Cecil Gant

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
I Wonder 00:00 Tools
Soft and Mellow 00:00 Tools
Cecil Boogie 00:00 Tools
Nashville Jumps 00:00 Tools
Blues In L.A. 00:00 Tools
I Gotta Gal 00:00 Tools
Midnight on Central Avenue 00:00 Tools
Original Cecil's Boogie 00:00 Tools
Killer Diller Boogie 00:00 Tools
Special Delivery 00:00 Tools
We're Gonna Rock 00:00 Tools
What's On Your Worried Mind 00:00 Tools
Hit That Jive Jack 00:00 Tools
Hello Santa Claus 00:00 Tools
When I Wanted You 00:00 Tools
Wake up Cecil Wake Up 00:00 Tools
New Cecil Boogie 00:00 Tools
Rhumba Boogie Woogie 00:00 Tools
Little Baby You're Running Wild 00:00 Tools
Cecil's Mop Mop 00:00 Tools
That's the Stuff You Gotta Watch 00:00 Tools
I'll Remember You 00:00 Tools
Jump Jack Jump 00:00 Tools
Boogie Blues 00:00 Tools
It's All over Darling 00:00 Tools
Baby I'm Losin' You 00:00 Tools
It's All Over Nw 00:00 Tools
All Because Of You 00:00 Tools
Rock Little Baby 00:00 Tools
Hello, Santa Claus 00:00 Tools
Train Time Blues 00:00 Tools
Hello, Santa Claus! 00:00 Tools
Anna Mae 00:00 Tools
Playin' Myself the Blues 00:00 Tools
Boogie Woogie Baby 00:00 Tools
loose as a goose 00:00 Tools
Sloppy Joe's 00:00 Tools
It's Christmas Time Again 00:00 Tools
Screwy boogie 00:00 Tools
I'm a Good Man But a Poor Man 00:00 Tools
Cecil's Jam Session 00:00 Tools
Rock, little baby 00:00 Tools
Shotgun Boogie 00:00 Tools
Boozie Boogie 00:00 Tools
Another Day Another Dollar 00:00 Tools
Bullet Boogie 00:00 Tools
Ninth Street Jive 00:00 Tools
I Ain't Gonna Cry No More 00:00 Tools
Time Will Tell 00:00 Tools
Hogan's Alley 00:00 Tools
It's Christmas Time Once Again 00:00 Tools
It Ain't Gonna Be Like That 00:00 Tools
Playing Myself the Blues 00:00 Tools
You Can't Do Me Right 00:00 Tools
Don't You Worry 00:00 Tools
I Believe I'll Go Back Home 00:00 Tools
I'm All Alone Now 00:00 Tools
Cecil Boogie No. 2 00:00 Tools
Owl Stew 00:00 Tools
Syncopated boogie 00:00 Tools
Blues In La 00:00 Tools
Three Little Girls 00:00 Tools
Deal Yourself Another Hand 00:00 Tools
What's The Matter 00:00 Tools
Blues In L. A. 00:00 Tools
Blues In Los Angeles 00:00 Tools
Am I To Blame 00:00 Tools
Cecils Mop Mop 00:00 Tools
So Tired 00:00 Tools
Wake Up Cecil 00:00 Tools
I Wonder - Original 00:00 Tools
I'm Tired 00:00 Tools
Cecil Boogie No 2 00:00 Tools
Whats on Your Worried Mind 00:00 Tools
I'm A Good Man, But A Poor Man 00:00 Tools
Way Down 00:00 Tools
Are You Ready 00:00 Tools
Every Minute Of Every Hour 00:00 Tools
Lightning Blues 00:00 Tools
My Little Baby 00:00 Tools
Rock the Boogie 00:00 Tools
Another Day, Another Dollar 00:00 Tools
If It's True 00:00 Tools
Long Distance 00:00 Tools
Lost Baby Blues 00:00 Tools
Long Distance Call 00:00 Tools
Hit That Jack Jive 00:00 Tools
Minth Street Jive 00:00 Tools
Nobody Loves You 00:00 Tools
Rose Room 00:00 Tools
Solitude 00:00 Tools
I Gotta Go! 00:00 Tools
Little Baby, You're Running Wild 00:00 Tools
Cecil Boogie No.2 00:00 Tools
Rock Litle Baby 00:00 Tools
Cecils Boogie 00:00 Tools
Take It And Get 00:00 Tools
Blues in L.a 00:00 Tools
I Got A Gal 00:00 Tools
I'm Singing The Blues Today 00:00 Tools
God Bless My Daddy 00:00 Tools
Sooner Or Later 00:00 Tools
I Ain't Gonna 00:00 Tools
Nashville Jump 00:00 Tools
Stuff You Gotta Watch 00:00 Tools
I'm A Good Man But A Poorman 00:00 Tools
I wonder (Public Domain Music) 00:00 Tools
My My My 00:00 Tools
My House Fell Down 00:00 Tools
We’re Gonna Rock 00:00 Tools
Jump Jack 00:00 Tools
Blues By Cecil 00:00 Tools
I'm a Good But a Poor Man 00:00 Tools
Goodbye Baby 00:00 Tools
Take and Get 00:00 Tools
Jam Jam Blues 00:00 Tools
Cecil's Boogie [1eoV] 00:00 Tools
It's All Over 00:00 Tools
Hit That Jive, Jack 00:00 Tools
My Baby's Changed 00:00 Tools
I Wonder 1945 00:00 Tools
Cecil Knows Better Now 00:00 Tools
Are You Ready? 00:00 Tools
Traintime Blues 00:00 Tools
I'm a Good Man Put a Poor Man 00:00 Tools
Playing Myself Some Blues 00:00 Tools
Wake Up Cecil, Wake Up 00:00 Tools
That’s the Stuff You Gotta Watch 00:00 Tools
Hey Boogie 00:00 Tools
Put Another Chair At The Table 00:00 Tools
If I Had a Wish 00:00 Tools
Train Time 00:00 Tools
Little Baby You're Runnin' Wild 00:00 Tools
Loose As Goose 00:00 Tools
Specila Delivery 00:00 Tools
Sloppy Joe'sTrack 02 00:00 Tools
Rhumba Boogie Boogie 00:00 Tools
That's the Stuff You Got to Watch 00:00 Tools
Rock Little Baby (Remastered) 00:00 Tools
Its All Over Darling 00:00 Tools
Cecil boogie n° 2 00:00 Tools
I Wonder / Cecil Grant 00:00 Tools
  • 70,324
    plays
  • 12,714
    listners
  • 70324
    top track count

Cecil Gant (April 4, 1913 - February 4, 1951) was an American blues singer and pianist. Born in Nashville, Tennessee, Gant worked local clubs through the mid 1930s up until the Second World War, when he enlisted in the United States Army. Though his piano was blues-based, vocally he was a crooner of considerable cross-over appeal. He sang at a War Bond rally in Los Angeles, California, signed with the Gilt Edge record label, and recorded the self-penned ballad "I Wonder" late in 1944, billed as "Pvt. Cecil Gant." "I Wonder" reached number one on the Billboard Harlem Hit Parade (as the R&B chart was called then) and sold impressively nationwide. Gant then went on tour billed as "The G.I. Sing-sation," dressed in Army khaki and breaking attendance records at major venues, attracting both black and white audiences. As well as singing in the dream vein of his hit, Gant could deliver a pleasant blues and energetic boogie-woogie; versatility shared by his West Coast contemporaries, Charles Brown and Ivory Joe Hunter. Gant had other releases on King Records (1947), Bullet Records (1948-49), Downbeat/Swingtime (1949), and Imperial Records (1950), but his moment of jukebox glory was gone. Some of his later recordings were rockabilly boogies utilising a Nashville studio guitarist, a few steps away from the soon-to-emerge rock and roll. However, he did not live long enough to see that new trend. Gant died from pneumonia in Nashville in 1951, at the age of 37. He is buried in Highland Park Cemetery in Cleveland, Ohio. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Certainly one of the most amazing and sometimes tragic stories in American musical history that is seldom told. Cecil Gant came out of nowhere that afternoon in 1944 in downtown Los Angeles. He was a largely unknown singer-pianist in the wartime army when the opportunity came for him to perform at a war bond rally. He made a favorable impression, enough so that he had a chance to put some tunes on record. A recording of his tune "I Wonder" was released on the small independent Gilt Edge label. He was billed as Pvt. Cecil Gant, The "GI Sing Station". What happened next was unforeseen and unprecedented. The record sold, and sold, and sold-in huge quantities. The numbers will never be known but by some estimates the amount may have reached well over a million. The story of meeting the demand is the stuff of legends. It required clandestine record pressing plants in residential neighborhoods, all manner of secret deals for the supply of shellac (a must for the production of 78 rpm records) which was subject to severe wartime restrictions, and the itinerant record sellers up and down the west coast operating from trunks of cars and roadside stands. It was the right song for the times and it captured the sentiments of a large number of the population as they could see the beginning of the end of the world war. The impact of the success of this record was immediate and forever changed the face of American recording. It proved that an unproven Black artist, recording for a small independent record label, can return huge profits to the owners and entrepreneurs. This was the first time that this had happened and the opportunity was not lost on a number of small time record producers. The result was the establishment of the indie labels which willingly recorded this new largely unheard wealth of talent. Los Angeles was the first area, the birthplace of the R & B independents. There was Modern Music (soon to become Modern and subsidiaries RPM, Flair, and Meteor), Alladin, Specialty, Imperial, and the Black owned Excelsior. The rest of the story is well known as independents sprung up in most major cities and changed the music forever. And it all started with this one record. And Cecil Gant who was there at the beginning? The story here is anything but happy. He tried again and again to duplicate the success of I Wonder with a string of releases for Gilt Edge. Having no luck he returned to his home town of Nashville for a series of records for Bullet, again with no success. He got one more shot with a major this time- Decca for some dates in New York. Although he was on Gunter Lee Carr's historic cut of "We're Gonna Rock" he came up empty again. He finally succumbed to a combination of depression and the bottle and died in 1951 just 7 years after the release of "I Wonder". Everyone who ever had a hit for an independent label should give a word of thanks for the memory of Cecil Gant. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.