- Shopping Bag ( 0 items )
| Jimmy Sturr | Primary Artist, Primary Artist, Clarinet, Alto Saxophone |
| The Jordanaires | Vocals, Group |
| Gene Bartkiewicz | Accordion |
| Dennis Coyman | Drums |
| Wally Czerniawski | Accordion |
| Johnny Karas | Tenor Saxophone, Vocals |
| Joe Magnuszewski | Clarinet, Alto Saxophone |
| Jeff Miller | Piano |
| Al Noble | Trumpet |
| Eric Parks | Trumpet |
| Dennis Polisky | Clarinet, Alto Saxophone |
| Frank Urbanovitch | Fiddle, Vocals |
| Ken Harbus | Trumpet |
| Mike Ralff | Bass |
| Basia Ciborowski | Vocals |
| Dave Czohara | Trumpet |
| Ella Kuzdzal | Vocals |
| Lynn Marie Rink | Accordion |
| Jimmy Sturr | Arranger, Producer |
| Tom Pick | Producer, Engineer |
| Bill Shibilski | Liner Notes |
| Henry Will | Arranger |
| Doyle Brown | Visual Coordinator |
| Hank Williams | Mastering |
| Will Dombrowski | Engineer |
Editorial Reviews
All Music Guide
Despite Sturr's five Grammies, your actual U.S. polka -- native-born son of the naturalized recordings above -- doesn't get much "mainstream" attention. Pity! After all, it's the only White regional urban idiom in the U.S. Sturr does the real stuff, mostly in English, with some Polish lyrics, and with a very strongly Bohemian/Slovenian vocal sound -- check out Slavko Avsenik for its roots. Yes, it's disgracefully short, but that's a ripoff whose time has apparently come. ~ John Storm Roberts, Original Music,