |
The Basin Street Six was a | Dixieland sextet founded in 1950 in New Orleans that h |
Side 1 was The Dukes of | Dixieland, Side 2 was railroad sound effects. |
Basie's group and started his own band, the | Dixieland Six; Robert Carter was the trombonist for th |
example, the Royal Garden Jazz Band and the | Dixieland Smugglers. |
or Traditional Jazz, or sometimes called the | Dixieland sound was emerging, drawing for its inspirat |
nd the composer of a number of pop tunes and | Dixieland standards, including Come Back Sweet Papa, D |
Mostly | dixieland style jazz on the album, though there are so |
onist and composer specializing in swing and | Dixieland styles. |
g" presenting blues, ragtime, boogie woogie, | Dixieland, swing, gospel, New Orleans brass band-style |
musical curiosity for all eras of jazz, from | dixieland to the avant-garde, Fusion to modern jazz. |
If you don't want | Dixieland to die with your generation, maybe you could |
6, 1924 - November 8, 1993) was an American | Dixieland trumpet player. |
at sixteen dropped out of school to play for | Dixieland trumpeter-leader Muggsy Spanier, but it was |
Dixieland Vols. 1, 2 & 3 (Savoy Records) | |
An early student of | Dixieland was the young Louis Prima, as well as his ol |
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