St.James Infirmary - Louis Armstrong [HQ Audio]

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Комментарии • 238

  • @AceAttorny
    @AceAttorny 6 лет назад +265

    "Hehehe... Braggin'."
    This guy is just too charming.

  • @dandut
    @dandut 6 лет назад +315

    To think this track is from 1926! The recording is amazing. Louie kills it! 😝

    • @DdDd-gd1rr
      @DdDd-gd1rr 6 лет назад +14

      Dan Price Sounds like a steel master recording, straight from studio. incredible.

    • @dandut
      @dandut 6 лет назад +3

      lucky us

    • @rammstein1994able
      @rammstein1994able 6 лет назад +22

      Can't believe that this recording is 91 years old.

    • @nicksolomon5348
      @nicksolomon5348 6 лет назад +21

      I think this is a later recording Louie's voice wasn't this gravely in 1926 and he's definitely playing his Selmer horn and not his Cornet

    • @americancrusader8175
      @americancrusader8175 6 лет назад

      Dan Price I doesn't sound like it

  • @Ebrill_Owen
    @Ebrill_Owen 5 лет назад +33

    I love Calloway’s slightly more upbeat version of this song but Armstrong’s version is soul crushingly haunting. To me it almost sounds like he’s saying “I failed you” in the beginning which is. Super creepy. I love it!

  • @stefanstefanich3924
    @stefanstefanich3924 7 лет назад +151

    What a voice... What a sound... Simply amazing...

  • @MrMaddox57
    @MrMaddox57 5 лет назад +9

    How many broken hearts have heard this in some of the loneliest gin joints in town. So powerful. LOVE blues and jazz!

  • @sebastiandelaespriella9611
    @sebastiandelaespriella9611 7 лет назад +157

    She can look this wide world over,
    But she'll never find a sweet man like me...

  • @MrMaddox57
    @MrMaddox57 5 лет назад +7

    Man, sometimes the music of these golden years beats that of today! Makes me want to go back in time and take a long break from the chaos of today! CLASSIC. Stirs my soul! Inspires me to appreciate only the finest life has to offer.

  • @logans9026
    @logans9026 6 лет назад +72

    When I think of blues, I think of this. Slow, methodical, repetitive and deep in the blues of life.

    • @gigiproiettili8985
      @gigiproiettili8985 6 лет назад +2

      Logan S when u think of blues you should not think of this since this is SWING JAZZ

    • @sws250
      @sws250 6 лет назад +1

      Mitik gio Still, there's so much blues on this one. Specially on vocals and percussion. Listen carefully to the hits in the ride at the end.

    • @gigiproiettili8985
      @gigiproiettili8985 6 лет назад

      RC Cola i guess you’re right, i have caught those blues features once you’ve told me. I rekon this isn’t fully blues or swing rather than a transition between the two though.

    • @MrMaddox57
      @MrMaddox57 5 лет назад

      Cold, rainy city streets at night. Neon lights and broken hearts.

  • @ketchupfries7521
    @ketchupfries7521 6 лет назад +29

    Th clarinet in the background gives me CHILLS. The vibratos these musicians can make are just so blood curdling. In a good way. The trumpet is so good as well. Why can't this music be mainstream.

    • @TyrannosaurusTroy
      @TyrannosaurusTroy 5 лет назад +1

      Agreed. The clarinet brings so much emotion to the arrangement. This is a great recording!

    • @MrMaddox57
      @MrMaddox57 5 лет назад +1

      The clarinet is a great compliment, what really spices the piece up, with it you know this is REAL, CLASSIC blues and jazz. Written for the person down on their luck, especially late into the lonely rainy night. AWESOME. Have to find some jazz and blues venues in my area...VINTAGE

  • @MrMaddox57
    @MrMaddox57 5 лет назад +3

    Cold, rainy nights in the city streets, neon lights, hard liquor, harder dames. Memories and broken hearts.

  • @sjplhavebrainwilltravel5700
    @sjplhavebrainwilltravel5700 3 года назад +2

    Louis Armstrong: The Mozart of Jazz!!!! What a Voice, What a Style, What a Man!!!!!

  • @ItsEliza5
    @ItsEliza5 4 года назад +3

    This man inspired me to play the trumpet I now am in Jazz and Honors Band playing First trumpet and I couldn’t be more proud of his accomplishments and my progress

  • @georgelopezplayboyyyy5852
    @georgelopezplayboyyyy5852 6 лет назад +84

    But she'll never find a sweet man like me .

  • @user-mj1nq7ms6g
    @user-mj1nq7ms6g 6 лет назад +15

    Sometimes the best songs are not so famous

  • @vogun52
    @vogun52 6 лет назад +37

    Absolutey stunning. LIterally, it stunned me when I first heard this and still does the same today. Awesome is an overused word I know, but this is it.

  • @skittlesmarmalade5246
    @skittlesmarmalade5246 6 лет назад +3

    Thank you Mr. Louis, for four and a half minutes of soul - purifying perfection!

  • @francoisvillon371
    @francoisvillon371 5 лет назад +5

    Tout ce qu'il a joué, chanté et composé est génial

  • @davelo3506
    @davelo3506 6 лет назад +26

    This plays on my alarm 6 am everyday, gets me ready for work down at the Mill

    • @usamaejaz7851
      @usamaejaz7851 5 лет назад +1

      You, Sir, have good taste in music

  • @kodamikha
    @kodamikha 5 лет назад +2

    Such a sweet and sultry song. Learned how to play it on my ukulele and it is one of my very favourites.

  • @9451hen
    @9451hen Год назад +1

    a legend, unique

  • @leoh8347
    @leoh8347 3 года назад +2

    I love New Orleans . From Brazil

  • @sebastianw.7254
    @sebastianw.7254 6 лет назад +87

    I aspire to play my trumpet like Louis

  • @zzzzzzz8417
    @zzzzzzz8417 4 года назад +2

    genius never dies

  • @paulmichaelson7203
    @paulmichaelson7203 Год назад +1

    The GREAT GREAT Satchel Mouth! There will never be another.

  • @kingghidorah1212
    @kingghidorah1212 6 лет назад +8

    Beautiful piece. Truly entrancing.

  • @annraven6765
    @annraven6765 5 лет назад +1

    I have been looking for this version of this song and FINALLY found it! Thank you. Song has very interesting history for those who like it.

  • @omgheather1
    @omgheather1 6 лет назад +4

    Perfect amount of growl in the voice

  • @CrownTown10
    @CrownTown10 5 лет назад +1

    Found myself in New Orleans one grey autumn day, alone and unaccounted for. After an evening trying to figure out my next move, the dawn came with a desultory drizzle. I managed to make my way to Cafe de Mon Coeur, and got some eggs and a little bourbon in my coffee. I sat watching the wet streets through the open door, when along came a funeral, in stately grief, laying down Saint James Infirmary.

  • @minyoung_24life37
    @minyoung_24life37 6 лет назад +67

    Betty Boop here

  • @minecraft1243
    @minecraft1243 6 лет назад +1

    no one else could do this the way he did!!such soul n heart.

  • @nadyarossi5102
    @nadyarossi5102 5 лет назад

    Ive been looking for the 1938 recording made at Carnegie Hall. It was a 2 record album and featured Ghanaians singing "All For You, Louis, All For You." Had the best version of St. Louis Blues I've ever heard.

  • @youssouphafall6966
    @youssouphafall6966 5 лет назад +3

    Magnifique Purée beauté

  • @nicolaraponi9117
    @nicolaraponi9117 7 лет назад +460

    LYRICS
    I went down to St.James Infirmary
    Saw my baby there
    She was stretched out on a long white table
    So cold, so sweet, so fair
    Let her go, let her go, God bless her
    Wherever she may be
    She can look this wide world over
    She'll never find a sweet man like me
    When I die I want you to dress me in straight lace shoes
    Boxback coat and a Stetson hat
    Put a twenty dollar gold piece on my watch chain
    So the boys’ll know that I died standin' pat

    • @JUANO510
      @JUANO510 7 лет назад +3

      Standing pat?! What does that mean though?

    • @onikuma7634
      @onikuma7634 7 лет назад

      Buck 50 good.

    • @moemoney8113
      @moemoney8113 7 лет назад

      Buck 50

    • @moemoney8113
      @moemoney8113 7 лет назад +16

      Buck 50 stand Pat is a poker term. it means you don't request any more cards to improve your hand.

    • @cuzimspecial1
      @cuzimspecial1 6 лет назад +9

      _$20 gold piece_
      Damn man, gold was cheap as fuck in the 1920's huh?

  • @iamjaysaul1169
    @iamjaysaul1169 5 лет назад +3

    Damn, this is truly great.

  • @edwinrivera5068
    @edwinrivera5068 3 года назад

    That's Talent, glad we the have the memories ...

  • @banilara6162
    @banilara6162 6 лет назад +36

    Fui a St. James Infirmary
    Ví a mi nena ahí
    Ella estaba tendida en una mesa larga y blanca
    Tan fría, tan dulce, tan dulce, tan bella
    Dejala ir, dejala ir, Dios la bendiga
    Dondesea que ella pueda ser
    Ella puede buscar en este ancho mundo
    Pero nunca encontrará a otro dulce hombre como yo
    Cuando yo muera entierrenme con los zapatos de cordones rectos
    Un traje nuevo a cuadros y un sombrero Stetson
    Pon un pedazo de oro de veinte dólares en mi cadena de reloj
    Así los chicos sabran que morí de pie . .

    • @Gaznapiro30
      @Gaznapiro30 5 лет назад +2

      Thank you Google traductor

  • @cwebb2300
    @cwebb2300 5 лет назад +1

    The only version of this song that touch me to my very soul.

  • @javierlopez243
    @javierlopez243 6 лет назад +2

    Magistral.

  • @josealejandromartinez7786
    @josealejandromartinez7786 6 лет назад +16

    Sencillamente buenisisisimo.

  • @aarondyckman3557
    @aarondyckman3557 5 лет назад

    Dam, I use to always hear this song on old cartoons, n it would always do something to me, not good, not bad, but this guy has to do the best version I HAVE EVER HERD! This is when music was music!

  • @painandmisery8971
    @painandmisery8971 5 лет назад

    Im getting a nostalgic tom and jerry song feeling...loved that show when i was a child

  • @pamelaiacovacci5474
    @pamelaiacovacci5474 2 года назад

    Love his music !!!!!

  • @balham456
    @balham456 5 лет назад +4

    Soundtrack to closing credits “Taste of Cherry”, Kiarostami masterpiece.

  • @IlarioSchanzer
    @IlarioSchanzer 6 лет назад

    SUPER !!!...i love this song

  • @aristotlemystotle4138
    @aristotlemystotle4138 6 лет назад +66

    I wish copyright wasn't so strict now a days, just so you could do this, take a song and play it so many ways

    • @kevinsandow5354
      @kevinsandow5354 6 лет назад +8

      Aristotle My stotle I know! Right? I'm from Argentina and here in Latin America we also have this kind of classics that used to be played by everyone, whenever one of the genius wrote a great song, he usually said it belonged to the people because it was a popular song and everyone did their cover. Try Zamba para olvidar, El Cosechero, Volver a los 17, Duerme negrito, almost all Violeta Parra songs, Simon Diaz and Atahualpa Yupanqui and like every famous Brazilian bossa nova song. It was such a beautiful tradition, because every new version was adding something special and great over an already great song. That's the true spirit of music and of humanity. Property laws (and mainly copyright in there) are an invention and a theft, not a "natural" thing like the first liberal thinkers like Adam Smith said.

    • @kevinsandow5354
      @kevinsandow5354 6 лет назад +6

      You guys in the US understand the word liberal the wrong way around, cuz some president of yours was so dumb he used it the other way around. The rest of the world still uses the word correctly. Look it up.. Adam Smith is actually one of the founders of economic liberalism. Yeah, I realize I wrote John Smith instead of Adam Smith.

    • @ember_shep8181
      @ember_shep8181 6 лет назад +1

      ala clan, sounds like what happens to house of the rising sun. It belonged to everyone.

    • @gigilaw9015
      @gigilaw9015 6 лет назад

      Aristotle My stotle rad grads re-did this song very recently actually, it’s a great cover

    • @rucaslicks5183
      @rucaslicks5183 6 лет назад +4

      This song public domain my dude.

  • @cyclesgoff9768
    @cyclesgoff9768 5 лет назад +1

    Thanks for posting man, you caught me at the right time.

  • @Elreydavid16
    @Elreydavid16 7 лет назад +3

    Deep! Beautiful

  • @joemarshall4226
    @joemarshall4226 5 лет назад +4

    20 million people died from the Spanish "flu", 1918-1920, which was probably not a flu at all. It was the greatest "Pandemic" in history. So a lot of people could identify with this song when it came out.

  • @solamentecmg8071
    @solamentecmg8071 5 лет назад +2

    A voz desse cara é muito foda ... Um viva ao blues

  • @kelliehill91
    @kelliehill91 5 лет назад +2

    Ghostmane to betty boop to here. And i love it all

  • @modguitar190
    @modguitar190 5 лет назад +1

    Louis Armstrong 🔥🔥🔥

  • @ghostofpanama622
    @ghostofpanama622 2 года назад

    Play this at my funeral

  • @EvaFariou
    @EvaFariou 6 лет назад +2

    Divine...

  • @lordcrowe9154
    @lordcrowe9154 6 лет назад

    i love this

  • @carlalorraine2841
    @carlalorraine2841 6 лет назад +2

    Como eu amo essa música meu!!!!

  • @doughesson
    @doughesson 6 лет назад

    David Drake's Rolling Hot story in his Hammer's Slammers series brought me here.
    One character walked out of his artillery piece whistling this tune.
    Now, I'm watching as Ray Stevens sings it.

  • @cestmirsimunek5939
    @cestmirsimunek5939 2 года назад

    Ahoj jedna z nejhezčích vyjádření Armstronga hudbou a zpěvem text v této nahrávce, ČESTMÍR.

  • @gm5240
    @gm5240 7 лет назад +21

    wow. A great man wrote a great song

    • @McDertydert
      @McDertydert 7 лет назад +22

      It is an old Irish song

    • @RayAtchley
      @RayAtchley 6 лет назад +5

      He didn't write it

    • @TheInfiniteFool
      @TheInfiniteFool 6 лет назад +1

      about: blank it's not Louis' song but this is a kickass version. perhaps the best.

  • @iknowheis
    @iknowheis 3 года назад +1

    Kindness Counts!
    .
    A Story about a Musician and Singer :
    A grandson of slaves, a boy was born in a poor neighborhood of New Orleans known as the 'Back of Town'. His father abandoned the family when the child was an infant. His mother became a prostitute and the boy and his sister had to live with their grandmother.
    Early in life he proved to be gifted for music and, with three other kids, he sang in the streets of New Orleans.
    His first gains were the coins that were thrown to them.
    A Jewish family, Karnofsky, who had immigrated from Lithuania to the USA had pity for the 7-year-old boy and brought him into their home. They initially gave him 'work' in the house, to feed this hungry child. There he remained and slept in this Jewish family's home where, for the first time in his life he was treated with kindness and tenderness.
    When he went to bed, Mrs. Karnovsky sang him a Russian Lullaby that he would sing with her. Later, he learned to sing and play several Russian and Jewish songs. Over time, this boy became the adopted son of this family. The Karnofskys gave him money to buy his first musical instrument, as was the custom in the Jewish families. They sincerely admired his musical talent. Later, when he became a professional musician and composer, he used these Jewish melodies in compositions, such as 'St. James Infirmary' and 'Go Down Moses'. The little black boy grew up and wrote a book about this Jewish family who had adopted him in 1907. In memory of this family and until the end of his life, he wore a star of David and said that in this family he had learned "how to live a real life and determination." You might recognize his name. This little boy was called Louis 'Satchmo' Armstrong. Louis Armstrong proudly spoke fluent Yiddish!
    And I bet you didn't know any of this.... And 'Satchmo' is Yiddish for 'Big Cheeks."

  • @janispaquet8749
    @janispaquet8749 6 лет назад

    J adore 👍

  • @jipship6863
    @jipship6863 5 лет назад

    Love. 💜

  • @monicabella7894
    @monicabella7894 5 лет назад +2

    Music for a funeral!

    • @aarondyckman3557
      @aarondyckman3557 5 лет назад +1

      That's what I always say, almost like a fantasy to have a new orleans jazz funeral right

  • @karsokawade
    @karsokawade 6 лет назад +17

    Here because of albert camus’ book the plague

  • @Odibio.Skins.
    @Odibio.Skins. 6 лет назад +5

    This is real music

  • @guffymakeup7681
    @guffymakeup7681 7 лет назад +5

    ❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @samdavidson6483
    @samdavidson6483 Год назад +1

    💪💪💪💪

  • @honokakosaka4816
    @honokakosaka4816 6 лет назад +7

    Wow

  • @ProfDavis
    @ProfDavis 7 лет назад +394

    No one knows wo wrote this important blues song

    • @DonGamerGuy
      @DonGamerGuy 7 лет назад +54

      Prof Davis me. Ignore the fact this recording is from 1929 and i was born in 87 lol.

    • @SkinnyK1ng209
      @SkinnyK1ng209 6 лет назад +3

      Don Gamer Guy I believe you

    • @thaevilgenius3
      @thaevilgenius3 6 лет назад +113

      There's so many different versions but like homeboy said it was a old English folk song. All versions capture the heavy hearted essence the performer is guilted with. However to me the best is the one Cab Calloway did as 'Koko The Clown' via 'The Betty Boop' show.' I forget the animation technique they used but his moves were so smooth when he was singing and moving Koko the Clown was shhhmmmooove as hell! Someone just posted the remastered version and it is the bees knees man. The Bees Knees daddy-o.

    • @user-oy6hk1gn7l
      @user-oy6hk1gn7l 6 лет назад +33

      thaevilgenius3 It's called rotoscoping (:
      And I agree, fantastic. I've lost count of how many times I've watched it in the last couple days

    • @oabuseer
      @oabuseer 6 лет назад +5

      Sir Ferius Fickle I Is it confirmed that it's actually based on an English folk song? I read that some guy made the link between the 2 but a lot of people have contested that.

  • @azzemojo
    @azzemojo 6 лет назад +1

    Number 6. 1001 is a lot of songs

  • @lisafer9411
    @lisafer9411 6 лет назад

    Chills.

  • @malcomshaw5962
    @malcomshaw5962 10 месяцев назад

    ⭐️🕊⭐️🕊⭐️⭐️🕊⭐️🕊⭐️⭐️🙏🏾💜

  • @kyleyesiahsupree
    @kyleyesiahsupree 6 лет назад +3

    She’ll never find sweet man like me.

  • @reesecunningham7187
    @reesecunningham7187 3 года назад

    He wrote this song about his wife that died she was the love of his life true love at its finest

  • @jean-claudemonier3887
    @jean-claudemonier3887 5 лет назад

    une perle , comme la version d'éric burdon avec les news animals !!!!!!!

  • @marcsoare5638
    @marcsoare5638 6 лет назад +2

    I learned on my clarinet

  • @FabrizioMarongiu
    @FabrizioMarongiu 5 лет назад +1

    Brian Johnson with Geordie recorded this song in 70s

  • @DGKJhayTV
    @DGKJhayTV 4 года назад +1

    He cut this up way different then cab 😎 they might be equally good

  • @davidduarte6344
    @davidduarte6344 5 лет назад

    Cool as ice

  • @virgiliomartini9051
    @virgiliomartini9051 6 лет назад +1

    Mr Badii !! Mr Badii !!

  • @Taylor_madeKi.
    @Taylor_madeKi. 4 года назад

    My honey brought me here💙

  • @malopenguin5871
    @malopenguin5871 6 лет назад +1

    Braggin

  • @jamesmitchell8922
    @jamesmitchell8922 2 года назад +1

    Used in A Taste of Cherry.

  • @christymarie1413
    @christymarie1413 4 года назад

    Murder Most Foul by Bob Dylan brought me here! Woah!

  • @rosildamaria6149
    @rosildamaria6149 6 лет назад +5

    Começo da música parece com uma de Reginaldo Rossi. Oloco bixo

  • @lynnhernandezortiz3439
    @lynnhernandezortiz3439 6 лет назад +2

    Wicked trupeterr

  • @OWAMER
    @OWAMER 6 лет назад +5

    1000 like

  • @octavio_a.serrano
    @octavio_a.serrano 6 лет назад +10

    Camus carried me here

  • @korvameister5874
    @korvameister5874 6 лет назад +2

    Compared to the original Cab Calloway, I honestly prefer this song a ton more.

  • @peruanervlogs3675
    @peruanervlogs3675 6 лет назад

    Annenmaykantereit hat mich hierhergebracht , dich auch?

  • @zenitzen2625
    @zenitzen2625 6 лет назад +1

    rip tamango

  • @michaeltalamo1833
    @michaeltalamo1833 5 лет назад +1

    Bobby bland made his own version. I think it was that best!

  • @vimarice4277
    @vimarice4277 6 лет назад +5

    La peste

  • @adrianortiz1946
    @adrianortiz1946 5 лет назад

    The House That Jack Built

  • @AruSakazaki
    @AruSakazaki 6 лет назад

    ಥ_ಥ Hermoso

  • @jhonnyolivastro8985
    @jhonnyolivastro8985 4 года назад

    2020?

  • @domdayoungpharaoh9372
    @domdayoungpharaoh9372 4 года назад

    💧

  • @moosseff
    @moosseff 5 лет назад +2

    What genre would this be considered? This melancholy... jazz? blues? I havent really found anything similar to this

  • @mrsandman16
    @mrsandman16 6 лет назад

    I wish cab calloway and Louie Armstrong did a duet on St.James infirmary but both of them are dead so now only the internet can do magic like this

    • @Commenter839
      @Commenter839 6 лет назад

      I never thought about that, but now I can't stop wishing that was a thing.

  • @DoubleBread
    @DoubleBread 6 лет назад

    Now I know by which version was Hugh Laurie inspired in Let Them Talk

  • @dernayt2728
    @dernayt2728 6 лет назад +18

    Albert Camus