Jelly Roll Morton - Oh! Didn't He Ramble paroles de chanson

paroles de chanson Oh! Didn't He Ramble - Jelly Roll Morton



Ashes to ashes dust to dust
If the women dont get you the liquor must
He rambled and he rambled but the butchers had to cut him down [he was such a good man]



Writer(s): Will Handy


Jelly Roll Morton - Jelly Roll Morton - The Complete Congress Recordings

1 Aaron Harris, His Hoodoo Woman, and the Hat That Started a Riot
2 Ain't Misbehavin'
3 At the Cadillac Café, Los Angeles
4 Bad Men and Pimps
5 Benny Frenchy's Tune
6 Bert Williams
7 Boogie Woogie Blues
8 Buddy Bertrand's Blues / Mamie's Blues
9 Buddy Bolden: Man and Musician
10 C'était N'aut' Can-Can, Payez Donc
11 Coon Blues
12 Creepy Feeling
13 Creoles Playing With Negroes: Getting That Drive
14 Fickle Fay Creep
15 Fights and Weapons
16 Freakish
17 Funeral Marches
18 Game Kid Blues
19 Guitar Blues
20 Hestitation Blues
21 High Society
22 Honky Tonk Blues
23 Honky Tonk Blues / In New Orleans, Anyone Could Carry a Gun
24 Hot Bands and Creole Tunes
25 How Jelly Roll Got His Name
26 How Johnny St. Cyr Learned to Play Guitar
27 Hyena Stomp
28 I Hate a Man Like You / Rolling Stuff
29 Improving Spanish Tempos
30 In Memphis: The Monarch Saloon and Benny Frenchy
31 In the Publishing Business
32 Jazz Discords and Story of the Kansas City Stomp
33 Jazz Is Just a Makeup: Buddy Bolden, Honky Tonks, Brass Band Funerals, and Parades
34 Jelly Roll Carves Saint Louis
35 Jelly Roll's Background
36 Jelly Roll's Compositions
37 Jelly's Travels
38 Jungle Blues
39 Kansas City Stomp
40 King Porter Stomp
41 Little Liza Jane, Continued / On the West Coast
42 Luis Russell and New Orleans Riffs
43 Make Me a Pallett On the Floor
44 Mamanita
45 Maple Leaf Rag, St. Louis Style / Maple Leaf Rag, New Orleans Style
46 Michigan Water Blues
47 Miserere
48 Mr. Jelly Lord
49 Music Lessons
50 My Gal Sal
51 New Orleans Blues
52 New Orleans Funerals
53 New Orleans Was a Free and Easy Place
54 Of All His Mother's Children He Loved Jelly the Best
55 Oh! Didn't He Ramble
56 Old-Time Creole Musicians and the French Element
57 Original Jelly Roll Blues
58 Parading With the Broadway Swells
59 Pep
60 Playing Hot With Buddy Bolden
61 Poor Alfred Wilson
62 Real Tough Boys
63 Salty Dog / Bill Johnson, Jelly's Brother-in-Law
64 See See Rider
65 Slow Swing and "Sweet Jazz Music"
66 Spanish Swat
67 Sporting Attire and Shooting the Agate
68 Sporting Life Costumes
69 State and Madison
70 Sweet Mamas and Sweet Papas
71 Sweet Peter
72 The Anamule Dance
73 The Crave
74 The Dirty Dozen
75 The First Hot Arrangements
76 The Georgia Skin Game
77 The Great Buddy Bolden
78 The Main Idea In Jazz: "Just Watch Me" - Improvising and Reading Music
79 The Murder Ballad
80 The Pearls
81 The Pensacola Kid and the Cadillac Café
82 The Right Tempo Is the Accurate Tempo
83 The Spanish Tinge
84 The St. Louis Scene
85 The Stomping Grounds
86 The Story of "I'm Alabama Bound"
87 The Story of "King Porter Stomp"
88 The Story of Aaron Harris
89 The Story of the 1900 New Orleans
90 The Story of the Coon Blues
91 The Style of Sammy Davis
92 Tiger Rag
93 Time In Mobile
94 Tony Jackson Was the Favorite / Dope, Crown, and Opium
95 Ungai Hai
96 When the Hot Stuff Came In
97 Wining Boy Blues
98 Wolverine Blues
99 Young Sidney Bechet: Jim Crow and the Dangers of the District




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