| Disc: 1 |
| 1. Hundred Years from Today - Jack Teagarden Orchestra |
| 2. She's a Great, Great Girl - Roger Wolfe Kahn & His Orchestra |
| 3. Makin' Friends - Eddie Condon & His Footwarmers |
| 4. I'm Gonna Stomp Mr. Henry Lee - Eddie Condon |
| 5. That's a Serious Thing - Eddie Condon |
| 6. Knockin' a Jug - Louis Armstrong & His Orchestra |
| 7. My Kinda Love (One Way to Paradise) - Ben Pollack & His Park Central Orchestra |
| 8. Dinah - Red Nichols & His 5 Pennies |
| 9. Sheik of Araby - Red Nichols & His 5 Pennies |
| 10. Basin Street Blues - Benny Goodman |
| Disc: 2 |
| 1. 'S Wonderful - Frankie Trumbauer & His Orchestra |
| 2. Serenade to a Shylock - Eddie Condon |
| 3. Blues - The Metronome All-Stars |
| 4. Octordon - Jack Teagarden Orchestra |
| 5. Muddy River Blues - Jack Teagarden Orchestra |
| 6. Swingin' on the Teagarden Gate - Jack Teagarden Orchestra |
| 7. Jack Hits the Road - Bud Freeman & His Famous Chicagoans |
| 8. Muskrat Ramble - Bud Freeman & His Famous Chicagoans |
| 9. Shine - Jack Teagarden |
| 10. Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen - Jack Teagarden Orchestra |
Editorial Reviews
Product Description
A Hundred Years from Today Gives the Best Possible Summary of Teagarden's Unique Star Quality as Both Trombonist and Vocalist. Starting in 1928 with his First Major Session, with Roger Wolfe Kahn, and Following Through to Fine 1954 Recordings Such as Meet Me Where They Play the Blues, the Generous Sequence Includes all the Numbers with which Teagarden is Forever Associated Basin Street Blues, I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues, Stars Fell on Alabama, St James' Infirmary and So On. He is Heard in Many of his Famous Settings, with Such as Eddie Condon, Red Nichols, Benny Goodman, Paul Whiteman And, of Course, with Louis Armstrong (Rockin' Chair...) 18 Tracks Are with his Own Orchestra (Somewhat Underrated) and Small Groups Such as his Big Eight. This Demands a Place in Every Jazz Collection.
A Hundred Years from Today Gives the Best Possible Summary of Teagarden's Unique Star Quality as Both Trombonist and Vocalist. Starting in 1928 with his First Major Session, with Roger Wolfe Kahn, and Following Through to Fine 1954 Recordings Such as Meet Me Where They Play the Blues, the Generous Sequence Includes all the Numbers with which Teagarden is Forever Associated Basin Street Blues, I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues, Stars Fell on Alabama, St James' Infirmary and So On. He is Heard in Many of his Famous Settings, with Such as Eddie Condon, Red Nichols, Benny Goodman, Paul Whiteman And, of Course, with Louis Armstrong (Rockin' Chair...) 18 Tracks Are with his Own Orchestra (Somewhat Underrated) and Small Groups Such as his Big Eight. This Demands a Place in Every Jazz Collection.
Big T: A Hundred Years from Today,Jack Teagarden,Asv Living Era,Big Band,Classic Jazz,Dixieland,Jazz,Jazz Traditional,Mainstream Jazz,Pop,Swing,United States of America
Jazz Music:
- Bitches Brew
- Bolero
- Brownie Lives! Live At Basin Street And In Concert [Live]
- Carr Toons
- Chitinous
- Complete 1951 Birdland Recordings [Original recording remastered] [Import]
- Dance With Me [Import]
- Dave Brubeck's Greatest Hits
- De Mijke Loeven Band
- Devotion
Jazz Music
Music: Delius: Florida Suite RTvi/1; Sea Drift RTii/3
Under Glass//I Presume [Import]
The Hand That Feeds [Import] [CD-single] [Limited Edition]