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Fred Van Eps - My Sumurun Girl Medley
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 Amberol  Blue  Cylinder  Eps  Fred  Girl  My  Sumurun  Van  

Channel: Music
Uploaded: July 18, 2008 at 3:23 pm
Author: kspm01
Length: 04:08
Rating: 4.93
Views: 415
Fred Van Eps (1878 -- 1960) was a noted banjoist and banjo maker. The "Van Eps Recording Banjo" was a well-known model until 1930. Van Eps learned to play the banjo and studied the phonograph cylinder recordings of Vess Ossman. In 1897 Van Eps was hired by Thomas Edison's National Phonograph Company in West Orange, New Jersey, working as a regular in studio engagements. Van Eps cylinder recordings, often remakes of Ossman tunes, sold well for Edison. Early ragtime banjo recordings by Van Eps included "A Bunch of Rags" (1900) and "A Ragtime Episode" (1902). He also recorded for a number of other companies, including Columbia (from 1904) and Victor (from 1910). His group the Van Eps Trio recorded steadily from 1912 to 1922. He also led other groups such as the Van Eps Quartet, the Van Eps Specialty Four, and the Van Eps Banjo Orchestra. The latter group was one of the first to record for the American branch of the French Pathé Frères Company in 1914. With Henry Burr, he formed a company that manufactured and sold the Van Eps Recording Banjo, modeled on the one he used in recordings and concerts. The banjo remained on the market until about 1930, when widespread use of electric recording removed the need for the loud volume produced by the Van Eps model. By the 1930s the banjo had fallen out of favor in popular music, and Van Eps switched to guitar, playing as a studio musician with Benny Goodman, Ray Noble, Red Norvo, and others. In the 1950s he attempted a comeback with a number of banjo recordings, before his death in Burbank, California at the age of 81. Van Eps also worked in vaudeville and influenced pre-bluegrass musicians like Charlie Poole and the North Carolina Ramblers. He was the father of jazz guitarist George Van Eps. This great recording was made for Edison (Blue Amberol #1549, Take 2, Mould 25) in August of 1912.

Video Comments

robgems2 (July 21, 2008 at 3:41 pm)
thanks heinbango12.
heinbanjo12 (July 21, 2008 at 11:29 am)
It was a banjo.
kspm01 (July 20, 2008 at 8:49 am)
So welcome. Pre-1920 recordings are not the focal point of my collection, so I hardly have any, but I'll try to include one now and then. That's why I'm particularly happy having been able to present you this one!
kspm01 (July 20, 2008 at 8:46 am)
I agree, the Amberol sound isn't always what one might wish; that's why - if possible - I always try to play the Diamond Disc version instead of the Amberol dubbing.
kspm01 (July 20, 2008 at 8:44 am)
I agree the sound is remarkably good on this one. It's sometimes unbelievable, but those "keen eared" listeners are more frequent than I'd ever imagined. I regularly get those remarks too.
Stompy23 (July 20, 2008 at 1:25 am)
One of my special interests are pre-1920 Ragtime recordings. I can say I know literally thousands of these, but I have never heard this one before. The only motive I recognize is 'The Gaby Glide'. Do you have more of these rather obscure syncopated pre-jazz or Ragtime recordings??? (banjo, instr. solo, orchestra, vocal ... any type will be of interest!) Thanks!
EdisonSquirrel (July 19, 2008 at 11:11 pm)
Fred Van Eps' banjo records are always a treat! While some Blue Amberols had less than solid sound, there are no quiet or muffled banjo records!
merrihew (July 19, 2008 at 10:59 pm)
Great sound with the vertical recording process. One of the interesting things about cylinders is that they shrunk as they hardened - otherwise how would you get them out of the round cylindrical molds. As a result, the pitch is off a bit. Not so I would notice but there are some keen eared listeners on YT who let me know when my phono has drifted to 79 or 80 rpm. :-)
kspm01 (July 19, 2008 at 9:58 am)
Thank you for your interest. I unfortunately am unable to confirm.
kspm01 (July 19, 2008 at 9:57 am)
No need to like everything I post, others do in this case :-) This song was composed in 1912 by Al Jolson (word), Louis Hirsch (music) and forms part of the musical "Come Over Here". I did not really be able to find what the plot is about.

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