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Age of Bronze

Six Brown Brothers CD Cover

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SIX BROWN BROTHERS
Those Moaning Saxophones



Deluxe 24 Page Booklet
Over 78 minutes of music!
Extensive Liner Notes by
Six Brown Brothers' biographer
Bruce Vermazen

TRACK LIST

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(836kb, 1:46)
Listen to an Excerpt Track 6
"Bullfrog Blues"

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Saxophones, Broadway, and Oz, oh my!
The Six Brown Brothers have several neat connections to The Wizard of Oz. This toe-tapping CD contains two unusual versions of The Bullfrog and the Coon, one of the popular songs from the 1903 Broadway musical version of Wizard. The Brown Brothers also appeared on Broadway with Oz duo Fred Stone and David Montgomery in the 1911 musical Chin Chin, and later with Fred Stone ion Jack O' Lantern and Tip Top. This new CD is wonderfully transferred from the original 78s and it comes with a deluxe 24 page booklet featuring many full color illustrations.
The Six Brown Brothers
Other than a copycat act, the Six Brown Brothers were the only saxophone ensemble to make commercial records between 1911 and 1917, and they ushered in the "saxophone craze" that had the country entranced in the mid-1910s. From the group's start in 1908 playing in the Ringling Brothers' circus until their final breakup in 1933, the shifting personnel of the outfit always included leader Tom Brown and at least one of his five brothers. On records for U.S. Everlasting, Columbia, Victor, and Emerson, the Brown Brothers set feet a-tapping to their joyous sound and comical routine. The tracks on this CD represent roughly half of the Browns' issued output, along with three extremely rare, previously unreleased selections. The beautiful 24-page full-color booklet is packed with rare graphics and detailed notes by expert Bruce Vermazen about the career and records of the Six Brown Brothers.

A Family Affair
The Six Brown Brothers consisted of a changing assortment of six real-life brothers, sons of Canadian cornetist and bandmaster Allan W. Brown (1858-1947) and his wife Maria (1859?-1943). It's unlikely all six brothers were in the group at the same time, but each did a stint at some point, and very possibly at least five of them are on almost all the sides issued by Victor and Emerson. The boys were William (1879-1945), Tom (1881-1950), Alec (1882-1978), Percy (1883-1918), Vern (1887-1964), and Fred (1890-1949). Another musician who is possibly on all the 1911-1920 discs is Harry Fink (1889-1951), who was born Harry Finklestein in Poland but used the name Harry Brown.

The Saxophone Craze
Tom Brown bought his first saxophone in 1904, when one was likely to hear the instrument only in military or large circus bands. A decade later, show-business newspapers were talking about a "saxophone craze." The Brown Brothers were at the helm of the craze, centering their vaudeville act around the beautiful, distinctive voices of their saxophones—and the funny noises (squeaks, laughter, clucking, and sobs) they could make, such as on "The Bullfrog and the Coon." Before long, entire sax-orchestras were formed, and sales of saxes skyrocketed. When jazz established itself by the 1920s, the saxophone would be a staple of jazz bands. This CD documents the meteoric rise of the sax in American music, its versatility and tone, and the extraordinary skill wielded by the leaders of the sax craze: the Six Brown Brothers.

Rags and Laughs
The Brown Brothers put their consummate abilities to use on the popular music and trends of the day, especially ragtime, and their performances, filled with clever twists and turns, always bring a laugh. At least one record, "That Moaning Saxophone Rag," was a huge seller, written by Tom Brown himself. "Peter Gink" is by George L. Cobb, who made a career out of "ragging" the classics (as he did with "Russian Rag", based on a piece by Rachmaninoff)—in this case the object of his adaptation is Grieg's opera Peer Gynt. "Smiles and Chuckles" is one of the Six Brown Brothers' best-known records, and although it was billed as a "Jazz Rag," its sheet music calls it a "rag one-step." Either way, the Brothers show their mastery of F. Henri Klickmann's syncopations. Klickmann was a prolific arranger and composer who improved the Brothers' sound considerably during his long tenure as chief orchestrator for the act.

Lasting Innovations
The Browns could tear it up on a catchy dance tune such as "My Fox Trot Girl," or they could ride the jazz and blues wave on songs like "Missouri Blues" with the best of them. But they made innovative contributions to the sax art that have lasting and historical significance. For instance, the dominant bass sax on "If a Wish Could Make It So" evidences the extent to which the Brothers boldly put that peculiar voice in their act. Perhaps the most stunning example of Tom Brown's art on the CD has to be heard to be believed: it is on the 1927 offering, The Original Six Brown Brothers, Saxaphonic Jazz Masters and Orchestra, in the middle of which Tom plays the role of an abandoned bride having a musical "conversation" with the band in snatches of tunes that would have been well-known to his audience. You can hear Tom "talking" through his instrument in this incredible testiment to the talent of the Six Brown Brothers' leader.

TRACK LISTINGS
Total Running Time 78:05

The Bullfrog and the Coon—Five Brown Brothers (1911)
American Patrol—Five Brown Brothers (1911)
That Moaning Saxophone Rag (1914)
Chicken Reel Comedy Medley (1915)
Chin Chin Medley (1916)
Bull Frog Blues (1916)
Chicken Walk (1916)
Walkin' the Dog (1916)
Passion Dance (La Danza Appassionata) (1916)
Saxophone Sam (1917)
My Fox Trot Girl (1917)
Ghost of the Saxophone (1917)
The Darktown Strutters' Ball (1917)
Smiles and Chuckles (1917)
For Me and My Gal (1917)
Peter Gink (1919)
Egyptland (1919)
I'll Say She Does (1919)
Missouri Blues (1919)
Jazz Band Blues (ca. 1920)
Rainbow of My Dreams (ca. 1920)
Tip Top (1920)
If a Wish Could Make It So (1920)
Shivaree (1920)
Rosy Cheeks (ca. 1920)
The Original Six Brown Brothers, Saxaphonic Jazz Masters and Orchestra (1927)


 
 


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