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The Last of the Blue Devils - The Kansas City Jazz Story dvd movie.
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The Last of the Blue Devils - The Kansas City Jazz Story
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The Last of the Blue Devils - The Kansas City Jazz Story List Price: $29.95
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Features
 Color
 Compilation
 DVD-Video
 Letterboxed
 Widescreen
 NTSC

In Theaters : 05 December, 1995
DVD Release : 14 August, 2001
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The Last of the Blue Devils - The Kansas City Jazz Story description
Kansas City in the 1930s was a wild, wide-open place. Under political boss Tom Pendergast, the booze flowed freely, prostitution and gambling flourished, and the Depression pretty much passed the city by, making it an ideal spawning ground for some great music. Pianist-bandleader Count Basie, saxophone immortals Lester Young and Charlie Parker, and blues belters Big Joe Turner and Jimmy Rushing were all working there, along with a host of lesser- known but equally formidable musicians, and they all played the blues, Kansas City style.

Director Bruce Ricker's 90-minute The Last of the Blue Devils chronicles the 1979 reunion of many of these legendary players, combining interviews, vintage film footage, photos, and some inimitably swinging performances by Basie, Turner, pianist Jay McShann, and many others to create an intimate, good- natured portrait of what one old-timer calls the "cool, relaxed sound" of the city. The camaraderie among these men, all of whom are colorful raconteurs (drummer Ernie Williams's harangues to some bemused local kids are especially entertaining), is palpable. But it's the music, unsurprisingly, that's the main attraction; performances include some familiar tunes, like Turner's "Shake, Rattle & Roll" and a Basie big band version of "Night Train" (featuring tenor saxophonist Jimmy Forrest, the tune's composer) that's as greasy as the local barbecue. The Last of the Blue Devils is an absolute delight. --Sam Graham

The Last of the Blue Devils - The Kansas City Jazz Story Customer Reviews
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♥♥♥♥♥ The Last of the Blue Devils
Warm, joyous film blends current day encounters and performances of old jazz comrades with lively footage and anecdotes of Kansas City in prohibition days and just after, when the Pendergast political machine controlled the town. (Later Boss Tom Pendergast would launch a former local haberdasher into politics: Harry S. Truman). Whatever else was happening, jazz was certainly thriving, and a host of musicians like Basie and Turner used the time and place to advance and perfect their individual gifts. This feature will be catnip for any jazz lover.
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