AT SUNDOWN by Manny Klein 1946 JAZZ!!
BEI MIR BIST DU SCHOEN Manny Klein and his Orchestra 1945
MANNIE KLEIN'S BIRTHDAY PARTY 1933 Silent Home Movie
Manny Klein - Louis
RED NICHOLS MIFF MOLE MANNY KLEIN - SWEET SUE, JUST YOU - ROARING 20'S VICTROLA 8-9.MP4
Johnny Maddox Manny Klein Matty Matlock Tishomingo Blues Dixieland Fisher Stereo
Johnny Maddox Manny Klein Matty Matlock Wolverine Blues Dot 33 Fisher
Red Nichols & His Five Pennies - (Back Home In) Indiana (Manny Klein on Trumpet) - 1929
"Who played that theme?" #66 - "Gidget"
Yellowstone and The Grand Tetons Movie V5
Adrian Rollini - Davenport Blues (1934)
Slow But Sure - Benny Goodman & His Orchestra (w Bunny Berigan & Tommy Dorsey)
Red Nichols & his Five Pennies - A Pretty Girl Is Like A Melody (1928)
1936 Richard Himber - Every Once In A While
AT SUNDOWN by Manny Klein 1946 JAZZ!!
BEI MIR BIST DU SCHOEN Manny Klein and his Orchestra 1945
MANNIE KLEIN'S BIRTHDAY PARTY 1933 Silent Home Movie
Manny Klein - Louis
RED NICHOLS MIFF MOLE MANNY KLEIN - SWEET SUE, JUST YOU - ROARING 20'S VICTROLA 8-9.MP4
Johnny Maddox Manny Klein Matty Matlock Tishomingo Blues Dixieland Fisher Stereo
Johnny Maddox Manny Klein Matty Matlock Wolverine Blues Dot 33 Fisher
Red Nichols & His Five Pennies - (Back Home In) Indiana (Manny Klein on Trumpet) - 1929
"Who played that theme?" #66 - "Gidget"
Yellowstone and The Grand Tetons Movie V5
Adrian Rollini - Davenport Blues (1934)
Slow But Sure - Benny Goodman & His Orchestra (w Bunny Berigan & Tommy Dorsey)
Red Nichols & his Five Pennies - A Pretty Girl Is Like A Melody (1928)
1936 Richard Himber - Every Once In A While
St. James Infirmary - Rube Bloom & His Bayou Boys (w Adrian Rollini, Benny Goodman, Mannie Klein)
"When I Take My Sugar To Tea" Teddy Raph and His Orchestra 1931
B'nai David Banquet Honoring Manny & Adaire Klein
Connie Haines, Tommy Dorsey - WHAT IS THIS THING CALLED LOVE
Sugar • Adrian Rollini and His Orchestra (Victor Credenza)
Be Careful With Those Eyes by Sam Lanin and his Orchestra, 1930
Frank Sinatra with Nelson Riddle Orchestra - My One and Only Love
The Boswell Sisters - It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing (1932).wmv
Ben Selvin & His Orchestra - My Sin
Manny Stylez Live (Copacabana Latin Quarters and The Klein Memorial)
Justin Bieber - Boyfriend (MattyBRaps Cover)
Coleman Hawkins & Benny Goodman & His Orchestra - Emaline
KAJ KLEIN V/ BAND 200712 live á G!. THE RAINBOW SHOW!!! :-)
Sam Lanin's Dance Ensemble - Hello Beautiful!
Manny-feat. Raquela "Love That Last A Lifetime"_DRAFT 3
Benny Goodman & His Orchestra - Texas Tea Party
Benny Goodman - Emaline
MANNY - Hear Me ROAR
Dorsey Brothers Orchestra - Singin' In The Rain (1929)
To Whom It May Concern - Sam Lanin And His Orchestra
Benny Goodman At Disneyland, Anaheim California 1961 #2
Benny Goodman At Disneyland, Anaheim California 1961 #6
Benny Goodman, Mildred Bailey - OL' PAPPY
The Boswell Sisters, Dorsey Brothers Orchestra - I Thank You Mister Moon (1931)
The Boswell Sisters - PUTTING IT ON
"Out Of Breath (And Scared To Death Of You)" Joe Venuti and His New Yorkers 1930
Lou Raderman And His Pelham Heath Inn Orchestra - Why Do I Love You - 1928.
Interview with Ben Monk, playwright of MANNY'S LAST STAND
Lynne Millican LUPRON Victim Radio Interview Rose Colombo, Klein Amicus Needed Due Nov 2013 Supreme
Cosmo Klein interview - auf www.radiotiw.de (Part 1/2)
Cosmo Klein interview - auf www.radiotiw.de (Part 2/2)
50 Cent Slips Up & Reveals He Smashed Meagan Good, Talks Drake Vs Kanye & Jay Z, & Animal Ambition
Floyd Mayweather Interview w Big Tigger (Talks Shantel Jackson and Nelly)
Interview with Dov Gorman
NEW 50 Cent Talks BEEF, SLOWBUCK, G UNIT, Floyd Mayweather, Animal Ambition INTERVIEW Part 2 of 3
Screen Guild Theater: Tailored by Toni / Zaza / Never in This World
Best post match interview ever.
Jaime Deena Healthy Adventure Interview
Sophie Monk storms out of Mark Wahlberg interview
Manny Rodriguez SS
Interview with Prof. Joseph Stiglitz (short version)
Gillie Da Kid Talks K.O.P.3; Will Smith; Philly; Freestyles
SHOWstuido: RCA MA 14: Menswear - Manny Bonett
Benny Goodman And His Orc- Love Me Or Leave Me (1933)
A Better Tomorrow- "The Interview" (Today Is The Day!!)
IsShePrincess Interview! Discussing Lupita Nyong'o, Youtube Success Tips, and more!
Star: 50 Cent Stays Beefin' With Ni**as
Barbro Klein Second Public Lecture
Disneys Kleine Einsteins Entenmama June
Birdhouse-The End (full video)
Muhammad Ali The Greatest Documentary (MUST SEE)
Muhammad Ali: The Greatest
40th Anniversary Jubilee
Dave Chappelle Killin Em Softly Full
CWF Mid-Atlantic Wrestling: Christmas Break Chaos - The Entire Event! (12/20/13)
45th Anniversary Jubilee
Cleveland Browns 37 vs Buffalo Bills 24 - Week 5 NFL Analysis
The Startup Show: Validating Your Business Idea
SCARFACE--CARA CORTADA--1983---CRITICA..ANALISIS.
AGSH Hangout Podcast 3
Crazy Christmas Kick / DIE ATZEN / Weihnachtsmarkt-Challenge (Onkel Berni's Butze - Sendung 5)
[434] Ceasefire Slaughter, Cold-War Proof NASA & West Africa’s Unprecedented Ebola Outbreak
1951-2-14 Jake LaMotta vs Ray Robinson VI
DON'T STARVE! Ep.5: Un Occhio di Cthulhu?
Noční kalba shejka s DarkWarem850
Manny Klein (born as Emmanuel Klein on February 4, 1908; died May 31, 1994) was a jazz trumpeter most associated with swing.
He began with Paul Whiteman in 1928 and was active throughout the 1930s playing with several major bands of the era including the Dorseys and Benny Goodman. In 1937, he moved to California and worked with Frank Trumbauer's orchestra. And in early 1940, credited as Mannie Klein, he appears on Artie Shaw And His Orchestra recordings. He also did soundtracks and played trumpet for the film From Here to Eternity, but was uncredited. In addition, Klein worked with musicians associated with West Coast jazz in the 1950s.
A versatile player who studied with Max Schlossberg of the New York Philharmonic (whose other students included another New York-born trumpet luminary of the Big-band era, Bernie Glow), Klein could play in almost any setting, including first trumpet in an orchestra. In 1953, he appeared on the Capitol Records LP of Concerto In C Minor For Piano by Dmitri Shostakovich and The Four Temperaments by Paul Hindemith with Victor Aller and Felix Slatkin.
Ernest Loring "Red" Nichols (May 8, 1905 – June 28, 1965) was an American jazz cornettist, composer, and jazz bandleader.
Over his long career, Nichols recorded in a wide variety of musical styles, and critic Steve Leggett describes him as "an expert cornet player, a solid improviser, and apparently a workaholic, since he is rumored to have appeared on over 4,000 recordings during the 1920s alone."
Red Nichols is a name which comes to us from the jazz of the 1920s, a time when Nichols was a fecund recording artist. But that name got a second lease on life when Hollywood made a movie, The Five Pennies, (starring Danny Kaye) very loosely based on Nichols’ life, in 1959.
Ernest Loring (“Red”) Nichols was born on May 8, 1905 in Ogden, Utah. His father was a college music professor, and Nichols was a child prodigy, because by twelve he was already playing difficult set pieces for his father’s brass band. The young Nichols heard the early recordings of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band (which was not in fact “original,” but was the first “jazz” band to record), and later those of Bix Beiderbecke, and these had a strong influence on the young cornet player. His style became polished, clean and incisive.
Irving Milfred Mole, better known as Miff Mole (11 March 1898 – 29 April 1961) was a jazz trombonist and band leader. He is generally considered as one of the greatest jazz trombonists and credited with creating "the first distinctive and influential solo jazz trombone style." His major recordings included "Slippin' Around", "Red Hot Mama" in 1924 with Sophie Tucker on vocals, "Miff's Blues", "There'll Come a Time (Wait and See)", on the film soundtrack to the 2008 movie The Curious Case of Benjamin Button, and "Toddlin' Blues" and "Davenport Blues", recorded in 1925 with Bix Beiderbecke and Tommy Dorsey as Bix Beiderbecke and His Rhythm Jugglers.
Miff Mole was born in Roosevelt, New York. As a child, he studied violin and piano and switched to trombone when he was 15. He played in Gus Sharp's orchestra for two years and in the 1920s went on to become a significant figure of the New York scene: he was a member of the Original Memphis Five (1922), played with Russ Gorman, Roger Wolfe Kahn, Sam Lanin, Ray Miller and many others. His other activities, like those of many jazz musicians at the time, included working for silent film and radio orchestras. In 1926–9 Mole and trumpeter Red Nichols led a band called "Miff Mole and his Little Molers". They recorded frequently until 1930.
Johnny Maddox (born August 4, 1927 in Gallatin, Tennessee) is a ragtime pianist, historian, and collector of musical memorabilia.
His interest in the era of ragtime was fueled by his great-aunt Zula Cothron. She had played ragtime with an all-girls' orchestra at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis and later played in vaudeville. Johnny took lessons from her initially but also studied with several locals teachers, including Lela Donoho, who had played for silent movies in Gallatin. He studied classical music for 19 years with Prudence Simpson Dresser and Patricia Neal, who once studied with Franz Liszt. Johnny played his first public concert when he was only 5 and began his professional career in 1939 playing with a local dance band, the Rhythmasters, lead by O'Donnel Templeton.
Around 1946, Maddox started working with his friend Randy Wood at Randy’s Record Shop in Gallatin when Randy launched Dot Records. His very first single, "St. Louis Tickle" with "Crazy Bone Rag" on the flip side (recorded May 19, 1950), sold over 22,000 copies in a few weeks. Maddox became the first successful artist to record for Dot Records, and his instant first success helped build the Dot into one of the most popular labels in the 1950s. Maddox's first record to sell over a million copies was probably Bob Wills's "San Antonio Rose," around 1951. Another one of his most popular early records was "In the Mood," and he performed the song on The Pee Wee King Show in February 1953.
Julian Clifton "Matty" Matlock (April 27, 1907 – June 14, 1978) was an American Dixieland jazz clarinettist, saxophonist and arranger born in Paducah, Kentucky. From 1929 to 1934 Matlock replaced Benny Goodman in the Ben Pollack band doing arrangements and performing on clarinet.
From 1935 to 1942, after a falling-out with Pollack, Matty joined Bob Crosby in whose band he was the featured clarinetist and also a saxophonist. He contribute arrangements to the band's repertoire.
Matlock wrote arrangements for television shows, feature films and motion pictures.[citation needed]
As bandleader
With Ella Fitzgerald
With Ray Heindorf
With Ben Pollack
With Beverly Jenkins