(Vocal Jazz/Scat singing/Outsider music) Shooby Taylor - The Human Horn - 2002, MP3 (tracks), 192 kbps
Shooby Taylor - The Human Horn
Жанр: Vocal Jazz/Scat singing/Outsider music
Год выпуска диска: 2002
Производитель диска: USA
Аудио кодек: MP3
Тип рипа: tracks
Битрейт аудио: 192 kbps
Продолжительность: 35:30
Трэклист
01. Introduction (0:08)
02. Lift Every Voice And Sing (2:34)
03. Stout-Hearted Man (2:40)
04. Lights Out (2:00)
05. Just A Closer Walk With Thee (2:35)
06. Peg O' My Heart (2:12)
07. Tico Tico (2:01)
08. How Great Thou Art (3:18)
09. Why Me Lord (2:43)
10. You Tell Me Your Dream And I'll Tell You Mine (3:27)
11. Who's Sorry Now (2:09)
12. You're Nobody Till Somebody Loves You (2:21)
13. It Is No Secret (2:26)
14. Over The Rainbow (2:16)
15. Softly And Tenderly (2:40)
Bonus
Shooby Records (2:26)
Shooby Talks (1:16)
Shooby Calls (0:18)
Johnny Cash & Shooby 1 (2:40) - 128 kbps
Johnny Cash & Shooby 2 (2:16) - 128 kbps
Gigi (5:54) - 96 kbps
Биография (англ.)
William "Shooby" Taylor (a.k.a. "The Human Horn") (September 19, 1929 - June 4, 2003) is 'a little bit famous' for scat singing over various records, including the Ink Spots, the Harmonicats and Cristy Lane in a baritone voice. He is noted for his highly idiosyncratic scat style, using sounds and syllables quite unlike those used by other scat singers.
Shooby Taylor was born in Indiana Township, Pennsylvania, on September 19, 1929. Shortly thereafter he moved with his family to Harlem, where he spent the majority of his life. Besides Shooby's several decades of pursuing a career as a scat singer, he also worked 21 years as a New York City postal worker.
He is most famously known for the 14 tracks he recorded in the early 1980s, at the now nonexistent Angel Sound Studios in Manhattan. These recordings began circulating among tape and file-swappers and are now available at the official Shooby Taylor website.
Video of a 1980s appearance at the Apollo Theater has also surfaced, and is the only known footage of Shooby performing. Taylor was booed off the stage moments after beginning his act.
In 1992, Shooby moved to a senior complex in Newark, New Jersey. Shooby experienced a stroke in 1994 that crippled his scat skill, also stopping him from recording and performing.
Shooby was "re-discovered" in spring 2002 by producer Rick Goetz On August 28, 2002, Shooby appeared for his first and only radio interview on WFMU.
Taylor died on June 4, 2003, at the age of 74. Plans for an official CD release of his work are still pending.