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Various other recordings of the tune followed in the 1920s and 1930s. The [[Boswell Sisters]] performed the tune on radio, record, and in the film ''[[The Big Broadcast]]''. [[Chick Webb]] made a notable recording with an arrangement by [[Benny Carter]].
Various other recordings of the tune followed in the 1920s and 1930s. The [[Boswell Sisters]] performed the tune on radio, record, and in the film ''[[The Big Broadcast]]''. [[Chick Webb]] made a notable recording with an arrangement by [[Benny Carter]].

{{Listen|filename=Armstrongscat.ogg|title="Heebie Jeebies" excerpt|description=[[Louis Armstrong]]'s 1926 recording of "Heebie Jeebies" was the most influential early example of scat singing. — 168 KB|format=[[Ogg]]}}


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 09:33, 24 April 2016

"Heebie Jeebies"
Song

"Heebie Jeebies" is a composition written by Boyd Atkins which achieved fame when it was recorded by Louis Armstrong in 1926. The recording on Okeh Records by Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five includes a famous example of scat singing by Armstrong.

A popular legend (apparently originating from a 1930s claim by Richard M. Jones) says that Louis Armstrong dropped his lyric sheet while recording the song and for lack of words to sing, began to improvise his vocals and thereby created the technique of scat singing. This story, though popular, may be apocryphal. Nevertheless, the inventiveness of the technique impressed many when the record first came out - Mezz Mezzrow's book Really the Blues recounts the delighted reactions of Frank Teschmacher, Bix Beiderbecke, and other musicians.

Another notable feature of the record is the hokum coda, in which a line is delivered too early, leaving the break over which it should have been spoken completely empty.

Various other recordings of the tune followed in the 1920s and 1930s. The Boswell Sisters performed the tune on radio, record, and in the film The Big Broadcast. Chick Webb made a notable recording with an arrangement by Benny Carter.

References

  • Who Wrote that Song? Dick Jacobs & Harriet Jacobs, published by Writer's Digest Books, 1993