Details
- Format:
- Score and Parts
- Item types:
- Digital
- Level:
- Late Intermediate
- Usages:
- School and Community
- Number of Pages:
- 28
SKU: A0.1842058
Composed by Philip Braham. Arranged by Rhoades Whitehill. This edition: pdf. Blues, Jazz. 28 pages. TBQ Press #1401587. Published by TBQ Press (A0.1842058).“Limehouse Blues” is a British popular song first performed in the 1921 West End revue A to Z. It evokes London’s Limehouse district and uses musical and lyrical references intended to suggest an exoticized Chinatown atmosphere common to early 20th‑century popular entertainment.
The tune quickly entered the jazz repertoire and became a standard, prized for its memorable minor‑key riff and fast, driving chord changes that invite virtuosic improvisation. Over the decades it has been recorded and arranged across styles from New Orleans jazz to swing, bebop, and small‑group modern jazz.
Musical characteristics:
Form and key — Typically performed in a minor key with a 32‑bar structure that alternates a plaintive opening with a more rhythmically aggressive bridge.
Melodic features — Uses pentatonic and “Orientalist” melodic gestures that reflect the song’s theatrical depiction of Limehouse rather than authentic Chinese music.
Why players like it — The tune’s compact, angular theme and brisk harmonic motion make it a favorite for showcasing technical facility and inventive solos.
Notable recordings and performances
Gertrude Lawrence — helped popularize the number on the London stage.
Fletcher Henderson (1934) — an influential big‑band swing reading that helped cement the tune in American jazz.
Benny Goodman — recorded a high‑energy swing arrangement in the 1930s.
Sidney Bechet, Django Reinhardt, Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Chet Atkins, Sonny Rollins — among many who recorded distinctive versions, demonstrating the tune’s cross‑genre reach.
The song has appeared in films and revues, sometimes performed in period or stylized “Oriental” stage numbers; notable cinematic uses include dance or production numbers in Hollywood musicals of the 1930s and 1940s.
Listening guide and recommended versions:
Start with the original theatrical context via historical recordings or the Wikipedia entry to hear the melody as written.
For swing — listen to Fletcher Henderson (1934) or Benny Goodman (1935) for big‑band arrangements.
For small‑group jazz — Sidney Bechet and Django Reinhardt offer contrasting soloist‑driven takes.
For modern improvisation — Sonny Rollins and later jazz instrumentalists show how the tune adapts to post‑bebop language.
The song’s original imagery and musical cues reflect early 20th‑century Western exoticism and stereotyping of Asian neighborhoods; modern listeners and performers often contextualize the tune historically while focusing on its musical merits.
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