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Compilations Featuring Various Artists
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Archeophone has released 42
CDs to date, including the 22
compilations shown below. 20
single artist releases
are also available. |
 | Real Ragtime: Disc Recordings From Its Heyday ARCH 1001A Ships in 24 hours $16.4929 songs from 1898-1923, 28-page booklet with historical notes, artist bios, and rare graphics. Includes two extremely rare Berliner discs. Banjos by Ossman and Van Eps, raggy marches by Pryor and Sousa, vocals by Collins, American Quartet, and 'Gene Greene, and much more. These are the ragtime records people heard during the genre's formative years. Read
more » |
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 | Before Radio ARCH 1002A Ships in 24 hours $16.4927 tracks from 1897-1923, 20-page booklet with historical notes, artist
bios, and rare graphics. Includes monologues, dialogues, sketches, "descriptives,"
and much more from the days before radio. Standout stars are Ada Jones,
Len Spencer, Steve Porter, Haydn Quartet, Weber and Fields, Golden and Hughes,
Cal Stewart, and Will Rogers. Read
more » |
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 | Stomp and Swerve ARCH 1003 Ships in 24 hours $16.4927 songs from 1897-1925, 28-page booklet with historical notes, artist
bios, and unusual graphics chronicling the rise of "hot" playing
in American music over four decades. Rare tracks by banjo virtuosos Cullen
and Collins, vocalist Silas Leachman, Jim Europe's Orchestra, and his proteges
in the Versatile Four. The ultra-rare "Sunset Medley" by Haenschen
and Schiffer is here released for the first time, along with Edison cylinders
by Sophie Tucker and Polk Miller. Companion to the book by David Wondrich,
published by Chicago Review Press on the A Cappella imprint. Read
more » |
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 | Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry, 1891-1922 ARCH 1005 Ships in 24 hours $29.99Fifty-four tracks by 43 artists, and 60 pages of in-depth commentary and analysis: Lost Sounds is a monumental achievement that stretches back to the faint beginnings of commercial recordings and travels to the brink of the Jazz Age to trace the contributions of black artists on American records. Sometimes noisy and raucous, sometimes quiet and austere, these recordings demonstrate the deep involvement and lasting influence of African Americans in the nascent recording industry. Read more » |
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 | Monarchs of Minstrelsy ARCH 1006 Ships in 24 hours $16.49From the research of Allen Debus comes Monarchs of Minstrelsy: Historic Recordings by the Stars of the Minstrel Stage, a collection of rare recordings by the stars who once performed them in minstrel shows. These are real veterans of the blackface minstrel stage, singing the songs they made famous on stage and performing the minstrel routines that have made them notorious today. Monarchs includes 28 tracks and a full-color 24-page booklet. Read more » |
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 | Actionable Offenses: Indecent Phonograph Recordings from the 1890s ARCH 1007 Ships in 24 hours $16.99Pioneer recording artist Russell Hunting went to jail for what's on this CD. 19 cylinder selections (43 tracks) from c.1892-1900 of the rarest of the rare: explicit indecent spoken-word recordings that brought down the wrath of anti-vice crusader Anthony Comstock. Actionable Offenses is a critical edition that places these recordings in their original social and historical context. Featuring an oversized 60-page booklet with complete transcripts of the recordings, annotations on slang and out-of-date references, and a groundbreaking historical essay by Patrick Feaster and David Giovannoni detailing the rise of indecent recordings and arrest of Hunting. Also includes recordings by Cal Stewart, James White, and an unknown gentleman of the 1890s indulging his taste for home recordings. Read more » |
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 | The Great War: An American Musical Fantasy ARCH 2001 (2 CDs) Ships in 24 hours $29.99Featuring 56 tracks, Archeophone's The Great War: An American Musical Fantasy traces the history of American involvement in World War I by reviewing the kind of records that were released. What unfolds is a drama in which the U.S. transforms through a series of stages: from curious bystander and political neutral to naive dove, then from idealistic booster to jingoistic hawk, and finally from jubilant victors to street-wise questioners asking "What was it all for?" With a 76-page full-color booklet featuring historical graphics, original research on the recording industry and a personal reflection on the war, The Great War is unparalleled in Archeophone's catalogue. Read more » |
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 | The Pink Lambert ARCH 3001 Ships in 24 hours $15.9922 songs, sketches, whistling solos, and band performances from ca. 1902, with
detailed notes in a 16-page glossy booklet. Featured artists are the (original)
American Quartet, Collins and Natus, Joe Belmont, Harry Macdonough, Sousa cornetist
Otto Mesloh, and the Metropolitan Band. Includes original research into the operation
of the Lambert Company of Chicago and 22 of the world's rarest records. A glimpse
into the culture of 100 years ago. Read
more » |
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 | The Complete Hit of the Week Recordings Volume 1 ARCH 3002 (2 CDs) Ships in 24 hours $30.99The first double-CD set in an eventual four-volume series featuring all regular
weekly issues of these cardboard records that were the best-selling records during
the Depression, along with several advertising and uncommonly scarce promotional
records from the Durium Company. The biggest names in 1930s music are here: Ben
Pollack, Phil Spitalney, Vincent Lopez, and Duke Ellington, playing as "The Harlem
Hot Chocolates." Top vocalists include Smith Ballew, Irving Kaufman, and Scrappy
Lambert. More than two hours of music and a very informative 24-page booklet with
notes by Doug Benson and Hit of the Week expert Hans Koert. Read more » |
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 | The Complete Hit of the Week Recordings, Volume 3 ARCH 3004 (2 CDs) Ships in 24 hours $30.99Volume 3 of The Complete Hit of the Week Recordings picks up where Volume 2 left off and features 51 tracks including the Durium 5 minute records and a number of rare advertising records. The package includes a 24-page booklet with complete discographical information, an essay about the Durium Corporation and notes on the recordings Read more » |
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 | 1920: "Even Water's Getting Weaker" ARCH 9001A (2nd ed.) Ships in 24 hours $16.9924 hits from 1920, the year that national Prohibition and women's suffrage took effect. Top artists include Al Jolson, Billy Murray, Paul Whiteman's Orchestra, Van and Schenck, John Steel, Selvin's Novelty Orchestra, Nora Bayes, and Art Hickman's Orchestra. 24-page color booklet features detailed notes on the songs, an historical essay, and rare graphics. Read more » |
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 | 1921: "Make Believe and Smile" ARCH 9002A (2nd ed.) Ships in 24 hours $16.9925 hits from 1921, the year that the Tulsa underwent the worst race riot in American history. Top songs by Paul Whiteman, Campbell and Burr, Al Jolson, Marion Harris, Eddie Cantor, Van and Schenck, Zez Confrey, the Paul Biese Trio and Frank Crumit, Isham Jones, and Vernon Dalhart. 24-page color booklet features detailed notes on the songs, an historical essay, and rare graphics.
Read more » |
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 | 1912: "Waitin' on the Levee" ARCH 9003 Ships in 24 hours $16.9924 hits from 1912, the year that the unsinkable Titanic went down and Teddy
Roosevelt launched his Bull Moose Party. Big songs by Billy Murray and the
American Quartet, Heidelberg Quintet, Ada Jones, Bob Roberts doing "Ragtime
Cowboy Joe," a very young Al Jolson singing "That Haunting Melody"
and "Ragging the Baby to Sleep," Collins and Harlan, Harry Lauder,
and more. Deluxe, full-color 24-page booklet features detailed notes on
the songs, an historical essay, and rare graphics. Read
more » |
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 | The 1890s, Volume 1 ARCH 9004 Ships in 24 hours $17.4930 tracks from 1893-1902, transferred from exceedingly scarce Berliner
discs and brown wax cylinders, with top artists such as Dan W. Quinn ("The
Band Played On"), George J. Gaskin ("Drill, Ye Terriers, Drill"),
John Yorke AtLee ("The Mocking Bird"), George W. Johnson ("The
Whistling Coon"), Arthur Collins ("I'd Leave My Happy Home for
You"), and Sousa's Band, Vess Ossman, Edward M. Favor, Russell Hunting,
and more. The deluxe 24-page booklet boasts extremely rare photos of several
of the artists (many only now published for the first time in over 100 years),
artist bios, a timeline of when the songs first hit big, and an historical
essay focusing on major social problems of the decade. Companion volume
to ARCH 9006. Read more » |
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 | 1913: "Come and See the Big Parade" ARCH 9005 Ships in 24 hours $16.9924 hits from 1913, the year that Henry Ford rolled out his first fully
operational assembly line. Big songs by Alan Turner, Ada Jones ("Row!
Row! Row!"), Al Jolson's first sides for Columbia ("Pullman Porters
Parade" and "You Made Me Love You"), the Peerless Quartet,
Campbell and Burr doing "The Trail of the Lonesome Pine", Charles
Harrison with "Peg O' My Heart," and spirited numbers by Prince's
Band ("Too Much Mustard") and the American Quartet, plus many
more. Deluxe, full-color 24-page booklet features detailed notes on the
songs, an historical essay, and rare graphics. Read
more » |
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 | The 1890s, Volume 2 ARCH 9006 Ships in 24 hours $17.4930 tracks from 1892-1900, transferred from exceedingly scarce brown wax
cylinders and Berliner discs. More hits by the biggest artists of the American
1890s, such as Gilmore's Band, Cal Stewart, Dan Quinn, George Gaskin, Arthur
Collins, and John Yorke AtLee. Standout tracks include the hitherto unattested
cylinder of "Silver Threads Among the Gold" by J. W. Myers, the
1894 recording of "Then You'll Remember Me" by the U.S. Marine
Band, an exceptional copy of "Casey at the Telephone," ca. 1896
by Russell Hunting, and the ultra-rare "Daddy Wouldn't Buy Me a Bow
Wow" ca. 1892 by Silas Leachman for the North American Phonograph Company
of Chicago. The deluxe 24-page booklet includes lyrics and bios and pictures
of selected songwriters, a timeline of when the songs first hit big, and
an historical essay focusing on major technological innovations of the decade.
Companion volume to ARCH 9004. Read
more » |
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 | 1922: "An Angel's Voice I Hear" ARCH 9007 Ships in 24 hours $16.9924 hits from 1922, the year that sales of radios to American homes skyrocketed.
The music was also getting jazzier, witnessed by hits such as "Lovin'
Sam" by Miss Patricola and the Virginians, "On the Alamo"
by Isham Jones, and "Hot Lips" by Paul Whiteman with Henry Busse.
Other hits are by Fanny Brice ("My Man" and "Second Hand
Rose"), Jones and Hare, Henry Burr, Al Jolson, and Lucy Isabelle Marsh
and Royal Dadmun. Features the last hit by Jones and Murray, and the song
of the year, the insanely popular "Mister Gallagher and Mister Shean"
in two different versions. Deluxe, full-color 24-page booklet features detailed
notes on the songs, an historical essay, and rare graphics. Read
more » |
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 | 1907: "Dear Old Golden Rule Days" ARCH 9008 Ships in 24 hours $16.9925 hits from 1907, the year that American banks suffered one of the worst
panics in U.S. history, ushering in a two-year depression. Features
sentimental favorites by Byron G. Harlan ("School Days") and Frank
Stanley ("Auld Lang Syne"), comic hits by Collins and Harlan,
Bob Roberts, and Helen Trix ("The Bird on Nellie's Hat"), and
the first stateside hit for Harry Lauder ("I Love a Lassie").
Other top artists include Billy Murray ("San Antonio" and "Harrigan"),
Bert Williams, Ada Jones, Stanley and Burr ("Red Wing"), Enrico
Caruso ("Vesti La Giubba" from Pagliacci), and the U.S.
Marine Band doing a rousing version of Joplin's "Maple Leaf Rag."
Deluxe, full-color 24-page booklet features detailed notes on the songs,
an historical essay, and rare graphics. Read
more » |
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 | 1908: "Take Me Out with the Crowd" ARCH 9009 Ships in 24 hours $16.9926 hits from 1908, the year that Fred Merkle's boneheaded play cost the Giants a trip to the World Series but sent the Cubs to their last series championship. Included here is baseball's anthem, "Take Me Out to the Ball Game" by the Haydn Quartet, along with 2 hits by the newly-christened Peerless Quartet and standards by the acoustic-era's great "teams": Collins and Harlan, Stanley and Burr, and Jones and Murray. Also features the collectible hit by Lucy Isabelle Marsh, "The Glow Worm" and hits by vaudeville greats Eddie Morton and Clarice Vance. Deluxe, full-color 24-page booklet features detailed notes on the songs, an historical essay, and rare graphics. Read more » |
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 | 1916: "The Country Found Them Ready" ARCH 9010 Ships in 24 hours $16.9925 hits from the year that Woodrow Wilson won re-election to the U.S. presidency on the campaign, "He kept us out of war." Behind the scenes, however, Wilson was preparing the nation for entry into the conflict, which came in April 1917. At the same time, child-labor laws were passed, and Emma Goldman found herself convicted for breaking the Comstock law. Read more » |
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 | 1915: "They'd Sooner Sleep on Thistles" ARCH 9011 Ships in 24 hours $16.9925 songs from 1915, the year submarine warfare and the sinking of the Lusitania hit the news. Popular songs included the American Quartet's "On the 5:15" and Billy Murray's "The Little Ford Rambled Right Along," Al Jolson's "Sister Susie's Sewing Shirts for Soldiers," and one of the most famous war protest songs of all, "I Didn't Raise My Boy to Be a Soldier." 1915: "They'd Sooner Sleep on Thistles" includes a 24 page full color booklet featuring an essay on the Lusitania and the push to war, discographical information on the records, notes on the songs, and rare images and photographs. Read more » |
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