Hans Is Hip

~ Release by Hans Koller Quartet (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Tracklist

110" Vinyl
#TitleRatingLength
A1Hans Is Hip
recorded in:
München (Munich), Bayern (Bavaria), Germany (in 1952)
bass:
Franz “Shorty” Roeder (Austrian contrabassist) (in 1952)
drums (drum set):
Karl Sanner (in 1952)
piano:
Jutta Hipp (in 1952)
tenor saxophone:
Hans Koller (saxophone, painter) (in 1952)
performer:
Hans Koller Quartet (in 1952)
2:14
A2I Cover the Water Front
recorded in:
München (Munich), Bayern (Bavaria), Germany (in 1952)
bass:
Franz “Shorty” Roeder (Austrian contrabassist) (in 1952)
drums (drum set):
Karl Sanner (in 1952)
piano:
Jutta Hipp (in 1952)
tenor saxophone:
Hans Koller (saxophone, painter) (in 1952)
performer:
Hans Koller Quartet (in 1952)
instrumental recording of:
I Cover the Waterfront
lyricist:
Edward Heyman
composer:
Johnny Green (composer and conductor, often credited as John Green) and Edward Heyman
publisher:
Harms, Inc., Warner Bros., Inc. (not for release label use!) and Warner/Chappell Music, Inc.
3:19
A3Jutta Is Hipp
recorded in:
München (Munich), Bayern (Bavaria), Germany (in 1952)
bass:
Franz “Shorty” Roeder (Austrian contrabassist) (in 1952)
drums (drum set):
Karl Sanner (in 1952)
piano:
Jutta Hipp (in 1952)
tenor saxophone:
Hans Koller (saxophone, painter) (in 1952)
performer:
Hans Koller Quartet (in 1952)
2:21
A4Stompin' at the Savoy
recorded in:
München (Munich), Bayern (Bavaria), Germany (in 1952)
bass:
Franz “Shorty” Roeder (Austrian contrabassist) (in 1952)
drums (drum set):
Karl Sanner (in 1952)
piano:
Jutta Hipp (in 1952)
tenor saxophone:
Hans Koller (saxophone, painter) (in 1952)
performer:
Hans Koller Quartet (in 1952)
instrumental recording of:
Stompin’ at the Savoy
lyricist:
Andy Razaf
composer:
Benny Goodman (clarinetist and bandleader), Edgar Sampson and Chick Webb
publisher:
EMI Robbins Catalog (ASCAP), Ragbag Music (ASCAP), Razaf Music, Rytvoc (ASCAP), フジパシフィックミュージック SBK事業部 (Fujipacific Music SBK Department) and ヤマハミュージックエンタテインメントホールディングス (Yamaha Music Entertainment Holdings, Inc., holding company – do not use as release label)
3:32
B1Up From Munich
recorded in:
München (Munich), Bayern (Bavaria), Germany (in 1952)
bass:
Franz “Shorty” Roeder (Austrian contrabassist) (in 1952)
drums (drum set):
Karl Sanner (in 1952)
piano:
Jutta Hipp (in 1952)
tenor saxophone:
Hans Koller (saxophone, painter) (in 1952)
performer:
Hans Koller Quartet (in 1952)
2:30
B2All the Things You Are
recorded in:
München (Munich), Bayern (Bavaria), Germany (in 1952)
bass:
Franz “Shorty” Roeder (Austrian contrabassist) (in 1952)
drums (drum set):
Karl Sanner (in 1952)
piano:
Jutta Hipp (in 1952)
tenor saxophone:
Hans Koller (saxophone, painter) (in 1952)
performer:
Hans Koller Quartet (in 1952)
instrumental recording of:
All the Things You Are (from “Very Warm for May”)
lyricist:
Oscar Hammerstein II (of Rodgers & Hammerstein) (in 1939)
composer:
Jerome Kern (in 1939)
publisher:
Polygram Int. Publishing (renamed Universal PolyGram International Publishing, Inc. circa 1998) (ended), T.B. Harms Inc. (ended) and Universal PolyGram International Publishing, Inc. (existed only since ca. 1998)
part of:
Broadway Rhythm (film)
3:16
B3Melancholy Baby
recorded in:
München (Munich), Bayern (Bavaria), Germany (in 1952)
bass:
Franz “Shorty” Roeder (Austrian contrabassist) (in 1952)
drums (drum set):
Karl Sanner (in 1952)
piano:
Jutta Hipp (in 1952)
tenor saxophone:
Hans Koller (saxophone, painter) (in 1952)
performer:
Hans Koller Quartet (in 1952)
instrumental recording of:
My Melancholy Baby
lyricist:
George A. Norton (in 1912)
composer:
Ernie Burnett (in 1911)
publisher:
Francis, Day & Hunter Ltd. and Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., Inc.
version of:
Melancholy (original 1911 version of "My Melancholy Baby", lyrics by Maybelle E. Watson)
2:50
B4Beat
recorded in:
München (Munich), Bayern (Bavaria), Germany (in 1952)
bass:
Franz “Shorty” Roeder (Austrian contrabassist) (in 1952)
drums (drum set):
Karl Sanner (in 1952)
piano:
Jutta Hipp (in 1952)
tenor saxophone:
Hans Koller (saxophone, painter) (in 1952)
performer:
Hans Koller Quartet (in 1952)
3:08