DVDs BluRay CDs Video Games Books Magazines Bargain Books Media Storage Cell Phones Fun Stuff Electronics
     Search      
Number Ones
Enlarge Image
Originally Released: 2005
Discs: 1
Label: Geffen Records (USA)
Item Number: UNI862717

Why pay:  $13.98?
Our Price:

$9.79

You Save: $4.19
Add to Wish List
Email a friend



Number Ones
Track Listings
  Title
Listen
1.    What's the Use of Gettin' Sober (When You Gonna Get Drunk Again)
2.    Ration Blues
3.    G.I. Jive
4.    Mop! Mop!
5.    Caldonia
6.    Buzz Me
7.    Don't Worry 'Bout That Mule
8.    Stone Cold Dead in the Market
9.    Choo Choo Ch'boogie
10.    Ain't That Just Like a Woman
11.    Ain't Nobody Here But Us Chickens
12.    Texas and Pacific
13.    Jack, You're Dead
14.    Boogie Woogie Blue Plate
15.    Run Joe
16.    Beans and Corn Bread
17.    Saturday Night Fish Fry, Parts 1 & 2
18.    Blue Light Boogie, Parts 1 & 2   
Personnel: Louis Jordan (vocals, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Eddie Roane (vocals, trumpet); Aaron Izenhall (vocals); Freddie Simon (tenor saxophone); William Austin, Arnold Thomas (piano); Dallas Bartley, Jessie Simpkins (bass instrument); Joe Morris , Walter Martin, Alex Mitchell , Rossiere Wilson, Wilmore Jones (drums).

Liner Note Author: Gene Sculatti.

A hugely popular performer in the 1940s, vocalist/saxophonist Louis Jordan won over World War II-era audiences with his swinging jump-blues style, which proved to be a direct link between '30s jazz and '50s rock & roll. True to its title, #1S includes the 18 songs that Jordan took to Number One on the Billboard R&B charts during his stint with Decca Records.

This chronologically ordered collection begins with 1942's silly and appropriately swaying "What's the Use of Getting Sober (When You Gonna Get Drunk Again)." Also featured are Jordan hits that crossed over into the pop charts, including his rollicking take on Johnny Mercer's "G.I. Jive" (Number One on both pop and R&B charts) and the proto-rock tune "Caldonia," which hinted at what was to come in the following decade from Little Richard and Chuck Berry. Throughout the compilation, Jordan's fun-loving persona is at the fore, with his smooth, deft vocals and always-grooving sax lines revealing the reasons behind his remarkably wide appeal. (Leave it to Jordan to have a hit with "Stone Cold Dead in the Market," a bizarrely catchy tale of murder that also featured Ella Fitzgerald on vocals.) For an excellent introduction to Jordan's peak years, #1S can't be beat.


  Similar Titles
Artist: Louis Jordan
Artist: Louis Jordan
Artist: Louis Jordan
Why pay: 
$226.98?
Our Price:
Why pay: 
$14.98?
Our Price:
Why pay: 
$9.95?
Our Price:
$158.89
Buy Let the Good Times Roll: The Complete Decca Recordings 1938-54 [Box] Now!
$10.49
Buy No Moe! The Greatest Hits [Verve] Now!
$6.97
Buy The Best of Louis Jordan [MCA] Now!



Track your previous orders.


View or change your orders in Your Account.


Questions about your orders?



Shipping rates, timeframes & policies.


Need to Return an item? Check out our Returns Policy first.



New customer? Click here to learn about searching, browsing and shopping at our store.


Forgot your password? Click here.




MRC - Merchant Risk Council