Sonny Boy ♫ jazz quintet arranged by Rich Willey
Did you know Al Jolson’s black face performances were a protest against banning blacks from performing on stage? He fought against discrimination on Broadway and introduced African-American music to white audiences.
Al Jolson’s 1928 recording of Sonny Boy was a million seller hit that stayed at #1 on the charts for 12 weeks.
Suggested price: $15.00
Description
Sonny Boy ♫ jazz quintet arranged by Rich Willey, written by Ray Henderson, Bud De Sylva, and Lew Brown.
This is an adaptation for two horns of a three-horn arrangement by Johnny Mandel from the 1956 Art Pepper & Chet Baker album The Route. This appears on the Rich Willey Quintet Gone With The Piggies CD.
Arrangement comes with parts 1 and 2 for: B♭ (trumpet or tenor sax), E♭ (alto sax), and bass clef (trombone), as well as a written bass line and rhythm chart. Parts come in a PDF that you’ll be able to download immediately upon submission of your order.
Written solos for any of our charts may be special ordered at a reasonable cost. Email us through our contact page with any and all inquiries.
Difficulty level medium to advanced. Medium-brisk swing tempo, 87-measures total score length.
Sound clip (♫) from the Rich Willey Quintet Gone With The Piggies CD:
Rich Willey on trumpet, Kenny Shanker on alto sax, Ayako Shirasaki on piano, Scott Fragala on bass, Tim Collins on drums.
Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.
Related products
-
Little Treasures ♫ jazz sextet composed and arranged by Rich Willey
0 out of 5Suggested price: $15.00 Choose priceDoes your jazz sextet shine with an Afro-Cuban 6/8 beat? Would you like to feature them on a fairly modern-sounding original composition that lets everybody dig deep?
Little Treasures has stirred audiences all over the country and has been played by jazz greats such as Chris Potter and the late Kenny Drew Jr.
-
On The Sunny Side Of The Street by McHugh & Fields ♫ arranged for vocalist + septet by Rich Willey
0 out of 5Suggested price: $25.00 Choose priceWould you like to share the optimism of this great song that helped cheer up America during the Great Depression of the 1930s?
Come on and listen to the sound clips of this arrangement that features your male vocalist with an upbeat horn section accompaniment.
-
All Of Me by Marks & Simons ♫ arranged by Rich Willey for jazz sextet
0 out of 5Suggested price: $20.00 Choose priceOf the over 2,000 different recordings (including four by Frank Sinatra), who recorded this song first in December of 1931? Was it Paul Whiteman or was it Ruth Etting?
Few songs have stood the test of time as well as All Of Me by Gerald Marks and Seymour Simons. Here is yet another way to play it.
-
Puttin’ On The Ritz by Irving Berlin ♫ for vocalist + septet arranged by Rich Willey
0 out of 5Suggested price: $30.00 Choose priceDo you know the first song to be sung by a multiracial ensemble in American cinema? Written in 1927, introduced by Harry Richman and chorus in the 1930 musical film Puttin’ On the Ritz.
Now you can play this very hip funk/jazz version with a little hint of J.S. Bach thrown in for extra fun!
Reviews
There are no reviews yet.