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Showing posts with label frankie "half-pint" Jaxon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frankie "half-pint" Jaxon. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 19, 2011

Frankie "Half-Pint" Jaxon 2

Here's Part 2............... :)

Jive man blues-6-11-1929
Let me ride your train-4-17-1940
Let's knock a jug-2-13-1929
Mama don't allow it-7-29-1933 Frankie "half-pint" Jaxon and his Hot Shots
My baby's hot (can't you understand)-7-29-1933 Frankie "half-pint" Jaxon and his Hot Shots
My daddy rocks me with a steady roll-Tampa Red's Hokum Jazz Band 4-19-1929
My four reasons-“Banjo” Ikey Robinson and His Bull Fiddle Band 2/9/1929
Operation blues-7-22-1929
Riff it-4-22-1938 w/ The Harlem Hamfats
Rock me mama-“Banjo” Ikey Robinson and His Bull Fiddle Band 2/9/1929
Shake your shimmy-Midnight Rounders 10-9-1928?
She got "it"-8-1-1927
She loves so good-4-22-1938 w/ The Harlem Hamfats
She's coming 'round the mountain-Cotton Top Mountain Sanctified Singers 8-28-1929?
Some sweet day-4-22-1938
Somethin' goin' on wrong-3-5-1940
Take off them hips-4-17-1940
They put the big britches on me-4-22-1938 w/ The Harlem Hamfats
Turn over-4-17-1940
Wasn't it nice-3-5-1940
Wet it (Let The Good Work Go On)-3-12-1937 w/ The Harlem Hamfats
When a woman gets the blues- Prince Budda & His Boys 7-22-1937
When they play them blues-3-5-1940
Willie the weeper-7-22-1927
You can't put that monkey on my back-5-19-1939
You can't tell-4-17-1940
You know jam don't shake-3-5-1940

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=77R2N4CZ

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Frankie "Half-Pint" Jaxon Part 1......

"If this song's too hot, cool it if you can...Go out and buy yourself a five cent fan.....and fan it"

Frankie "Half-Pint" Jaxon....Part 1

Frankie "Half Pint" Jaxon (February 3, 1895 - 1944 ?) was an African American vaudeville singer, female impersonator, stage designer and comedian, popular in the 1920s and 1930s.

He was born in Montgomery, Alabama, orphaned, and raised in Kansas City, Missouri. His nickname of "Half Pint" referred to his 5'2" height. He started in show business around 1910 as a singer in Kansas City, before travelling extensively with medicine shows in Texas, and then touring the eastern seaboard. His feminine voice and outrageous manner, often as a female impersonator, established him as a crowd favorite. By 1917 he had begun working regularly in Atlantic City, New Jersey and in Chicago, Illinois, often with such performers as Bessie Smith and Ethel Waters, whose staging he helped design.

In the late 1920s he sang with top jazz bands when they passed through Chicago, working with Bennie Moten, King Oliver and Freddie Keppard among others. He also performed and recorded with the pianists Cow Cow Davenport, Tampa Red and "Georgia Tom" Dorsey, recording with the latter pair under the name of The Black Hillbillies. He also recorded with the Harlem Hamfats. In the 1930s he was often on radio in the Chicago area, and led his own band, Frankie "Half Pint" Jaxon and his Quarts Of Joy.

Jaxon appeared with Duke Ellington in a film short called Black and Tan Fantasy (1929). Cab Calloway's "Minnie the Moocher" (1931) is based both musically and lyrically on Jaxon's "Willie the Weeper" (1927).

His recordings, such as "Fan It" (later recorded by Woody Herman), are mostly filled with bawdy comedy, double entendres and hokum. Blues fans reserve a special place in their hearts for his orgasmic parodies of "How Long How Long Blues" and "It's Tight Like That", louché collaborations with Tampa Red, Georgia Tom and assorted jugbandsmen.

In 1941 he retired from show business and worked at The Pentagon in Washington, D.C. He was transferred to Los Angeles, California in 1944 where, according to most sources, he died in the veterans hospital, although according to Allmusic he lived in Los Angeles until 1970.


Allrighty then! Let's get to part 1!!


Be your natural self-4-17-1940
Callin' Corrine
-5-19-1939
Can't you wait till you get home?-piano=Blanche Smith Walton-7-12-1927
Can't you wait?-2-13-1929
Corrine blues-7-22-1929
Corrine-8-3-1927
Don't drink it in here-Bill Johnson's Louisiana Jug Band 3-21-1929
Don't pan me (please don't talk about me when I'm gone)-5-19-1939
Down at Jasper's Bar-B-Que-10-28-1928
Fan it (take A)-11-28-1928
Fan it (take B)-11-28-1928
Fan it Boogie woogie-5-19-1939
Fifteen Cents-Frankie "Half-Pint" Jaxon and his hot shots-7-29-1933
Get the L on down the road-Bill Johnson's Louisiana Jug Band 3-21-1929
Gimme a pig's foot and a bottle of beer-4-17-1940
Hannah fell in love with my piano-As Frankie JACKSON w/Lloyd Barnes, piano 5-14-1926
Head rag hop-Frankie "Half-Pint" Jaxon/Romeo Nelson/Tampa Red 1928?
Hit ta ditty low down-10-28-1928
How can I get it-10-28-1928
I knocks myself out-w/ The Harlem Hamfats 4-22-1938
I'm gonna dance wit de guy wot brung me-8-1-1927 (sorry, VERY bad quality)
I'm gonna steal you 2-piano=Blanche Smith Walton-7-12-1927
I'm gonna steal you 1-4-22-1938
If that don't get it, this sho' will-As Frankie JACKSON w/Lloyd Barnes, piano 5-14-1926
It's heated-6-11-1929
The dirty dozens-3-12-1937

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=VOZ1S86D