Comet Records was an American jazz and R&B record label, founded in 1944 by Les Schriber, Sr.[a] and Harry Alderton. The label is most known for having recorded and produced T-Bone Walker and Red Norvo. The label was acquired by Black & White Records and operated as a subsidiary. Comet recorded – but never released – a session with Charlie Parker on June 6, 1945. That master was sold to Dial Records in 1949, when Black & White Records went out of business.[1][2]
Selected session discography
editRed Norvo and His Selected Sextet recorded June 6, 1945, at WOR Recording Studios, 1440 Broadway, New York. The master was originally owned by Comet, but sold to Dial Records who first released some of the cuts.[2] The musicians were Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Flip Phillips, Red Norvo, Teddy Wilson, Slam Stewart, Specs Powell, and J.C. Heard. Heard alternated with Powell.
- Various reissues (compilations)
- Various takes
T6–A | "Halleluliah" | Comet T6; reissued on Dial 1045 |
T6–B | "Slam Slam Blues" | Comet T6; reissued on Dial 1045 |
T8–1 | "Hallelujah" ("Sing Hallelujah") | Dial LP903 |
T8–2 | "Hallelujah" | unissued, presumed lost |
T8–3 | "Hallelujah" | unissued, presumed lost |
T8–4 | "Hallelujah" | unissued, presumed lost |
T8–4 | "Hallelujah" | Dial 1045 |
T8–6 | "Hallelujah" | Dial LP903 |
T9–1 | "Get Happy" | unissued, presumed lost |
T9–2 | "Get Happy" | Dial 1035 and LP 903 |
T9–3 | "Get Happy" | unissued, presumed lost |
T9–4 | "Get Happy" | Comet T7; reissued on Dial LP903 |
T10–1 | "Slam Slam Blues" ("Bird's Blues") | Comet 1045; reissued on Dial LP903 |
T10–2 | "Slam Slam Blues" | Comet T6; reissued on Dial LP 903 |
T11–AA | "Congo Blues" | Dial LP903 |
T11–BB | "Congo Blues" | Dial LP903 |
T11–1 | "Congo Blues" | Dial LP903 |
T11–2 | "Congo Blues" (incomplete take) | Dial 1035 |
T11–3 | "Congo Blues" | Comet T7; reissued on Dial LP903 |
T11–4 | "Congo Blues" (incomplete take) | |
T11–5 | "Congo Blues" |
References
editComet artists & their original shellac (78rpm) releases
edit- Cow Cow Davenport
- C-1 "Gotta Girl For Every Day In The Week" / "Jump, Little Jitterbug" (1944)
- C-2 "Jeep Boogie" / "Chimin' Away" (1944)
- C-3 "Hobson City Stomp" / "Run Into Me" (1944)
- C-4 "Cow Cow's Stomp" / "Gin Mill Stomp" (1944)
- Art Tatum Trio (featuring Tiny Grimes and Slam Stewart)
- T-1 "The Man I Love" / "Dark Eyes" (1944); OCLC 62466439
- T-2 "Body and Soul" / "I Know That You Know" (1944); OCLC 62466436
- T-3 "On The Sunny Side of the Street" / "Flying Home" (1944); OCLC 62466425
- Cyril Haynes (de) Sextet (featuring Don Byas) (Cyril Nathaniel Haynes; 1915–1996)
- Red Norvo & His Selected Sextet (featuring Charlie Parker)
- T-6 "Halleluliah" [sic] / "Slam Slam Blues" (1945); OCLC 62466441
- Four Kings & A Queen / Orval "Baggie" Hardiman (1913–1999)
- 1301 "All I Need Is A Lucky Break" / "Shoo Shoo Baby" (1944)
- 1302 "King's Boogie" / "Lost My Sugar In Salt Lake City" (1944)
- 1304 "One Of Those Dreams That Fell Thru" / "Ration Blues" (1945)
- T-Bone Walker & His Guitar (unissued Black & White masters except the previously issued "T-Bone Shuffle")
- T-50 "West Side Baby" / "Lonesome Woman Blues" (issued 1948); OCLC 42466068
- T-51 "I'm Still In Love With You" / "Inspiration Blues" (issued 1948); OCLC 732376024
- T-52 "That Old Feelin' Is Gone" / "Description Blues" (issued 1948); OCLC 732376031
- T-53 "First Love Blues" / "T-Bone Shuffle" (issued 1949); OCLC 42386027
- Jack McVea & His All Stars
- T-100 "B.B. Boogie" / "H.P. Boogie" (1948)
- Previously issued by Black & White as "Bartender Boogie" (1945); OCLC 732367252
- Previously issued by Black & White as "House Party Boogie" (1946); OCLC 732367263
References
edit- Notes
- ^ Lester Wilmot Wilbert Schriber, Sr. (1901–1965)
- Inline citations
- ^ Thematic Catalogues in Music: An Annotated Bibliography (2nd ed.), by Barry Shelley Brook, PhD (1918–1997), & Richard J. Viano, PhD (born 1946), Pendragon Press, Hillsdale, New York (1997), pg. 321; OCLC 468031517, 36179010, 770881119, 614142637, 750723958; ISBN 091872886X; ISBN 9780918728869
- ^ a b The Dial recordings of Charlie Parker, Edward M. Komara (compiler), Greenwood Press (1998), pg. 58; OCLC 528877878