Jimmy and Mama Yancey

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
How Long Blues 04:29 Tools
Yancey Special 02:40 Tools
Mournful Blues 03:11 Tools
Monkey Woman Blues 04:02 Tools
Santa Fe Blues 02:46 Tools
35th and Dearborn 03:08 Tools
Yancey's Bugle Call 02:22 Tools
Make Me A Pallet On The Floor 02:22 Tools
How Long Blues - Second Version 04:39 Tools
How Long Blues - aka How Long How Long Blues LP Version 04:39 Tools
Four O'clock Blues 04:39 Tools
Salute To Pinetop 02:50 Tools
Shave 'Em Dry 02:50 Tools
Blues For Albert 02:11 Tools
Yancey Special (Second Version) 02:32 Tools
Yancey's Bugle Call - LP Version 02:32 Tools
Shave 'Em Dry - LP Version 02:32 Tools
Yancey Special - LP Version 02:32 Tools
Mournful Blues - LP Version 02:32 Tools
How Long Blues (Second Version) 04:37 Tools
How Long Blues (aka How Long How Long Blues) 04:37 Tools
Blues For Albert - LP Version 04:37 Tools
Santa Fe Blues - LP Version 04:37 Tools
Monkey Womam Blues 04:37 Tools
Salute To Pinetop - LP Version 04:37 Tools
Make Me A Pallet On The Floor - LP Version 04:37 Tools
Four O'Clock Blues - LP Version 04:37 Tools
Monkey Woman Blues - LP Version 04:37 Tools
35th And Dearborn - LP Version 04:37 Tools
Sante Fe Blues 02:48 Tools
How Long Blues - aka How Long How Long Blues LP Version 02:47 Tools
Yancey Special, 2nd Version 02:57 Tools
Shave'em Dry 03:21 Tools
How Long Blues - aka How Long How Long Blues 02:47 Tools
02 How Long Blues 02:47 Tools
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Jimmy Yancey with Mama Yancey James Edwards “Jimmy” Yancey (February 20, 1898 - September 17, 1951) was an African American pianist, composer, and lyricist, most noted for his pianowork in the boogie woogie style. Estelle “Mama” Yancey (January 1, 1896 – April 19, 1986) was an American blues singer. In 1917, when she was 21, she married Jimmy Yancey, who had traveled the U.S. and Europe as a vaudeville dancer. She often sang with him at informal get-togethers and house parties in the 1930s and 1940s and performed with him at Carnegie Hall, New York in 1948. Because Jimmy Yancey was a great boogie-woogie/blues piano player, Estelle recorded frequently with her husband. Jimmy and Mama Yancey recorded the first album ever made by Atlantic Records. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.