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Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)

Posted By: Domestos
Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)
MP3 CBR 320kbps | 08:15:08 | 1.2 Gb | Covers
Vocal Jazz, Swing | Country: Los Angeles, California, United States

With her sleek bob haircut (usually with a flower placed just so), vintage fashion sense, strikingly beautiful looks and artfully customized ukulele, Janet Klein might seem at first to be a simple novelty act, a 21st-century hipster "ironically" recreating the subtly naughty looks of a fin-de-siecle French postcard. Then she opens her mouth to sing. There's no Betty Boop hiccups or Mae West-style brassiness in her charmingly original voice. And when she starts to play her ukulele, it's clear that this oft-ridiculed cousin of the guitar is neither prop nor gimmick, but a delightful and under-utilized musical instrument. Bearing an ever-expanding repertoire of, as she puts it, "obscure, lovely and naughty songs from the 1910's , 20's and 30's," Janet Klein is a musical archeologist hiding in the body of an F. Scott Fitzgerald heroine.

Raised in San Bernardino, California, during the 1970s, Klein's early musical education came from her father Stephen Klein, a teacher and avant-garde animator whose taste ran primarily to Frank Zappa and Classical. Even more importantly, Klein's grandparents regaled her with tales of New York in the 1930s (where her grandfather Marty Klein had worked as a stage magician), instilling a lifelong fascination with pre-World War II American popular culture into the young girl.

By the time Klein moved to Los Angeles to start college in the early '80s, this had translated into an interest in both early jazz recordings and the graphic designs styles of the era. Through the former, Klein discovered early female jazz singers and musicians like, Lil Hardin Armstrong (Louis' wife and early manager) and Blanche Calloway (sister of Cab). The latter hobby led Klein to start collecting sheet music from the 1800s to the Jazz Age, at first purely for the pictures and artwork, then increasingly out of love for the songs themselves.

Around this time, Klein met Robert Loveless, a local post-punk musician (Savage Republic, 17 Pygmies,etc.) who shared her love for early 20th century art and design and encouraged her artistic pursuits. Although Klein was becoming progressively more intrigued with her favorite style of music, she felt at the time that nobody would want to hear her sing, especially not the vintage pre-rock pop and early jazz tunes she loved. Instead, she channeled her creative energies into poetry and painting ( she self-published a chapbook of poems and drawings, When They Kiss I Leave, in 1989) as well as performance art. This changed when Klein discovered the Letter Exchange, a sort of pre-Internet chat room where folks left letters (remember letters?) on any number of topics to be published in small journals, to be read and responded to by others.

Through the Letter Exchange, Klein discovered that she wasn't alone in her dedication to such a supposedly unfashionable style. Encouraged, Klein picked up the ukulele, and as she mastered the instrument, she began to incorporate some of her favorite old songs into her poetry readings. Klein's breathy voice was perfectly suited to material from the teens and '20s, and by 1996, she dropped the poetry aspect of her performances entirely, concentrating on performing her favorite old songs in an authentic and straightforward style, staying true to the original material while entirely avoiding any whiff of kitsch or nostalgia.

Klein's straightforward vocal style places the lyrics foremost, so that the songwriters' clever construction and witty rhymes can be best appreciated. Indeed, her debut album, 1998's Come Into My Parlor, is almost a solo record, with Klein's vocals and ukulele occasionally unobtrusively supported by John Reynold's Django Reinhardt-style guitar and producer Loveless' accordion, mandolin, harmonica and triangle.

After that album was recorded, Klein started putting together a band to perform with. The Parlor Boys is a loose-knit conglomeration that can include up to a dozen musicians but usually tops out around six or seven. Reynolds (the grandson of '30s comic/sound and silent movie actress Zasu Pitts) remains, accompanied by two charter members of Robert Crumb's '70s trad-jazz group the Cheap Suit Serenaders, Robert Armstrong (Hawaiian steel guitar, accordion and musical saw) and Tom Marion (guitar, mandolin and banjo), plus musical historian Brad Kay (piano and cornet) and musicologist, author, radio personality and former British Invasion teen idol Ian Whitcomb (ukulele and accordion).

Klein's second album, Paradise Wobble (like the first bedecked in vintage photos and perfect replications of early 20th century graphic design), was credited to Janet Klein and her Parlor Boys. the wide-ranging disc earns the communal credit, featuring several Hawaiian-flavored instrumentals showcasing Armstrong as well as a delightful Whitcomb lead vocal on the profoundly odd "Tain't No Sin To Take Off Your Skin and Dance Around In Your Bones," a 1930 obscurity with a title that later turned up in a William S. Burroughs poem.

"I'm on a mission for charm," Klein states unapologetically. Everything she does, both professionally and personally, is done with an eye for beauty, wit, and indeed charm. Her current activities include recording new work for CD number six. Joined by her band,as well as special guests, Janet draws from rare material originally recorded by the likes of Wilton Crawley (little known clarinetist and vaudeville contortionist of the 1920's)and Robert Cloud (a highly quirky composer from Florida who had several of his works recorded by the Ross Deluxe Synchopators in a tobacco warehouse in 1927 by the Victor Recording Company). Other unusual tunes for the new record will include a little known Cole Porter song entitled "I'm Getting Myself Ready for You" and "Nakasete Chodai" or as titled in English, "Please Cry Me" a 1930s Japanese blues song. As usual, the group is cooking up some wild and wooly renditions of their own.

She continues to perform with her band mostly in Los Angeles but also makes appearances frequently in the San Francisco area (notably February 4, 2007, opening for R. Crumb's Cheap Suit Serenaders at the Freight and Salvage in Berkeley), as well as touring Japan regularly since 2002. Janet & the Boys have given concerts in numerous American movie palaces and other historic venues such as the grand Ahwahnee Hotel in Yosemite and can be found jazzing it up at their regular monthly shows at the Steve Allen Theater, Los Angeles. (www.steveallentheater.com) Janet also continues to utilize her collection of vintage photographic matter in graphic design projects including two miniature books "Love is A Boomerang" and "Take A Picture of the Moon" and has plans for a dvd of musical film shorts and live concert footage.

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)

Janet Klein - Come Into My Parlor (1998)
MP3 CBR 320kbps | 00:50:45 | 121.87 Mb | Covers
Vocal Jazz, Swing | Label: Coeur De Jeanette Productions

One of those rare albums that puts forth a specific set of aesthetic criteria and then fulfills them completely, Janet Klein's 1998 debut Come Into My Parlor is a joy. Klein, accompanied by her own ukulele and occasional unobtrusive bits of guitar or accordion, interprets 26 songs from the teens through the '30s. The program includes standards ("You're the Cream in My Coffee," an exquisite version of Rodgers & Hart's "Mountain Greenery"), near-forgotten pop songs (the absolutely adorable, almost Betty Boop-like "What a Night for Spooning" is possibly the album's highest point), and a small handful of racy novelties. Most of these songs now mostly sound as innocent and sweet as once-shocking French postcards from the era look, despite double-entendre titles like "If I Can't Sell It, I'll Keep Sittin' on It" and "Banana in Your Fruit Basket." On the other hand, the purring "Need a Little Sugar in My Bowl" ("I need a little sugar in my bowl/I need a hot dog in my roll") still sounds both downright rude and more than a little sexy. The most impressive thing about Come Into My Parlor is that, unlike most late-'90s exercises in nostalgia, like the thankfully short-lived lounge and swing revivals, this album is completely free of both smarmy hipsterism and attempts to modernize the material. Klein obviously genuinely loves this music, and she sings it with both the historical reverence of the archivist and the unfettered joy of a person doing exactly as she pleases. Contemporary pop albums by the Squirrel Nut Zippers, John Southworth, and Rufus Wainwright incorporated elements of this pre-rock style of pop music, but Come Into My Parlor is an irony-free presentation of this still-delightful music in its purest form. ~ AllMusic Review by Stewart Mason

Track List:
01. In A Great Big Way (02:02)
02. Mountain Greenery (03:27)
03. What A Night For Spooning (02:22)
04. Wasting My Love On You (03:19)
05. Tonight You Belong To Me (01:16)
06. Her Beaus are Only Rainbows (01:41)
07. If You Want the Rainbow You Must Have The Rain (01:45)
08. I Like You (01:07)
09. Nasty Man (01:58)
10. Happy Today, Sad Tomorrow (02:12)
11. Give Me Liberty Or Give Me Love (02:26)
12. That's You Baby (01:36)
13. If I Can't Sell It I'll Keep Sitting On It (01:17)
14. Banana In Your Fruit Basket (03:23)
15. My Wife Went Away (02:32)
16. Regular Man (01:43)
17. Baby It Must Be Love (02:03)
18. Naughty Lola (01:27)
19. Need A Little Sugar In My Bowl (02:12)
20. Oh You Dog (01:27)
21. You're The Cream In My Coffee (01:02)
22. Russian Lullaby (01:17)
23. Wooden Wedding (01:21)
24. Kashmiri Song (02:24)
25. Take A Picture Of The Moon (02:31)
26. Love Is A Boomerang (01:00)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - Paradise Wobble (2000)
MP3 CBR 320kbps | 1:12:07 | 169.82 Mb | Cover
Vocal Jazz, Swing | Label: Coeur De Jeanette Productions

The enchanting ukulele chanteuse, Janet Klein and her intriguing gentlemen pals, the Parlor Boys, perform 23 Late Ragtime and Early Jazz-Age tunes as well as 1920s jazz-styled Hawaiian numbers and French and Amercian speakeasy songs.

Sweet and sexy like a classic showgirl, evoking the vamps of the silent era, Janet Klein coos gloriously sweet numbers such as "You're A Heavenly Thing" and "Cooking Breakfast For the One I Love" and flirts and teases with naughty songs such as " The Physician","Nasty Man" and "I'm No Angel".

Janet's own unique vocal style reflects the old-fashioned sweetness and charm of bygone singers like Ruth Etting, Josephine Baker, Lil Armstrong and Mae West.

Among the Parlor Boys are two alumni of R.Crumb's band "The Cheap Suit Serenaders", Tom Marion, on guitar, mandolin and banjo, and Robert Armstrong, on Hawaiian steel guitar, accordion and saw, as well as recording and radio personality Ian Whitcomb, on ukulele and accordion, composer, band-leader and music historian Brad Kay, on ragtime style piano and cornet, and John Reynolds, on guitar and whistling(grandson of Zasou Pitts).

Janet has managed to charm these time-warped musicians into her parlor and out on the town, performing regularly for audiences in Los Angeles and Northern California.

Also an alluring treat is the CD packaging itself, chockfull of period photographs and ephemera from Janet's collection.

Track List:
01. I Wish I Were Twins (02:43)
02. Pretty Baby (03:55)
03. Shine (03:33)
04. It was Only a Sunshower (03:51)
05. The Physician (03:28)
06. Any Kind-a-Man (Would be Better than You) (03:06)
07. Palakiko Blues (02:42)
08. Nasty Man (03:05)
09. Paradise Wobble (03:34)
10. Clip Joint (04:23)
11. I'm No Angel (03:36)
12. Honolulu Stomp (02:36)
13. Someday Sweetheart (02:59)
14. I Used to Love You (01:29)
15. You Went Away Too Far (03:29)
16. Sous Les Toits de Paris (01:54)
17. Lonely Little Bluebird (03:32)
18. Taint No Sin To Take Off Your Skin (02:41)
19. Real Estate Papa You Aint Gonna (03:51)
20. Cooking Breakfast for the One I Love (03:43)
21. Maui Chimes (03:13)
22. You're a Heavenly Thing (03:17)
23. Will You Remember Me? (01:30)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - Put A Flavor To Love (2002)
MP3 CBR 320kbps | 1:11:57 | 170.84 Mb | Covers
Vocal Jazz, Swing | Label: Coeur De Jeanette Productions

Contains obscure, naughty and lovely songs from the 1910s, 20s and 30s, with soulful, rustic and authentically inspired interpretations of early 20th century hot-jazz, late ragtime, ballads, blues and novelty tunes. Chock full of lovely adornments and alluring vintage photos from Janet's collection.

Janet Klein and her distinctive musician pals bring to life 22 rare, diverse and lively songs from the 1910's, 20's and 30's with Janet's third and most ambitious CD: PUT A FLAVOR TO LOVE.. The charming Ms. Klein and her band The Parlor Boys deliver a bundle of spirited and inspired renditions of cleverly fun but forgotten Tin Pan Alley, early hot jazz, saucy bits and late ragtime gems. Adding to the band's already extensive performing repertoire of early jazz tunes these merry-makers zestfully branch into obscure vaudeville and Vitaphone numbers, Hawaiian, Yiddish and French knock-out ballads. The CD's 22 song selections of rich musical heritage are once again gorgeously packaged, inspired by early 20th century ephemera and designed by Janet and friends.

PUT A FLAVOR TO LOVE is a feast for the ears, eyes and heart!
Included songs of note are: Put A Flavor to Love, written and originally rendered only as a test pressing by the unique clarinetist and vaudeville contortionist Wilton Crawley, diamond in the ruff bluesy Troubled Waters once performed by Mae West, two delightful but obscure Vitaphone numbers Lambchops, originally performed by George Burns and Gracie Allen, and anomalous Biscuit Medley, which survived only as a soundtrack to a lost film.

Also lost and found are Hurry on Down which was banned from radio broadcast in the 30's, Ian Whitcomb's Uncle Stanley Dameroll's wonderfully quirky song Fairy On The Clock, Janet's oy tipsy rendition of the Klezmir/Hawaiian novelty tune Yiddish Hula Boy, and two beautiful ballads, the wistful Nuages, a Django Reinhardt tune featuring rarely performed French lyrics and the stunningly sublime All My Life originally recorded by a 19 year old Ella Fitzgerald in the early 30's will leave you spellbound and swooning.

Track List:
01. Put A Flavor To Love (04:25)
02. Troubled Waters (04:22)
03. If I Could Be With You One Hour Tonight (02:59)
04. My Bundle Of Love (02:43)
05. Happy Feet (03:46)
06. Red Hot Flo From Ko-Ko-Mo (03:30)
07. Biscuit Medley (05:09)
08. Cotton Picker Rag (02:18)
09. Hurry On Down (02:45)
10. I'm Tired Of Everything But You (03:06)
11. When Jenny Does Her Lowdown Dance (03:15)
12. Sittin' On A Rubbish Can (02:43)
13. All My Life (03:38)
14. Monmartre (03:04)
15. Nuages (05:47)
16. Fairy On The Clock (02:31)
17. I'm A Whole Lot Wilder Than I Look (01:18)
18. I Like You (02:29)
19. Yiddish Hula Boy/Becky I Ain't Comin' Back (03:00)
20. Lambchops/Do You Believe Me? (02:59)
21. Mestizia (03:07)
22. Smile Your Bluesies Away (03:05)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - Janet Klein's Scandals: 'Living In Sin' (2004)
MP3 CBR 320kbps | 1:06:36 | 156.35 Mb + 30.60 Mb (Scans)
Vocal Jazz, Swing | Label: Coeur De Jeanette Productions

Ukulele chanteuse Janet Klein's 2004 most hotsy totsy CD release entitled "JANET KLEIN'S SCANDALS" vivaciously evokes the mischievous music of 1910-30s nightclubs, clip joints and dance halls with a simmering selection of early jazz tunes. Most of these 22 songs are originally from burlesque, Vitaphone short films, dance hall and movie musicals of the 1920s and 30s, many of which originally not intended for radio or records. In the vein of naughty comedy singers like Sophie Tucker, Eddie Cantor, Fannie Brice and Chico Marx, Janet renders these clever tunes with a loving flare like no other sweet spunky gal can. The captivating Janet Klein and Her Parlor Boys have a knack for bringing to life great forgotten music, in a fresh and irresistible way.

The title and evocative cover of the CD is a play on images and words from the original 1930's George White Scandals variety show and follies. They ably represent the CD's saucy thematic contents as the band delivers their own musical follies show complete with naughty comic tunes, Burlesque patter, hot dance hall numbers and some sweet and soulful songs to round things out. The first six titles can give you an idea of what's going on here: "Hollywood Party, Good Little Bad Little You, You Keep Me Living in Sin, How Could Red Riding Hood? My Bluebirds Are Singing The Blues, Don't Take That Blackbottom Away."

The CD features inspired performances by Parlor Boy notables: Ian Whitcomb (of 1960's pop fame), Tom Marion and Robert Armstrong (of Robert Crumb's Cheap Suit Serenaders), 91 year old Bob Mitchell (of Bob Mitchell's Boys Choir, featured in over 110 movies) and Dan Levinson horn player for Leon Redbone. It's produced by Robert Loveless of the innovative groups: Scenic, 17 Pygmies and Savage Republic.

This is Janet's 4th CD release and as in her former releases, great care has been taken to produce a quality package with exquisite design well representative of its red-hot jazz musical contents.

Track List:
01. Hollywood Party (02:41)
02. Good Little, Bad Little You! (02:46)
03. Living in Sin (03:31)
04. How Could Red Riding Hood? (02:10)
05. My Blue Bird's Singing The Blues (03:30)
06. Don't Take That Black Bottom Away (03:35)
07. CeDisque Vous Dira (02:33)
08. Baby O' Mine (03:19)
09. I Love My Baby, My Baby Loves Me (03:03)
10. Jersey Walk (02:56)
11. If You Do What You Do (03:16)
12. Ballin' the Jack (02:19)
13. Big Time Woman (04:00)
14. The Sheik of Avenue B (02:53)
15. Some Little Bug is Going to Find You (03:21)
16. True Blue Lou (03:05)
17. Everyone Says 'I Love You' (01:43)
18. Unrequited (03:17)
19. Night Wind (03:10)
20. Jacksonville Blues (02:58)
21. Sunday (03:04)
22. Sing Me A Baby Song (03:28)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - Oh! (2006)
MP3 CBR 320kbps | 57:19 | 137.58 Mb | Covers
Vocal Jazz, Swing | Label: Not On Label

Announcing!!! “Oh!” the latest, newest CD collection of Rare, Vintage, Rollicking Musical Funtime Frolics from the 1910’s, 20’s and 30’s, as sung and performed by Janet Klein & Her Parlor Boys. Janet and the Boys are the best at what they do! They’re unearthing, revivifying, rejuvenating, Vaudevillinating, whoopifying and bringing to joyous life tunes so rare and surprising that they are off the map! Here are the sonorous, hauntingly frank and clever sounds of a lost America, an underappreciated time between the two world wars. This is music that kept people up all night in speakeasies, barrelhouses, dance halls and Vaudeville theatres by the millions. When this band dishes out these neglected melodies and lyrical gems you know you’ve been spoken to. This CD is a “where have you been all my life” musical lost and found treasure box.

Oh How Sweet! The band’s ruff and ready live approach to song recording comes across from the first to the last cut. In the first and title track song “Oh!” the band shows an affinity to the expressive unique quirky charm that Robert Cloud gave his arrangement of the same song in 1927. The songs: “When The World Is At Rest” and “Ida I Do” are just simply stunning. “Who-oo? You-oo! That’s Who”, “Oh!” and Blanche (sister of Cab) Calloway’s “Concentrating On You” benefit from the thrillingly buoyant horn trio of Corey Gemme, Dan Weinstein and Brad Kay. The naughty and suggestive “I’m Busy and You Can’t Come In” is notable for it’s breakdown of harmonized humming by the band.

Fix your lamps on hotcha sweetie & ukulele chanteuse Janet Klein and just some of the notable members of the Parlor Boys: Ian Whitcomb, author and British invader of pop music fame circa 1960’s, Tom Marion and Robert Armstrong, members of Robert Crumb’s Cheap Suit Serenaders and Brad Kay, former member of The Original Mystic Knights of the Oingo Boingo.

Oh My! This is the 5th CD from the enchanting Ms Klein and her highly acclaimed, girdle-bustin’ bunch of West Coast Jazz Archeologists whose previous CDs include:
1998 Come In To my Parlor 2002 Put A Flavor To Love
2000 Paradise Wobble 2004 Living In Sin

OH! Is a gorgeously- packaged little candy box of vintage Jazz-Age Delights-Obscure, Comical, Lovely and Spirited musical bon-bons from the Only Decades That Were Ever worth a Hill O’ Beans.

Track List:
01. Oh! (02:48)
02. Concentratin' On You (03:07)
03. When the World is at Rest (03:28)
04. That's Love! (03:01)
05. Baltimore (03:11)
06. Ida, I Love You (02:52)
07. Who-oo? You-oo! That's Who! (02:21)
08. Mon Ami Perdu (02:08)
09. Don't Worry 'Bout Me (03:28)
10. Undecided Now (03:04)
11. Sweet Man (03:05)
12. Hello Bluebird (02:41)
13. Little Coquette (04:12)
14. I'm Busy and You Can't Come In (03:40)
15. Lonesome and Sorry (02:30)
16. Butterflies in the Rain (01:58)
17. If You Hadn't Gone Away (02:59)
18. Rebecca Came From Mecca (03:26)
19. When? (03:23)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - Ready For You (2008)
MP3 CBR 320kbps | 53:03 | 125.03 Mb + 26.93 Mb (Scans)
Vocal Jazz, Swing | Label: Not On Label (Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys Self-released)

Janet Klein & Her Parlor Boys Present "READY FOR YOU" produced by Robert Loveless Hot & Beautiful Vintage Jazz from the 1910's, 20' & 30's. Ready For You opens with terrific swingy dance numbers by a spirited singer and band that has put a spit shine and polish on its ensemble musicianship. These wonderfully robust tunes will set you jazzing for romance and hurly-burly speakeasy steppin out. Starting with the title track ( I m Getting Myself Ready For You a rare Cole Porter song originally by Blanche Calloway - Cab s sister), you ll be rocking to the rafters and then Bear Hugging your baby.

From there, the tunes roll into new stylistic water with steamy Riverboat shuffles and a hot southern style repertoire specifically designed for and being performed in intimate historic settings in the US. New to the mix, this break out trio featuring Janet and her first Parlor Boy - John Reynolds who s known for his expert whistling and hotter-than-hell guitar and banjo playing. John provided accompaniment on her 1st CD Come Into My Parlor and is joined with maestro violinist Benny Brydern (Hot Club Quartet) a Parlor Boy regular. This little threesome performs with tremendous drive utter simplicity. Along with the swinging & swaying there s dreamy romance tunes delivered with great arrangements and timeless lyrics by the sweet and vivacious Ms. Klein. As always there s plenty of variety with obscure movie tunes, a load of sassy Dixie mania, novelties and jazz age tales of bad behavior all mixed with a yummy plate of down home fun. Three songs feature Janet singing duets and harmonies with Parlor Fellows- John Reynolds (grandson of 20 s 30 s movie star Zazu Pitts), Ian Whitcomb (music historian and 60 s pop star) and David Barlia (fellow ukulelian and eefing crooner David Barlia).

Track List:
01. I'm getting myself ready for you (02:59)
02. Take a Number from One to Ten (03:49)
03. A new Moon is over my Shoulder (03:21)
04. Walking my Baby back Home (03:56)
05. Lookie, Lookie here comes Cookie (02:37)
06. That's what you think (02:58)
07. My Canary has Circles under his Eyes (03:32)
08. Have a Martini! (02:55)
09. Au bal Musette (03:19)
10. Sentimental Gentleman from Georgia (02:34)
11. I love a Ukulele (02:14)
12. Them Piano Blues (02:55)
13. Runaway Blues (01:30)
14. Who's that knocking at my Door? (02:57)
15. Roll on, Mississippi, roll on (02:29)
16. Sweet Papa, Momma's getting mad (01:15)
17. I don't know whether to do it or not (03:17)
18. I ain't that Kind of a Baby (02:59)
19. Then I'll be happy (01:29)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - Whoopee! Hey! Hey! (2010)
MP3 CBR 320kbps | 59:16 | 141.15 Mb | Covers
Vocal Jazz, Swing | Label: Not On Label (Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys Self-released)

“Whoopee Hey Hey!”, Tunes to Cheer In Tumultuous Times, is Janet Klein & Her Parlor Boys’ 7th CD release and times couldn’t be more ripe for this vibrant and evocative bunch of rare and wonderful tunes from the 1920s and 1930s. Performed with freshness and zeal these long lost tunes are alive again with timeless perspectives on life’s ups and downs and will surely have listeners musing over parallels with our current state of affairs.

Songs from the 20s and 30s reflect culturally "tumultuous times"- the heady frivolity and sassy wild good times followed by modernistic stylings colored by “The Crash” and the Great Depression that followed. The enchanting and effervescent Ms Klein’s singing on "Whoopee Hey Hey!" is sweeter than ever. The album is chock full (19 tracks) of rich and bold music and lyrics vivid with heady parlance of the period.

Included are eleven tunes from the 1920s… It is the first time Janet and Boys have tried to get a characteristic 1920s dance band feel. You can hear the crisp foxtrot and vertical clip on ‘Honey Child’ 1929, ‘Shanghai Shuffle’ 1924, ‘I Found A New Baby’ 1926 and ‘Bye Bye Blues’ 1929. ‘Honey Child’, the CD’s opening track at once transports the listener to a 1920s dance hall with its bright tenor guitar and up-beat, bouncy accordion stabs. The record then leads with more Southern fantasy tunes such as the yearning ‘Delta Bound’ and playful romping of ‘Mississippi Mud’.

The six 1930s songs and arrangements let on a more "knowing", lush and world-weary sound with sophisticated undulating rhythms, ie “Delta Bound”, “Isn't Love the Strangest Thing”, “I'll Never Be the Same”. A novelty song on the CD (written by band-member, the incomparable Ian Whitcomb) is lovingly inspired by the English Music Hall favorites- Flanagan and Allen who were known for their down and out but jolly tramp tunes such as "Underneath the Arches", 'Two Very Ordinary People', On the Outside Looking In'. In this vein Ian’s tune, "Ambling Along”, complete with old style introductory patter, is a bitter sweet strolling melody and a heartfelt hobo song for our own agitated times.

Featured are two new full time Parlor Boy band members: best on the planet 1930’s style guitar and plectrum banjo whistling master-John Reynolds and hobo bon vivant Marquis Howell who plays stand-up bass with an authentically inspired vintage panache. Other notable performers are: Daniel Glass who literally “wrote the book” on vintage percussion styles. Set to the task, he succeeded in deciphering and recreating in his own style the fantastic percussion effects of Paul Whiteman’s original recording of ‘Mississippi Mud’ and discovered a rare devise called a bockety bock. Also, Randy Woltz who continues with his marvelously adroit Vibraphone and xylophone playing is featured on jaunty piano duets with Janet. One of these tunes ‘Poppa’s back With Momma Now’ (from a lost Vitaphone short) is a virtual laundry list of pre 1929 whoopee lavish lifestyle ‘when every fella from a banker to his caddy’ had lots of dough and wandering ways only to find they are now all staying home with momma because they’ve discovered ‘there’s a kick in the old gal still’.

Having come so perilously close to the brink of economic calamity… what better time than now to contemplate the zeitgeist of pre and post Depression America…As Janet likes to say, ‘This music got folks through the Depression, the last time’. So Bye By Blues…

Since Janet’s last release (‘Ready For You’ in 2008) the band has toured Japan and Australia and played at the famous Fuji Rock Festival and Adelaide Cabaret Festival. The group plays regularly in and around Los Angeles. “Whoopee Hey Hey!” is produced by Robert Loveless (Scenic, 17 Pygmies and Savage Republic) with gorgeously crafted vintage style artwork adornments designed by Janet, David Barlia and Robert.

Track List:
01. Honey Child (03:18)
02. In My Honey's Lovin' Arms (02:42)
03. Delta Bound (04:28)
04. I Found A New Baby (03:51)
05. Isn't Love The Strangest Thing? (04:16)
06. Shanghai Shuffle (02:40)
07. Poppa's Back With Momma Now (01:51)
08. Baby (03:42)
09. I'll Never Be The Same (03:28)
10. Give Me Liberty Or Give Me Love (03:04)
11. Maybe She'll Write Me, Maybe She'll Phone Me (02:25)
12. Under The Moon (Yoo-oo-oo-oo) (03:11)
13. A Little Bit Independent (04:39)
14. Mississippi Mud (02:45)
15. Ambling Along (03:53)
16. Keko (03:23)
17. A Room With A View (02:23)
18. Bye Bye Blues (03:20)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - 8 Albums (1998-2015)

Janet Klein And Her Parlor Boys - It's the Girl! (2015)
MP3 CBR 320kbps | 1:04:06 | 149.73 Mb | Cover
Vocal Jazz, Swing | Label: Couer de Jeanette

Janet Klein & Her Parlor Boys - Merrymakers of Whoopee and Purveyors of rare and scintillating Jazz, Vaudeville & Tin Pan Alley tunes of the 1920s and 30s presents their 8th CD release - It's The Girl. The 5 years since the last release have been put to good use. The arrangements' intricately conceived tapestry and highly polished execution sets this collection in a new class of ensemble achievement - the group has vaulted to a higher plateau. This is 1920's and 30's hot, sweet and melodic music with new and fresh arrangements that will appeal to a modern ear. It's The Girl is an engrossing and moving experience….and it's fun too!

Track List:
01. Sing to Me (02:39)
02. Doin' the Uptown Lowdown (02:40)
03. In a Little Garden (03:24)
04. It's the Girl (03:10)
05. Close Your Eyes (05:44)
06. Old Man of the Mountain (03:40)
07. East St. Louis Toodle-Oo (03:21)
08. I Double Dare You (03:39)
09. I'm Gonna Meet My Sweetie Now (02:46)
10. Let's Don't and Say We Did (01:45)
11. Look What You've Done to Me (03:26)
12. Willow Weep for Me (05:31)
13. You Learn About Love Everyday (03:56)
14. Left Bank Medley: Bad Boys of Belleville / La Route Bleu (04:18)
15. Shiny Shoes (02:41)
16. The World Is Waiting for the Sunrise (02:50)
17. Music Makes Me (03:00)
18. Moonglow (05:41)

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