Reconversion Blues

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Reconversion_Blues an entity of type: Thing

"Reconversion Blues" is a song attributed to Steve Graham and Fleecie Moore. It was performed by Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five, recorded in October 1946, and released on the Decca label (catalog no. 18762-A). The record's "B" side was "Salt Pork, West Virginia". The song peaked at No. 2 on Billboard's race record chart and was ranked No. 14 on the magazine's year-end list of the most played race records of 1946. Jordan biographer Stephen Koch noted that the granting of partial songwriting credit to Jordan's wife, Fleecie Moore, was part of "a publishing and tax dodge gone awry." rdf:langString
rdf:langString Reconversion Blues
rdf:langString Reconversion Blues
rdf:langString Reconversion Blues
xsd:integer 66099250
xsd:integer 1060061413
rdf:langString Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five
rdf:langString Reconversion Blues.png
rdf:langString Jump blues, boogie woogie
xsd:integer 1946
rdf:langString single
rdf:langString Steve Graham, Fleecie Moore
rdf:langString "Reconversion Blues" is a song attributed to Steve Graham and Fleecie Moore. It was performed by Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five, recorded in October 1946, and released on the Decca label (catalog no. 18762-A). The record's "B" side was "Salt Pork, West Virginia". The song peaked at No. 2 on Billboard's race record chart and was ranked No. 14 on the magazine's year-end list of the most played race records of 1946. Recorded two months after the end of World War II, the lyrics refer to the post-war freedom to buy goods that weren't strictly rationed or unavailable during the World War II. It reviews many of the newly available items, such as a new automobile, two-tone shoes, bacon, butter, cigarettes, nuts and bolts and screws, nylons for his baby, and most anything he chooses at the gas station. Jordan earlier had a No. 1 hit with his 1943 song "Ration Blues". Jordan biographer Stephen Koch noted that the granting of partial songwriting credit to Jordan's wife, Fleecie Moore, was part of "a publishing and tax dodge gone awry."
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 2531

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