Skip to main content alibris logo
1944-1946 - Wingy Manone
Filter Results
Item Condition
Seller Rating
Other Options
Change Currency
Track Listing
  1. General Jumped at Dawn
  2. Tin Roof Blues
  3. If I Could Be with You
  4. "A" Card Blues
  5. O Sole Mio]
Show All Tracks
  1. General Jumped at Dawn
  2. Tin Roof Blues
  3. If I Could Be with You
  4. "A" Card Blues
  5. O Sole Mio]
  6. Shake the Blues Away
  7. That Glory Day
  8. Bread and Gravy
  9. That's a Gasser
  10. Georgia Girl
  11. Mr Boogie Man
  12. Where Can I Find a Cherry (For My Banana Split)?
  13. Big Leg Mama
  14. Last Call for Alcohol
  15. Hot Peanuts
  16. Salt Polk, West Virginia
  17. What Good Is You
  18. My Blue Heaven
  19. I Must Be Dreaming
  20. Isle of Capri
  21. Sleepy Time Down South
  22. Confessin' That I Love You
  23. Patience and Fortitude
  24. Cement Mixer
Show Fewer Tracks

Volume eight in the Classics complete chronologically reissued recordings of Wingy Manone documents the singing trumpeter's recording activity during a time period extending from July 1944 to March 1946. Manone, a hard-swinging, husky voiced hipster with New Orleans roots, is at his best on a very funny rendition of "O Sole Mio," the rather libidinous "Where Can I Find a Cherry (For My Banana Split)?" and Slim Gaillard's "Cement Mixer," which Wingy makes sound like it was written expressly for him. Of all the ...

loading