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CD: Black Europe Sounds & Images SWING JAZZ MEGA RARE BOX AFRICAN GRAMMY NOMINEE EX+

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1,250.00 USD
999.99 USD
28 Apr 2024
24 Apr 2024
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Various Artists
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Various - History: Black Europe - B-Stock - The Sounds And Images Of Black People In Europe- Pre 1927 (44-CD Deluxe Box Set)


Grammy Nominee 2015
BEST HISTORICAL ALBUM
Black Europe: The Sounds And Images Of Black People In Europe Pre-1927
Jeffrey Green, Ranier E. Lotz & Howard Rye, compilation producers; Christian Zwarg, mastering engineer (Various Artists)
Label: Bear Family

44-CD Box Set (LP-Size) with two 300-page hardbound books, 1244 tracks. Total playing time: 56hours 26minutes 27seconds

It has to be the very best compilation of anything at any time in history ! No words are sufficient to describe it.
- Bruce Bastin, owner of Insterstate Music (UK) incorporating Flyright, Harlequin, Heritage, Travelin' Man, and Magpie Records
Hear the first recordings of Josephine Baker, the roots of European Swing and Jazz bands, and the subversive religious discs of Fela Kuti’s grandfather!
Follow the lives of musicians, dancers and entertainers across Europe and marvel at their amazing stories!
Discover audio documents, recording protocols and unseen treasures from years of research!
After several years in the making, the set will finally be available to the public in October 2013.
The edition will be strictly limited to 500 copies, worldwide.
The team of internationally recognized experts, compilers and authors responsible for this project includes
biographer Horst J.P. Bergmeier of the Netherlands
historian Jeffrey Green from the United Kingdom
discographer Dr. Rainer E. Lotz from Germany
researcher Howard Rye from the United Kingdom
and sound engineer Christian Zwarg from Germany.

Recordings on phonograph cylinders, gramophone discs and films, with both still and moving images, feature people of African descent in Europe from the earliest years of the recording industry and continued after the First World War. The contribution of these pioneering personalities on the modern mass media has not been noticed – recognition is overdue. Music, spoken word and dance, from all styles, categories, languages and natal lands provide a lost but rich resource. Many artefacts may be lost forever, but this project traces the surviving evidence.

Collected in two 12 x 12 inch coffee table book with almost 600 full-colour pages, here is a multitude of documents, artefacts and curiosities, from passport applications, personal memorabilia and letters, to sheet music, newspaper ads and fabulous poster art, complemented by contemporary postcards and images of wax cylinders and disc records. In more than 100 chapters the life and times of these pioneering entertainers, musicians and linguists comes to life, from early film and sound examples to best-selling 78 rpm records, from ‘human zoos’ and minstrel shows to ethnological documentation and portraits of the (sometimes dubious) movers and shakers in European showbusiness of the time.

From African-Americans comes an aural kaleidoscope of entertainers and music from the last days of minstrelsy through ragtime and music hall artists to string bands, spirituals, and the early days of jazz in Europe, including the earliest examples of stride piano and rhythm scat singing, and some of the first records made anywhere of African-American folk music practices. From Africans come recordings of African languages and folk tales, religious music on both African and European models, and recordings of the popular music of the 1920s. Also documented is the involvement of those born in Europe of African descent in the wider culture of the African diaspora.