In 1999, the Timeless label released a 25-track collection devoted to
the California Ramblers, that great Midwestern unit that managed to cut more records during the '20s than virtually any other hot dance band. Incredibly, this collection's playlist has only two titles in common with Biograph's trailblazing
California Ramblers albums, which have been reissued by Collectables as New York Jazz in the Roaring Twenties, Vol. 2 and Vol. 3. This means that all three could co-exist in the same personal stash of gloriously arcane, jazz-inflected pop music with almost no redundancy. The songs on the Timeless collection are burnished emblems of that charming and restless intersection of jazz and pop that characterized the decade following the First World War. Bouncy topical routines like "Singapore Sorrows,""Ya Gotta Know How to Love," "She Knows Her Onions," "Yes She Do (No She Don't)," "I Love the College Girls," "Vo-Do-Do-De-O-Blues," "Make My Cot Where the Cot-Cot-Cotton Grows," "Nothin' Does-Does Like It Used to Do-Do-Do," and Sam Coslow's puerile novelty, "I'm Just Wild About Animal Crackers," are pleasantly complemented by slightly more substantial numbers such as
Walter Donaldson's "Changes," Rodgers & Hart's "The Girl Friend," Jack Pettis' "Stockholm Stomp," and
Goldkette/
Beiderbecke/
Trumbauer banjoist Howdy Quicksell's "The Pay Off" and "Pardon the Glove." For quantity and quality, this is the best single-disc
California Ramblers collection, although the New York Jazz in the Roaring Twenties, Vol. 2 and Vol. 3 on Biograph/Collectables still offer the best selection of all. Get all three discs and you'll be set for life. ~ arwulf arwulf