Slim Gaillard......Loved him all the way back to listening to my mom's 78s of his...some of which are in this list, today. I just thought the records were funny as a kid....by high school, I realized I had to be smoking weed to actually "get" him.....sometimes I still think that...lol. If you don't know of him, here's a little bit of bio, courtesy of Wikepedia:
Along with Gaillard's date of birth, his family lineage and place of  birth are disputed. One account is that he was born in Santa Clara, Cuba of a Greek father and an Afro-Cuban  mother [1];  another is that he was born in Pensacola, Florida to a German father and an  African-American mother [2].  Adding to the confusion, the 1920 U.S. Census lists a 19-month-old  named "Beulee Gaillard" in Pensacola, but born in Alabama.[3]  He grew up in Detroit and moved to New York City in the 1930s.
According to the obituaries in leading newspapers, Gaillard's  childhood in Cuba was spent cutting cane and picking bananas, as well as  occasionally going to sea with his father. However, at the age of 12,  he accompanied his father on a world voyage and was accidentally left  behind on the island of Crete. After working on the island for a while,  he made his home in Detroit. In America, Gaillard worked in an abattoir,  trained as a mortician and also had been employed by Ford's Motor  Works. Gaillard first rose to prominence in the late 1930s as part of Slim & Slam, a jazz novelty act he formed with bassist Slam  Stewart. Their hits included "Flat Foot Floogie (with a  Floy Floy)", "Cement Mixer (Puti Puti)" and the hipster anthem, "The Groove Juice  Special (Opera in Vout)". The duo  performs in the 1941 movie Hellzapoppin'.
Gaillard's appeal was similar to Cab  Calloway and Louis Jordan in that he presented a hip style  with broad appeal (for example in his children's song "Down by the Station"). Unlike them,  he was a master improviser whose stream of  consciousness vocals ranged far afield from the original lyrics  along with wild interpolations of nonsense syllables like MacVoutie  O-reeney. One such performance is celebrated in the 1957 novel On  the Road by Jack Kerouac.
Gaillard later teamed with bassist Bam Brown; Slim and Bam can be  seen in a 1948 motion picture featurette—with the Gaillardese title O'Voutie  O'Rooney -- filmed live at one of their nightclub performances.
In the late forties and early fifties, Gaillard frequently opened at Birdland for such greats as Charlie Parker, Flip  Phillips, and Coleman Hawkins. His 1945 session with Parker and Dizzy Gillespie is notable, both musically and for its  relaxed convivial air. Gaillard could play several instruments, and  always managed to turn the performance from hip jazz to comedy: he would  play the guitar with his left hand fretting from the top of the neck,  or would play credible piano solos with his palms facing up.Gaillard  also wrote the theme song introducing the Peter Potter radio show.
Gaillard appeared in several shows in the 1960s and 1970s, such as  Marcus Welby, M.D., Charlie's Angels, Mission Impossible, Medical  Center, and Along Came Bronson. He also appeared in the 1970s TV series Roots: The Next Generations  and reprised some of his old hits on the NBC primetime  variety program, The Chuck Barris Rah Rah Show. By the early  1980s he was touring the European jazz festival circuit, playing with  such musicians as Arnett Cobb. He also played with George  Melly and John Chilton's Feetwarmers, appearing on their  BBC television series.
He later appeared in the musical  film Absolute Beginners (1986)  singing "Selling Out".
In 1992, the Belgian group De Nieuwe Snaar released an amusing ode  (in Dutch) to Gaillard, on their CD William. Arabic is sprinkled about Gaillard's songs. The song  "Yep-Roc-Heresay" 3:07 - 1945 is a good example. This song is made up  almost entirely of Arabic food names. The title of the song is taken  from the first two words of the song, which are "yabraq" or in  Arabic "يبرق" (pronounced "يبرأ" "yabra'" in the Levant, and mostly in northern  parts of today's Syria), which is another name for the Turkish Dolma or  stuffed grape leaves. The second word is "[harisseh]," which is a sweet  desert made from semolina flour - recipe.
Other Arabic words used in the song are: Burghal (burghal), Mahshi  (stuffed), kibbeh siniyyeh (kibbe in a tray), anna biddi (I want),  Masari bahh (No money), banadoura (tomato), ruzz (rice), eidi maksura (I  am broke), Arak  (Arabic: عرق, pronounced [ʕaraq]) (a liquorice liquor), lahame mishwie  (grilled meat), basal (onion).
This may be the first jazz song in Arabic. Some say he was reading  from a menu of an Arabic restaurant, but this does not explain for his  use of phrases such as, "no money" or "I am broke."
In the 1940s, the song was "banned in the radio for being  suggestive", for its suspicious lyric references to drugs and crime.
The actual origin from these phrases comes from his time living in  Detroit. He was out of money by the time he made it to Detroit and was  turned down a job at Ford. An Armenian woman named Rose Malhalab (last  name indicates connection to Aleppo, Syria) took Slim in, where he lived  in the basement of her and her husband's beauty shop on Woodward  Avenue. She cooked much Arabic food for him, explaining Slim's entire  song.
Gaillard's daughter Janis Hunter is the ex-wife of R&B/soul  legend Marvin Gaye, and the mother of actress and singer Nona  Gaye and Frankie Christian Gaye.
Alrighty then.....here's some tunes....this is pt. 1 of 5...yes, 5......I've gotta lotta Slim....there will be some repeat titles, but (see notes) they will be different versions of songs....ENJOY!
Slim and Slam-Harlem Hunch
Slim and Slam-Tutti Fritti
 Slim Gaillard-
Chinatown, my Chinatown
Flat foot floogee
My Darling (it's only you)
8, 9, qnd 10
A well-a take 'em Joe (crapshooter's song)
Beatin' the board
Boot-Ta-La-Za
Buck dance rhythm
Cause my baby says it's so
Chicken rhythm
Chinatown, my Chinatown
Dancing on the beach
Dopey Joe
Ferdinand the bull
Humpty Dumpty
It's getting kinda chilly
Jump session
Laughin' in rhythm
Look-a there
Oh, lady be good
Sweet Safronia
Swingin' in the key of C
That's a bringer-That's a hanger
That's what you call romance
Flat foot floogie
There's no two ways about it
Ti-Pi-Tin
Tutti Frutti
Vol vist Du Gaily Star
 

 
 
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