Welcome to the weird and wonderful world of record covers from the golden age of LPs


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Your search for jazz cover returned the following results.

Everyone loves the fat man

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I saw Antoine “Fats” Domino play at JazzFest in 1990 and have always loved his music. He was a king there at the piano, big rings on his fingers, flashy suit. I think I read he lost everything in the flood. Here’s a sweet single courtesy of Fred.   Great liner notes on this mid- fifties collection and a nice illustration on the cover. Fat’s early classics are all on the Imperial label. This four song e.p. features his eponymous first hit “The Fat Man”.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (13 votes, average: 3.31 out of 5)
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Pre-Jeannie Barbara Eden

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This is a young Barbara Eden of “I Dream of Jeannie” fame. Imagine Jeannie smoking and drinking in a sexy negligee and fuzzy slippers. Major Nelson! This is on the Bethlehem jazz label with music by jazz singer Herb Jeffries. Jeffries sang with big bands, (most notably with the Duke Ellington Orchestra), and starred in B-movie westerns in the forties and fifties. He was married to Tempest Storm the famous burlesque queen (“Teaserama” with Bettie Page) and was known as the “Bronze Buckaroo.” But it’s this sexy cover of the prudish Jeannie that would blow the mind of any seven year-old in the mid-sixties fantasizing about having a girl in a bottle.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (26 votes, average: 4.15 out of 5)
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Old “Friends”

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Fred Seibert writes: OK, here’s a completely obscure cover. It’s to a record I produced in 1973 for my blues & jazz label Oblivion Records. The artist is a alto player called Marc Cohen (now, interestingly, a pianist called Marc Copeland), though it’s more often known as a session of John Abercrombie’s, the guitarist who was a last minute addition; also at the last minute Marc, never a self promoter, insisted the session be released as a group date called “Friends”. He had graduated Columbia University, and we recorded at the college radio station), went on to play with Chico Hamilton. Marc came up to the station to try out an idea he had with a pick-up and exhoplex. This was after the Tony Williams Lifetime, but before Mahavishnu Orchestra. I was overwhelmed by the then-freshness of the sound so we cut this date.

Oh, the cover. Sam Steinberg was an unhealthy guy from the Bronx (4F in World War I) without an education, whose Mom had been bringing him to the Columbia campus since he was a kid. Somewhere in his 60s (in the 1960s) he picked up some paints and illustration board and pooof! he was a painter. Nowadays he’d be known as an ‘outsider’ artist and be known the world over. Then, he was a kind of campus mascot, selling his “boids” and cats and Elvis’s (long before the King’s death) for $2.50 (eventually climbing to $5.50 in the 80s). We’d all adopted him, and rarely would you visit a Columbia dorm room without four or five hanging on the walls. Anyway, since we were recording a Columbia grad at the Columbia station with a Columbia producer, I figured why not? I ‘commissioned’ Sam for $10 (four times his asking price) and a new pair of $50 shoes (his request), well beyond our normal cover budget. When it was released it was universally derided, unless, of course, the reviewer went to Columbia. The record on the other hand was praised as “innovative, well worth your attention” by DownBeat and others.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (11 votes, average: 3.45 out of 5)
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Stretching out

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I collect albums that were issued as multiple cover puzzles. Riverside issued nine lps that created three sexy, cheesecake puzzles. Here is one set. The series “Compositions of…” compiled an amazing collection of modern jazz performances and showcased the writing of Ellington, Monk and Dizzy Gillespie alongside sets of Gershwin, Arlen and Berlin.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (19 votes, average: 4.84 out of 5)
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Mood in Blue

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Urania was a great cover label in the 1950’s and put out some great traditional jazz as well.   This is a cool, sexy chick alone in an alley in the light of a street post after dark.   A cigarette hanging on her lips.   Looks like a pulp JD paperback cover.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (19 votes, average: 4.84 out of 5)
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At last and forever

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Etta James “At Last!”   Argo Lp 4003 (1961)   Designed by Don Bronstein.   What an album.   What a song.     What a performer.   What a cover.   For every Hall of Fame.     I have all of Etta James’ records.   I first heard an early R&B song “Roll with me Henry” and starting hitting the used record stores looking for more.   She was the Queen of Soul before Aretha stole the title.   There’s even an Etta James record with that title also on Argo.   I’ve seen her perform a few times.   Once at the Newport Jazz Festival where I met her.   Her version of “At Last” has become a wedding staple and was used in some car commercial a few years ago.   This cover is a stunning portrait of her at her peak in the mid-sixties.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (15 votes, average: 4.67 out of 5)
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Bird and Diz

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Many jazz album covers are timeless, essential portraits of the artists in their prime. This one captures Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie beautifully and is suitable for framing.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (13 votes, average: 4.31 out of 5)
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Puff daddy

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Dexter Blows Hot and Cool  Dexter Gordon  Dootone Records  This is high art.   The photographer is Hermann Leonard who shot most jazz legends beginning in the 1940’s. I met him once in the eighties. Nice guy. A lot of his photos include the curling smoke of a musician’s cigarette. This is a famous shot of Dexter Gordon on the rare Dootone label.  A beautiful cover for a beautiful jazz record.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (16 votes, average: 4.75 out of 5)
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Bettie Page

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Ain’t Misbehavin’: Fats Waller’s Hits and Jazz  Broadway Jazz Orchestra  Halo

Bettie Page was on the cover of 3 Lps in fifties. The most famous uses the Bunny Yeager shot with the tigers, the other is cropped version of this photo. This is the sexiest and hardest to find. Halo is a great label for cheesecake covers. It was a budget label with smaltzy pop music and hits covered by orchestras. But many remain prime examples of early LPs with sexy models and pin-up photography. It would be incredible if anyone unearthed another lp from this period with Bettie on the cover. Maybe there’s one in another country that will show up some day.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (45 votes, average: 4.38 out of 5)
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Jungle fever

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Eyes of the Spectre  Chaino

Chaino put out some cool records in the fifties.   He was a percussionist and some of his stuff is “exotic” African rhythms and some is more jazzy.   This kind of exploitation cover art was popular at the time for Eisenhower-era suburbanites looking for something wild (but safe).   A stunning illustration and a prime example of its type.   The very rare Spectre label had a very scary eye logo around the spindle hole.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (48 votes, average: 4.77 out of 5)
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