Struttin' (Louis Armstrong album) explained

Struttin'
Type:studio
Artist:Louis Armstrong with Edmond Hall's All Stars
Cover:Album_Struttin'_Louis_Armstrong_with_Edmond_Hall's_All_Stars_Cover.jpg
Released:March 19, 1996
Recorded:February 8, 1947
Venue:Carnegie Hall, New York City
Genre:Jazz, Dixieland, swing
Label:Drive Archive

Struttin' is an album by Louis Armstrong with Edmond Hall's All Stars, recorded at Carnegie Hall in 1947.

Music and importance

The music on the album was recorded during a concert at Carnegie Hall on February 8, 1947. The music features trumpeter Louis Armstrong playing with a small group – clarinettist Edmond Hall, trumpeter "Mousie" Randolph, trombonist Henderson Chambers, pianist Ellis Larkins, bassist Johnny Williams, and drummer Jimmy Crawford – thus making it Armstrong's "first major appearance in front of a small group in close to two decades".

"Clearly, it was inspirational for Armstrong at the time: by the end of 1947, he dissolved his big band and formed his own combo, also called the All-Stars, and adapted most of these songs into their repertoire."

Reception

The AllMusic reviewer wrote that, "While the sound quality of this disc is unfortunately primitive, the historical import of the performances overshadows the technical problems."