Michel Warlop et son orchestre

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Sweet Serenade 03:12 Tools
Strange Harmony 02:35 Tools
Crazy Strings 03:25 Tools
Cloud Castles 03:13 Tools
Taj Mahal 03:21 Tools
CA Me Tracasse 02:30 Tools
Serenade 02:49 Tools
Serenade For A Wealthy Widow 03:19 Tools
Budding Dancers 02:40 Tools
Cloud Castles (Paris, April 17, 1936) [Live] 02:58 Tools
Novel Pets 03:30 Tools
Magic Strings 03:27 Tools
Crazy Strings (Paris, April 17, 1936) [Live] 03:22 Tools
Budding Dancers (Paris, April 17, 1936) [Live] 02:41 Tools
Magic Strings (Paris, April 17, 1936) [Live] 03:11 Tools
BLUE INTERLUDE 03:11 Tools
Organ Grinder's Swing 02:36 Tools
Presentation Stomp (Paris, March 16, 1934) [Live] 03:04 Tools
Ca me tracasse (Double Trouble) 02:30 Tools
Présentation Stomp 03:06 Tools
Chirstmas Swing 02:52 Tools
Christmas Swing 02:52 Tools
Organ Grinder Swing 02:47 Tools
Celle qui est Perdue 02:47 Tools
La chanson du large 02:52 Tools
Toboggan 02:47 Tools
Ici l'on péche 02:47 Tools
Nandette 02:47 Tools
J'suis pas un ange 02:47 Tools
Un jour sur la mer 02:47 Tools
Pas sur la bouche 02:47 Tools
Harmoniques 02:47 Tools
Crazy fiddle 03:21 Tools
Blue Interlude (1934-5-12)) 03:21 Tools
Budding Dancers (1936) 03:21 Tools
Ça Me Tracasse (Double Trouble) 03:21 Tools
  • 10,639
    plays
  • 3,481
    listners
  • 10639
    top track count

Michel Warlop (January 23, 1911 – March 20, 1947) was a French jazz violinist. He was a contemporary of Didi Duprat and of Stephane Grappelli, with whom he played often. Warlop was one of France's early native stars on the violin; he accompanied singers Maurice Chevalier and Germaine Sablon in the mid-1930s, and worked with Stephane Grappelli and Django Reinhardt from 1934 to 1937. In the second half of the 1930s he played in the Jazz du Poste Parisien and with accordionist Louis Richardet, as well as with Grappelli and Eddie South in 1937. He worked extensively with American expatriates, including Garland Wilson (with whom he recorded as a duo in 1938), and visiting musicians such as Coleman Hawkins. In the early 1940s he was a member of Raymond Legrand's orchestra, and he led his own string septet from 1941 to 1943. He composed the work Noel du Prisonnier (Christmas of a Prisoner) and premiered it as conductor with the Paris Symphony Orchestra in 1942. He died at the age of 36 in 1947 Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.