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Louis Jordan

Louis Jordan

Louis Jordan has been played on NTS in shows including Dancing Through The 20th Century, featured first on 23 March 2014. Songs played include Stone Cold Dead In The Market, Saturday Night Fish Fry and Caledonia.

Louis Jordan (July 8, 1908 - February 4, 1975) was a pioneering African-American jazz and rhythm & blues musician and songwriter who enjoyed his greatest popularity from the late 1930s to the early 1950s. Known as "The King of the Jukebox", Jordan was highly popular with both black and white audiences in the later years of the swing era.

Jordan was one of the first black recording artists whose popularity crossed over into the mainstream white audience and who scored hits on both the "race" charts and the mainstream white pop charts. He is now acknowledged as one of the most successful African-American musicians of the 20th century, ranking fifth in the list of the all-time most successful black recording artists.

Jordan scored at least four million-selling hits during his career, regularly topping the "race" charts, as well as scoring simultaneous Top Ten hits on the white pop charts on several occasions. Many of the songs he wrote or co-wrote have become 20th century popular music classics.

With his dynamic Tympany Five bands (which also pioneered the use of electric guitar and electric organ) Jordan largely mapped out the main parameters of the classic R&B, urban blues and early rock'n'roll genres with a series of hugely influential 78 rpm discs for the Decca label that presaged virtually all of the dominant black music styles of the 1950s and 1960s and which exerted a huge influence on many leading performers in these genres.

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Louis Jordan

Louis Jordan has been played on NTS in shows including Dancing Through The 20th Century, featured first on 23 March 2014. Songs played include Stone Cold Dead In The Market, Saturday Night Fish Fry and Caledonia.

Louis Jordan (July 8, 1908 - February 4, 1975) was a pioneering African-American jazz and rhythm & blues musician and songwriter who enjoyed his greatest popularity from the late 1930s to the early 1950s. Known as "The King of the Jukebox", Jordan was highly popular with both black and white audiences in the later years of the swing era.

Jordan was one of the first black recording artists whose popularity crossed over into the mainstream white audience and who scored hits on both the "race" charts and the mainstream white pop charts. He is now acknowledged as one of the most successful African-American musicians of the 20th century, ranking fifth in the list of the all-time most successful black recording artists.

Jordan scored at least four million-selling hits during his career, regularly topping the "race" charts, as well as scoring simultaneous Top Ten hits on the white pop charts on several occasions. Many of the songs he wrote or co-wrote have become 20th century popular music classics.

With his dynamic Tympany Five bands (which also pioneered the use of electric guitar and electric organ) Jordan largely mapped out the main parameters of the classic R&B, urban blues and early rock'n'roll genres with a series of hugely influential 78 rpm discs for the Decca label that presaged virtually all of the dominant black music styles of the 1950s and 1960s and which exerted a huge influence on many leading performers in these genres.

Original source Last.fm

Tracks featured on

Most played tracks

Stone Cold Dead In The Market
Louis Jordan, Ella Fitzgerald
Bear Family Records1992
Saturday Night Fish Fry
Louis Jordan
Tangerine Records1964
Caledonia
Louis Jordan, Hot Lips Page, Don Byas
Rarities0
65 Bars
Louis Jordan
Tangerine Records1965
Beware Brother Beware
Louis Jordan
Mercury1957
GI Jive
Lewis Jordon
Play Back Records0
Open The Door, Richard
Louis Jordan
MCA Records1980