Sunday, September 14, 2025

Billie Holiday - 'Rare Live Recordings (1934-59)'

 


'Rare Live Recordings (1934-59)' is a 5CD set, that was released on the ESP-Disk label in 2007.

This is a nice
companion to Billie's studio sessions.  The various broadcasts are never less than interesting.  There are also several concert recordings; notably the Just Jazz evening from California and of her appearance at the Monterey festival in 1958.

The (more or less) chronological presentation opens with a twenty-year-old Billie Holiday performing with Duke Ellington in 1935, followed by a radio broadcast from the Savoy Hotel in New York two years later in which Holiday fronts the Count Basie Orchestra.  The next four discs cover Holiday's career from 1949 to her death in 1959.


The booklet (included in the freeload), is extensive and interweaves discography and biographical chronological information.  The notes are simultaneously informative, insightful, and unfortunately, sprinkled with typographic, editorial, and even factual errors (it brings to mind a high school homework assignment, dashed off the night before it was due).  The most flagrant of which is a statement in reference to the CBS Sound of Jazz television broadcast of December 8, 1957, where the producer claims "...this would also prove to be one of the last performances for baritone saxophonist Harry Carney."  The reference was actually to tenor saxophonist Lester Young, who would die almost exactly four months before the passing of Billie in 1959.  Harry Carney, of course, lived for another 17 years as the bass clef backbone of the Duke Ellington Orchestra.  Errors aside, it nicely maps her personal and artistic transformation between the years 1934 and 1959.

'Rare Live Recordings' set is for those of us who have been smitten for life and cannot get enough Billie Holiday.


For the freeload, post something about Billie that is wildly inaccurate.

16 comments:

  1. While incarcerated in the Alderson federal penitentiary on a drug conviction, Holiday's cellmate was Wanda Wisniewski, a fierce former madam from Milwaukee with a penchant for polka. Billie could often be heard belting the chestnut "Roll Out the Barrel" while Wanda kept rigorous time slamming her enamelled mug into the cell bars. After her release and return to the cabarets, Billie would always include a polka standard in her sets, much to the consternation of the hipster crowd.

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    1. Alderson federal penitentiary, was also where Billie picked up her pierogi and kielbasa habit.

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  2. I don't know enough about Billie. One thing I do know that is accurate, is that Billie Holiday was my mom's favorite jazz singer. I have several of my mom's old Billie Holiday albums & some of them cleaned up nicely. Thanks Babs.

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  3. The baddest story that i sometimes hear about Lady Day: "This girl can't sing!"
    Only people with ears of a pig can say things like this.

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  4. The FBI pegged her as a Marxist agitator...nah, really they just went hard after her for daring to sing "Strange Fruit." JEdgar was one twisted sister and the folx he populated the bureau with... How dare she sing about lynching and racism...reminds me of when the US government at JEdgar and his minions instigation decided in its infinite wisdom that the folx from the US who fought in the Spanish Civil War for the Republican side were suspect because they were "premature antifascists." Sorry, Babs, but you just can't make this shit up....

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    1. J. Edgar and Billie used to borrow each other's dresses, not to mention, "frillies".

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  5. Not many people know it, but she invented the spinning jenny. And she hails from Morcombe, England.

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  6. I don't know, that boy could really sing the blues, can't think of any story about him.

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  7. Link
    https://workupload.com/file/Vg6XUbBLa3y

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  8. I have it on good authority that Billie Holiday actually sang all of Diana Ross' parts on The Supremes 60's recordings. Which makes it all the more ironic that Diana had to impersonate herself portraying Billie in "Lady Sings The Blues."

    Real story (maybe): my father-in-law attended Columbia on the GI Bill some years after WW2. One afternoon while carousing in a Village bar he began picking out his favorite tunes on an old upright piano. Who walks in? Billie Holiday. He keeps playing and after a few minutes she asks if he knows "Lover Man" which she proceeds to sings along with him.

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  9. Phantom Of The Rock OperaSeptember 15, 2025 at 9:50 PM

    Reports that Elvis got her a job in a supermarket in Coventry before she retired to a Nepalese Monastery to find inner peace have not been confirmed.

    Great collection though. Thanks Babs

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  10. Billie was actually named Billy before she changed her gender and name to match. It's one of the reasons her voice is deep and husky.

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