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Crescent Records
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==History== [[File:All-Star-Jazz-Band-1944.jpg|thumb|left|250px|The All Star Jazz Group, early 1944 (left to right): [[Ed Garland]] (bass), [[Buster Wilson]] (piano), Marili Morden (proprietor, [[Jazz Man Records]]), [[Jimmie Noone]] (clarinet), [[Mutt Carey]] (trumpet), [[Zutty Singleton]] (drums), [[Kid Ory]] (trombone), [[Bud Scott]] (guitar)]] [[File:CrescentRecord.jpg|thumb|right|Crescent Records Number 1 by [[Kid Ory]]'s Creole Jazz Band, recorded on August 3, 1944]] [[File:Crescent-Blues-for-Jimmy.jpg|thumb|right|Crescent Records Number 2 featured ''[[Jimmie Noone|Blues for Jimmie]]'' (misspelled "Jimmy" on the label), recorded August 3, 1944]] Crescent Records was founded by [[Nesuhi Ertegun]] in 1944, with the express purpose of recording the All Star Jazz Group featured on the [[CBS Radio]] program, ''[[The Orson Welles Almanac]]''.<ref name="Ertegun">[[Nesuhi Ertegun|Ertegun, Nesuhi]]. Liner notes for ''Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band'', [[Good Time Jazz Records]] L-10 and L-11, 1953; also used for ''Tailgate! Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band'', Good Time Jazz Records L-12022, 1957.</ref> Ertegun produced the four recording sessions; the label was owned by Marili Morden, proprietor of the Jazz Man Record Shop in Hollywood. Only eight discs were released on the Crescent label, all of them made by the group Ertegun renamed Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band.<ref name="Jazz Man">Ginell, Cary, ''Hot Jazz for Sale: Hollywood's Jazz Man Record Shop''. [[Lulu (company)|Lulu.com]]: Cary Ginell, 2010 {{ISBN|978-0-557-35146-6}}</ref>{{Rp|133β134|date=June 2014}} The All Star Jazz Group was founded in February 1944<ref>Whaley, Barton, ''Orson Welles: The Man Who Was Magic'', Lybrary.com, 2005. {{ASIN|B005HEHQ7E}}</ref>{{Rp|243|date=June 2014}} by Marili Morden at the request of [[Orson Welles]]. A passionate and knowledgeable fan of traditional jazz, Welles wanted an authentic New Orleans jazz band for his weekly variety show on CBS Radio. Within minutes Morden assembled [[Mutt Carey]] (trumpet), [[Ed Garland]] (bass), [[Kid Ory]] (trombone), [[Bud Scott]] (guitar), [[Zutty Singleton]] (drums), [[Buster Wilson]] (piano), and [[Jimmie Noone]] (clarinet, replaced by [[Barney Bigard]] after Noone's death). The All Star Jazz Group first performed on ''The Orson Welles Almanac'' March 15, 1944; its last performance was July 12, 1944, on the penultimate show in the series.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.fellers.se/Kid/1944-45_Orson_Welles.html |title=1944β45 Orson Welles Broadcasts |publisher=Christer Fellers, The Kid Ory Archive |accessdate=2014-06-23}}</ref> Their performances on the Welles show were so popular that the band became a regular feature, launched Ory's comeback, and was an important force in reviving interest in New Orleans jazz.<ref name="Bigard">[[Barney Bigard|Bigard, Barney]], and Martyn, Barry (ed.), ''With Louis and the Duke: The Autobiography of a Jazz Clarinetist''. New York: [[Oxford University Press]], 1986. {{ISBN|0-19-520637-1}}</ref>{{Rp|85|date=June 2014}} "Viewed in perspective," Ertegun later wrote, "they are among the most significant jazz records ever made: they gave eloquent proof of the continuing vitality of New Orleans jazz at a time when such proof was needed. They also revealed that Kid Ory's trombone was more powerful and more exuberant than it had ever been before, and that the master from New Orleans was still improving after a life almost as long as the life of jazz."<ref name="Ertegun"/> Ertegun retired the Crescent label after he purchased [[Jazz Man Records]] in late 1946. The eight Crescent discs were reissued on the Jazz Man Records label (Jazz Man 21β28) between 1946 and 1947.<ref name="Jazz Man"/>{{Rp|156}} On January 15, 1952, [[Good Time Jazz Records]] purchased the Crescent masters and the rest of the Jazz Man catalog for $5,500.<ref name="Jazz Man"/>{{Rp|308}} The Crescent recordings were reissued on Good Time Jazz Records L-10 and L-11 (1953) and L-12022 (1957).<ref name="Ertegun"/>
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