James Andrew Rushing (August 26, 1903 - June 8, 1972) was an American blues shouter and swing jazz singer from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, best known as the featured vocalist of Count Basie's Orchestra from 1935 to 1948.
Jimmy Rushing was big in 1942, so big that a song called
“Mr. Five By Five” was written in his honour and went to No. 1 on the Billboard
R&B Chart. The song described a man who was “5-feet-tall and he's
5-feet-wide,” but the biggest thing about Rushing was his voice, an instrument
that could compete with the loudest horns in any band. And from the 1910s, when
his voice could be heard ringing out from nightclubs in Deep Deuce, to his
death in 1972, Rushing maintained a mountainous presence in blues and jazz.
When William “Count” Basie first heard Rushing, the piano legend was so
impressed with the singer's powerful vocals that they spent the next two
decades playing together.
“In 1929, we picked up a blues singer in Oklahoma City,”
Basie told authors Nat Hentoff and Nat Shapiro in the 1966 book, “Hear Me
Talkin' to Ya: The Story of Jazz As Told by the Men Who Made It.” “That was
Jimmy Rushing, who for my money has never had an equal when it comes to the
blues.“In all the time he was with the band, Jimmy Rushing has been what I
might call my right arm,” Basie said. “There were times in the early days of
the band that I'd have given it all up but for Jimmy's urging to stick with
it.”
Born in Oklahoma City, Rushing's actual birth date has
long been in dispute and was called into question in 1994 when the U.S. Postal
Service issued a stamp with Rushing's likeness that listed his year of birth as
1902. Currie Ballard, who was then historian-in-residence at Langston University,
said at the time that Rushing was
born in 1899. The 1938 Social Security Administration form filed by James Andrew Rushing, listing his employer as “Count Basie” and his birthday as “August 26, 1901.”
born in 1899. The 1938 Social Security Administration form filed by James Andrew Rushing, listing his employer as “Count Basie” and his birthday as “August 26, 1901.”
Rushing was born into a musical family. His father,
trumpet player Andrew Rushing, steered his son toward violin and away from
piano, the common instrument at the “sporting houses” in the red light
district.“He had bought me a violin, and he had forbidden me to touch the
piano,” Rushing told Basie biographer Stanley Dance in 1963.
“When he left the house, he'd lock the piano and give my
mother the key. We'd watch him go away, and then she'd give me the key. When he
came back at night, he'd say ‘Get the violin out!' But I wouldn't know
anything. It got to the stage where I just couldn't play it, and he told me,
‘If I ever catch you on that piano again, or dancing, I'm gonna run you away
from home!' I had really tried, but I was gone from there in about two weeks!
He lived long enough to see my success with Basie, and he agreed to it,
although he never said so. But he'd have a smile on his face and say, ‘Well, I
guess you're doing OK.'”
Rushing graduated from Douglass High School and attended
Wilberforce University in Ohio before joining bassist Walter Page's Oklahoma
City Blue Devils, one of the great territorial jazz bands. Rushing, along with
Basie, spent time in the Blue Devils before Basie, Page, Rushing and other
members moved over to Benny
Moten's big band, and after Moten's death in 1935, they became the nucleus of Basie's orchestra. “He was during that transition between the territorial band and the big band swing,” said “Hardluck Jim” Johnson, program director at KGOU/KROU and host of the “Weekend Blues.” “He was one of these guys who was at the cusp of an evolution to what we know as big band.”
Moten's big band, and after Moten's death in 1935, they became the nucleus of Basie's orchestra. “He was during that transition between the territorial band and the big band swing,” said “Hardluck Jim” Johnson, program director at KGOU/KROU and host of the “Weekend Blues.” “He was one of these guys who was at the cusp of an evolution to what we know as big band.”
During his earliest performances, microphones were not
available. Fortunately for Rushing, they were not required either. “There were
no microphones in those days, and unless you could overshadow the horns, they
wouldn't let you sing,”
Rushing said in the Dance interview. “You had to have a
good pair of lungs — strong — to reach out over the band and the people in those big dance halls. Later on, they brought in megaphones for singers like Rudy Vallee, but the crooners and sweet singers couldn't make it before that.”
Rushing said in the Dance interview. “You had to have a
good pair of lungs — strong — to reach out over the band and the people in those big dance halls. Later on, they brought in megaphones for singers like Rudy Vallee, but the crooners and sweet singers couldn't make it before that.”
Rushing distinguished himself on Basie recordings such as
“Sent For You Yesterday,” “Harvard Blues” and “Goin' to Chicago Blues,” and
when he split with Basie in 1950, Rushing continued to enjoy a steady career
and loyal following. In 1959, he collaborated with Duke Ellington on the
all-star recording “Jazz Party,” and recorded
“Brubeck and Rushing” with the Dave Brubeck Quartet in 1960.
“Brubeck and Rushing” with the Dave Brubeck Quartet in 1960.
His final album, 1971's “The You and Me That Used to Be,”
was chosen as “album of the year” by Downbeat magazine. After a bout with
leukemia, Rushing died on June 8, 1972, in New York City, and was buried at
Maple Grove Cemetery, Kew Gardens, in Queens, N.Y. Although he sang many
styles, applying his powerful voice to standards and jazz ballads, Rushing's
first and abiding love was always for the blues.
(Edited from The Oklahoman)
Mr. Five by Five, Jimmy Rushing, sings the blues, with
help from Buck Clayton on trumpet, and the Vice President, Paul Quinichette on
tenor. From The Subject Is Jazz, 1958.
For “Jimmy Rushing – Four Classic Albums Plus” go here:
ReplyDeletehttps://mega.nz/file/MnoBjByR#oahbaloJQ2QHo7_GSK86UjKZUjbi5HPQVzXpg0AEWBM
CD1 Jimmy Rushing And The Smith Girls
1-01 Arkansas Blues 2:41
1-02 Down Hearted Blues 3:26
1-03 How Come You Do Me Like You Do 2:24
1-04 Crazy Blues 3:50
1-05 Squeeze Me 2:56
1-06 Trouble In Mind 4:00
1-07 Muddy Water 2:22
1-08 Gulf Coast Blues 4:52
1-09 Everybody Loves My Baby 2:19
1-10 Shipwrecked Blues 2:31
The Jazz Odyssey Of James Rushing ESQ.
1-11 New Orleans 3:21
1-12 Tricks Ain't Walkin' No More 2:52
1-13 Baby Won't You Please Come Home 3:32
1-14 Piney Brown Blues 3:42
1-15 'Tain't Nobody's Biz-Ness If I Do 3:26
1-16 I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town 2:42
1-17 Careless Love 3:31
1-18 Doctor Blues 3:20
1-19 Rosetta 2:53
1-20 Lullaby Of Broadway 3:21
1-21 Old Fashioned Love 2:34
1-22 Some Of These Days 4:45
The Sound Of Jazz
1-23 I Left My Baby 4:26
The Way I Feel
1-24 Where Were You 2:57
CD2 Little Jimmy Rushing And The Big Brass
2-01 I'm Coming Virginia 2:17
2-02 Knock Me A Kiss 2:41
2-03 Harvard Blues 3:08
2-04 Mister Five By Five 1:58
2-05 Trav'lin' Light 2:48
2-06 June Night 2:49
2-07 It's A Sin To Tell A Lie 2:35
2-08 Rosalie 3:42
2-09 Jimmy's Blues 3:25
2-10 Someday Sweetheart 3:01
2-11 When You're Smiling 2:35
2-12 Somebody Stole My Gal 3:44
Brubeck & Rushing
2-13 There'll Be Some Changes Made 2:08
2-14 My Melancholy Baby 3:58
2-15 Blues In The Dark 4:37
2-16 I Never Knew 2:28
2-17 Ain't Misbehavin' 3:21
2-18 Evenin' 4:11
2-19 All By Myself 2:31
2-20 River, Stay 'Way From My Door 4:23
2-21 You Can Depend On Me 3:31
2-22 Am I Blue 2:51
The Way I Feel
2-23 Go Get Some More, You Fool 3:00
2-24 Hi-O-Sylvester 2:23
2-25 The Way I Feel 2:57
In his book A Biographical Guide to the Great Jazz and Pop Singers, Will Friedwald described Jimmy Rushing as follows: "He was more than a blues singer, but at the same time he did more for the blues than any other male singer of his generation imbuing them with a dignity, a warmth, and a virtuoso technique that were unique to him". All these attributes are on display in this Avid release of four key Rushing albums originally done for Columbia Records between 1956 and 1960.
The final three tracks on this CD and the final track on CD1 come from an extended-play 10-inch release entitled The Way I Feel. These cuts are from the 1951/52 period, and have more of a rhythm-and-blues feel to them with the exception of the title track which is all blues.
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For “Jimmy Rushing – Mr Five By Five. (Topaz Blues 1995)” go here:
https://www.upload.ee/files/12199960/Jimmy_Rushing_-_Mr_Five_By_Five.rar.html
1. Blue Devil Blues
2. That Too, Do Blues
3. Liza Lee
4. Now That I Need You
5. New Orleans
6. Exactly Like You
7. Boogie Woogie (I May Be Wrong)
8. Listen My Children And You Shall Hear
9. Good Morning Blues
10. Don't You Miss Your Baby
11. Blues In The Dark
12. Sent For You Yesterday And Here You Come Today
13. The Blues I Like To Hear
14. Do You Wanna Jump, Children?
15. You Can Depend On Me
16. Nobody Knows
17. How Long Blues
18. I Left My Baby
19. Blues (I Still Think Of Her)
20. Take Me Back Baby Blues
21. Harvard Blues
22. I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town
Recordings from 1929 to 1942 (track info in folder)
Thank you, Bob! You've been on a serious roll of late and I am diggin' it - and especially Mr Five by Five, Little Jimmy Rushing! Keep up the good work.
ReplyDeleteI am in love! thanks for this!
ReplyDelete-whymamacries
Many thanks for Mr Five By Five.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing the 2CD set. Unfortunately, the download link for Mr Five By Five. (Topaz Blues 1995) is no longer available. Is it possible to re-upload the rar?
ReplyDelete