Artie Shaw

Bild Quelle:


  • jazz
  • swing
  • big band
  • clarinet
  • oldies
Arthur Arshawsky (23 May 1910 – 30 December 2004), better known as Artie Shaw, was an accomplished jazz alto saxophonist,clarinetist, composer, arranger, bandleader, and author.
He was born in New York City (but grew up in New Haven, Connecticut) and began learning the saxophone when he was 15 and by age 16, had begun to tour with a band. He reached Hollywood the first time, as a sideman with Irving Aaronson's band in 1931, performing at the famous Orange Blossom Room (site of the first Academy Awards ceremony in 1929).

Mehr Informationen...

Songs

  •  
    Oh! Lady, Be Good

  •  
    Oh, Lady Be Good

  •  
    Oh, Lady Be Good!

  •  
    Oh, Lady, Be Good

  •  
    Oh, You Crazy Moon

  •  
    On the Sunny Side of the Street

  •  
    One Foot in the Groove

  •  
    One, Two, Button Your Shoe

  •  
    Orinoco

  •  
    Out of Nowhere

  •  
    Out of This Wold

  •  
    Out of This World

  •  
    Over the Rainbow

  •  
    Pastel Blue

  •  
    Perfidia

  •  
    Pied Piper Theme

  •  
    Please Pardon Us, We're In Love

  •  
    Prelude In C Major

  •  
    Prelude in C-Sharp Major

  •  
    Profoundly Blue

  •  
    Prosschai

  •  
    Put That Down in Writing

  •  
    Really the Blues

  •  
    Rockin' Chair

  •  
    Rockin' the State

  •  
    Rosalie

  •  
    Rose Room

  •  
    Rough Ridin'

  •  
    S'posin'

  •  
    S'Wonderful

  •  
    Say it with a Kiss

  •  
    Scustlebutt

  •  
    Scuttlebutt

  •  
    September Song

  •  
    Serenade in Blue

  •  
    Serenade to a Savage

  •  
    Shadows

  •  
    Shine on Harvest Moon

  •  
    Shine On, Harvest Moon

  •  
    Shoot the Likker to Me John Boy

  •  
    Shoot the Likker to Me, John Boy

  •  
    Similau

  •  
    Simple and Sweet

  •  
    Small Fry

  •  
    Smoke Gets in Your Eyes

  •  
    Smooth 'N' Easy

  •  
    So Easy

  •  
    Sobbin' Blues

  •  
    Softly as in a Morning Sunrise

  •  
    Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise


Comments