chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted February 24, 2012 Report Posted February 24, 2012 i saw the other day in the .99 c. bin, like prob every firehouse 5 record on goodtimejazz, (at least 5 or 6 different lps or so), they are literally out of the cellophone, M-covers, M-vinyl, M-innersleeves, M-picture of Joy Bryan on innersleve, etc. are these worth picking up, they are like dixieland jazz, right? but bay area dixie-revival, from the 50s, or something? Quote
Dave James Posted February 24, 2012 Report Posted February 24, 2012 I'd hold out for the Firehouse 5 + 2 box set. They do a version of "Hold That Tiger" that will bring tears to your eyes. Quote
Harold_Z Posted February 24, 2012 Report Posted February 24, 2012 (edited) They were LA based and mostly guys with day gigs (with a ringer here or there)at the Disney studios. Kind of intentionally over the top dixieland but done well. the label name "Good Time Jazz" fits very well. I have all those lps but went for the MP3 download box set to put them on my iPod. I enjoy them in small doses (iPod on shuffle is perfect) but I particularly dig their versions of "Frankie and Johnny" and "Copenhagen." Edited February 24, 2012 by Harold_Z Quote
JSngry Posted February 24, 2012 Report Posted February 24, 2012 The Firehouse Five Plus Two was a Dixieland jazz band, popular in the 1950s, consisting of members of the Walt Disney Studios animation department; http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firehouse_Five_Plus_Two Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted February 24, 2012 Author Report Posted February 24, 2012 they were dinsey annimators by day? that is bizzare Quote
jeffcrom Posted February 24, 2012 Report Posted February 24, 2012 I have one 78 and one 45 by the Firehouse Five Plus Two, and I think I listened to each one once. I'm someone who loves traditional jazz - dixieland, if you will - and I don't much care for this band. Music can be fun without being a cheap joke. Quote
Christiern Posted February 24, 2012 Report Posted February 24, 2012 Ward Kimball he was a very important animator, going back to Snow White. His deep interest in trains became shared by Disney, he played trombone and started the Firehouse Five. Died in 2004. The Firehouse 5 and, indeed, Kimball himself were very well known. - Google him! Quote
gmonahan Posted February 26, 2012 Report Posted February 26, 2012 I always liked them--lots of great fun. I'm pretty sure all their records were released on cd back in the 90s when Good Time Jazz was owned by Fantasy. I think I have them all. "Firehouse Five + 2 Goes South" was always my favorite. gregmo Quote
johnlitweiler Posted February 26, 2012 Report Posted February 26, 2012 They seemed to be basically conscientious musicians--look at their repertoire, for example. But still a cartoon trad band. The soprano player sounded hideous and Kimball was a caricature of a trombonist. Quote
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