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Artie Shaw — Mysterioso
Album: Artie Shaw & His Gramercy 5
Avg rating:
7

Your rating:
Total ratings: 915









Released: 1945
Length: 2:53
Plays (last 30 days): 2
(Instrumental)
Comments (49)add comment
 jtherieau wrote:

My dog was sleeping peacefully on the sofa until Artie began blowing his clarinet in this song. My dog suddenly started barking, like there was some kind of intruder about to attack. I had to turn the volume down on my laptop to calm her down. True story.


Uff... I can only agree with your dog. I like this tune, but right now it is giving me a bit of anxiety...
 gratefulgator wrote:

Today this is going to get a 10 from me because I have clarinets on the brain.  My son thought he lost his... thankfully he didn't!

Also cause I played clarinet too... I really do enjoy this.  



As a previous clarinet player, I love hearing clarinet pieces. Not that I was any good at all. 
 jtherieau wrote:

My dog was sleeping peacefully on the sofa until Artie began blowing his clarinet in this song. My dog suddenly started barking, like there was some kind of intruder about to attack. I had to turn the volume down on my laptop to calm her down. True story.



   
Too funny! LOL!   
My dog was sleeping peacefully on the sofa until Artie began blowing his clarinet in this song. My dog suddenly started barking, like there was some kind of intruder about to attack. I had to turn the volume down on my laptop to calm her down. True story.
must
 Proclivities wrote:

Which version have you heard?
 
I'd imagine greiffenstein was thinking of Misterioso by Thelonius Monk.
 greiffenstein wrote:
I'd never heard the original.  The main question is...why the hell not!?  This stuff is timeless and inimitable
 
Which version have you heard?
 WonderLizard wrote:

A funny, yes? Shaw retired from the music biz in 1954 and died in 2004.

 
 
Wow. That's amazing.
Today this is going to get a 10 from me because I have clarinets on the brain.  My son thought he lost his... thankfully he didn't!

Also cause I played clarinet too... I really do enjoy this.  
missed me by that much
{#Bananajam}
I bet this served as inspiration for the Get Smart theme.

Sorry about that, chief.
When I was a teenager I had clarinet lessons and thought I had learnt to play the instrument -  but I have no idea how these dudes got some of the sounds heard on this track,
                      
Theme from "Get Smart"
ziggytrix wrote:
hrm... was Mancini listening to this before composing the theme to Peter Gunn?

  
 
LizK wrote:
Didn't Peter Gunn have one woman call center, never showing her face - just a spectacular pair of legs - Mary Tyler Moore's break into the big time. 
 
Mary Tyler Moore played the mysterious, leggy secretary on Richard Diamond, Private Detective, not Peter Gunn.
Didn't Peter Gunn have one woman call center, never showing her face - just a spectacular pair of legs - Mary Tyler Moore's break into the big time. 
ziggytrix wrote:
hrm... was Mancini listening to this before composing the theme to Peter Gunn?

 


 greiffenstein wrote:
I'd never heard the original.  The main question is...why the hell not!?  This stuff is timeless and inimitable

 
Thank you for helping me learn a new word today, "inimitable".
I'd never heard the original.  The main question is...why the hell not!?  This stuff is timeless and inimitable
Way before my time but greatly appreciated. Great for a lazy Saturday morning.
 HoneyBearKelly wrote:
Play the Thelonious Monk version.

 
That's a completely different song which just happens to have the same title as this one, but it would be cool to hear it here.
Divine!
Brilliant. 
 MrsTom wrote:
I need to be in the mood for this - and its lunch time in my country so I'm not chilled enough
 
:-)
 
Get Smart

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PMf2mlHlwAA 
This is way out of my taste range, but I really enjoy this.
Play the Thelonious Monk version.
It's too bad that this couldn't have been captured and engineered with better equipment. ( not that he wasn't using the best of the time.) Listening to this type music live is a great experience. how about a Benny Goodman or Pete Fountain follow-up?
I need to be in the mood for this - and its lunch time in my country so I'm not chilled enough
Thin bowtie music.
 Boy_Wonder wrote:
Cool, daddio... has he released anything new recently?

 
A funny, yes? Shaw retired from the music biz in 1954 and died in 2004.
 999_99_999 wrote:

I hear the "Theme to the Pink Panther."  May be Henri Mancini was an Artie Shaw fan?

 
Artie Shaw was a extremely successful, popular, and influential bandleader and musician; it's a safe bet that Henry Mancini was familiar with his work and influenced by it.
Not a serious jazz fan, so I never go looking for this stuff.  Thanks Bill, for bringing this one to me.  
Kind of trippy, eh?
hrm... was Mancini listening to this before composing the theme to Peter Gunn?
Cool, daddio... has he released anything new recently?
This is so wonderful to listen to (silkily-swinging, scary, beautifully played), and it is so timeless, that I have to give it a 10. So much older music that I've never heard, so little time....
Ahhh! I'm so glad you played this, haven't heard it in ages.

Another fabulous clarinetist is Pete Fountain. I grew up listening to him thanks to my dad's eclectic music collection. Great stuff. 
 kingart wrote:
I hear Courageous Cat and Minute Mouse!   ?? 
Now I have an ear worm, trying to remember where I've heard the tune before. 
 
 
I hear the "Theme to the Pink Panther."  May be Henri Mancini was an Artie Shaw fan?

Artie Shaw was one of jazz's best clarinetists...  great big band sound...  this classic music is good for the ears...
Top
My Dad always claimed the '40's had the best music and the coolest cats... i would have to agree after hearing this gem.
Artie Shaw is new to me.. way ahead of his time me thinks!
Artie Shaw — Mysterioso

...WHAT a set,bill.........just canceled my nightshift-job for tonight,...better to open a bottle whitewine and listen rp the whole night....THANX...

narguile


Smokin'
terrible!
 palexis wrote:
And I thought good music started in the sixties...
 
Yes. The 1760's.
I hear Courageous Cat and Minute Mouse!   ?? 
Now I have an ear worm, trying to remember where I've heard the tune before. 
 
And I thought good music started in the sixties...
wow! Dynomite!