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Mosaic Records Issues a Spectacular 9-Disc Set of 
Live Performances by the Peerless Louis Armstrong: 
The Complete Columbia and RCA Victor Live Recordings 
of Louis Armstrong and The All Stars - Available May 20 
 
Mosaic Also Set to Release Armstrong's 
Complete '56 and '58 Newport Jazz Festival 
Performances with Four LP Set: 
Louis Armstrong & The All Stars: Newport 1956 &1958 
 
  
 
 
There has never been a more globally beloved figure from the world of jazz than Louis "Pops/Satchmo" Armstrong.
 His influence on the development of both jazz and American popular 
music is indisputably unparalleled. A lesser-known and disturbing fact 
is that for the last 30 years of his life he was under attack by many 
critics and musicians as irrelevant, under-achieving and too heavily 
focused on commercial success. Now, Mosaic Records offers clear testimony to the inaccuracy and injustice of those characterizations with its spectacular Columbia and RCA Victor Live Recordings of Louis Armstrong and The All Stars.
 A nine-disc set covering the years 1947-1958, these wonderful 
recordings provide crystal-clear evidence of Louis' profound artistry 
and majestic audience appeal from the most meaningful platform of 
musical scrutiny - the bandstand. 
 
"This
 LP sets focuses on the complete performances by Louis Armstrong and his
 All Stars at the third and fifth Newport Jazz Festivals, which are two 
of the linchpins from our larger CD edition," says Mosaic Records 
co-founder, Michael Cuscuna. "Although tracks have been
 parceled out over the years, this 2014 set will finally present these 
excellent performances in the entirety and in performance order, giving 
us a healthy portion of previously unissued music by Louis with Trummty 
Young, Edmond Hall, Peanuts Hucko, Jack Teagarden, Bobby Hackett and 
Billy Kyle." 
 
Mosaic
 is not only known for assembling collections of vitally important music
 by many of jazz' most immortal and influential figures, but also of 
establishing historical accuracy and edification of the true import of 
America's only indigenous art form. This set - a 12-year slice of his 
creative output on the worldwide stage - shows the peerless Pops to be 
fully in the forefront of jazz at its jubilant, transcendent and 
irresistible best on nearly 163 tracks of both his most popular songs 
along with many that are far less familiar. 
 
Performing
 over 300 shows a year throughout these years (and most of his life), 
it's very fortunate that the performances offered here were recorded for
 posterity. Most of this can be attributed to the legendary producer George Avakian
 - to whom this set has been dedicated - who is responsible for nearly 
70% of the material contained here. As his exclusive producer at 
Columbia from when Louis joined the label in 1955, George implemented 
the latest technological advances, which enhanced the material for both 
artist and label. But that sometimes demanded editing and altering the 
music for best commercial appeal. Mosaic has restored all of the concert
 recordings to their purest essence, demonstrating all of the fire and 
raw creativity of the music exactly as the screaming and stomping 
audiences heard it over 50 years ago. And as a gigantic bonus, there are
 75 tracks being released for the very first time. 
 
The
 set begins with the scintillating 1947 concert at New York's Town Hall,
 which dramatically altered Louis' live performance format to the one 
that would remain intact for the rest of his life. Eschewing his 
16-piece big band for a smaller, more au courant ensemble, The All Stars
 were born. In this incarnation it was the remarkable assemblage of Jack
 Teagarden on trombone, clarinetist Peanuts Hucko, pianist Dick Cary, 
bassist Bob Haggart and two alternating drummers - George Wettling and 
"Big" Sid Catlett - on 20 tracks of pure joy. 
 
A
 newfound gem is the 1947 Carnegie Hall concert, which sat improperly 
labeled in RCA's vaults for over half a century, is issued here for the 
very first time. Some 90 minutes of material was preserved - 18 
brilliant tracks, also featuring Teagarden, Cary and Catlett, but this 
time with the eminent Barney Bigard on clarinet, the big bass sound of Arvell Shaw and the addition of vocalist Velma Middleton. 
 
|  |  | Photograph courtesy of the Louis Armstrong House Museum |  
 
The
 Avakian sessions comprise the rest of the set. Adding a new nickname to
 Louis' already impressive array of monikers, Ambassador Satch was 
bestowed - a fitting name for the man who had become the world's 
foremost representative of American jazz and music in the 1950s. 
Performances from Amsterdam and Milan featured the new All Stars of 
Trummy Young on trombone, Edmond Hall on clarinet, pianist Billy Kyle 
and drummer Barrett Deems, along with Shaw and Middleton. The Milan 
performance was recorded in a theater in front of a small invited 
audience. The original release included fake applause, which has been 
removed so that only the wild response of the actual audience is heard, 
genuinely enhancing the immediacy of the live concert. 
 
Three U.S. concerts are also included. The Great Chicago Concert
 from 1956 has been out of print for a long time, but is available again
 here - with additional material, fully restored and unedited (Dale 
Jones replaces Arvell Shaw). Two Newport Jazz Festival performances from
 1956 and 1958 are here, uncut and including 28 tracks that have never 
been released. The 1958 concert reunited Louis with Teagarden, Hucko and
 cornetist Bobby Hackett, plus a most interesting item of Louis fronting
 The International Youth Band. 
 
A
 Los Angeles studio date is included here because it was originally 
released as a live concert. It's a fascinating set of unedited versions 
of popular songs that provides an unusual and intimate glimpse of how 
Louis and The All Stars developed and refined their material. 
 
There
 are other very special and inclusions - two never-before released 
tracks recorded in Ghana, one with local musicians, singers and dancers;
 an unreleased track from a London concert; a great version of Mack the Knife from Carnegie Hall; an interview of Louis by Edward R. Murrow that aired on the television show See It Now;
 another interview by Avakian, and a most remarkable item featuring 
Leonard Bernstein in rehearsal and performance at a 1956 Lewisohn 
Stadium concert with Bernstein and the New York Philharmonic - including
 three passes at St. Louis Blues, Bernstein chatting up the 
audience and Pops playing encore after encore to keep the fans happy - a
 real treasure that adds special luster to this wonderful collection. 
 
But
 above all else, Louis' consummate artistry on his horn, the brilliance 
of his most singular sound, the unique infectiousness and impeccable 
phrasing of his luminous vocal style and the utterly irresistible appeal
 of one of the most delightful human beings to ever walk the earth is 
brought to the listener with the clarity and depth that is the hallmark 
of Mosaic Records. There is nothing like undiluted live performance to 
truly convey the heart and soul of the jazz artist, succinctly stated by
 Louis himself: "So, whatever they're going to say about Louis 
Armstrong, all they say is, 'He blows like hell every time he hits that 
stand.'" 
 
As always, the striking Mosaic black and white packaging further enhances the total experience. Ricky Riccardi,
 the archivist for the Louis Armstrong House Museum and one of the 
world's foremost Armstrong experts has written an extremely enlightening
 and comprehensive essay. A precisely researched new discography finally
 clears up the confusion and inaccuracy about these dates. And in the 
classic Mosaic tradition, there are many outstanding vintage photographs
 from Louis' exalted career. 
 
Of
 course, Mosaic's commitment to provide the finest audio quality is 
front and center on every track, under the guidance of co-producer Scott Wenzel,
 who summarizes this set most aptly: "The Armstrong magnetism hardly 
ever wavered through the years and these live performances that had him 
back in the driver's seat with a small group bear out the verve and 
genius of this great man."  
 
 
Louis Armstrong · Columbia and RCA Victor 
Live Recordings of Louis Armstrong and The All Stars 
Mosaic Records  ·  Release Date: May 20, 2014 
 
This limited edition set is available exclusively from Mosaic Records. 
complete track listing and discography. 
 
 
For media information, please contact: 
  
Information and press materials (including album covers, promotional photos  
Serving the finest in jazz since 1988 
 
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