• el mes pasado
Ambrose and His Orchestra plays “Memphis Blues” on Decca 660, recorded on March 20, 1935.

The Rhythm Sisters provide vocals.

At one point the Rhythm Sisters were Tressa Dale (her married named was Tressa Dale Marshall), Betty Dale, and Kay Munro-Smythe. The trio had a shifting line up. Sometimes Jean Conibear, Helen Raymond, or others sang instead of the two Dales.

Bert Ambrose was an English bandleader and violinist. He lived from 1896 to 1971.

Folks I've just been down, down to Memphis town,
That's where the people smile, smile on you all the while.
Hospitality, they were good to me.
I couldn't spend a dime, and had the grandest time.

I went out a dancing with a Tennessee dear,
They had a fellow there named Handy with a band you should hear
And while the folks gently swayed, all the band folks played Real harmony.
I never will forget the tune that Handy called the Memphis Blues.
Oh yes, them Blues.

They've got a fiddler there that always slickens his hair
And folks he sure do pull some bow.
And when the big Bassoon seconds to the Trombones croon.
It moans just like a sinner on Revival Day, on Revival Day.

Oh that melody sure appealed to me.
Just like a mountain stream rippling on it seemed.
Then it slowly died, with a gentle sigh
Soft as the breeze that whines high in the summer pines.

Hear me people, hear me people, hear I pray,
I'm going to take a million lesson's 'til I learn how to play
Because I seem to hear it yet, simply can't forget
That blue refrain.

There's nothing like the Handy Band that played the Memphis Blues so grand.
Oh play them Blues.
That melancholy strain, that ever haunting refrain
Is like a sweet old sorrow song.
Here comes the very part that wraps a spell around my heart.
It sets me wild to hear that loving tune a gain,
The Memphis Blues.

Ambrose and His Orchestra “Memphis Blues” (1935) Rhythm Sisters = Kay Munro-Smythe

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