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The Golden Gate Orchestra was a dance band that used elements of jazz, à la Paul Whiteman, and recorded for Edison during the mid-'20s. They specialized in popular music of the period, doing highly danceable renditions of tunes such as "The Charleston," "Manhattan," and "Hallelujah," and aimed their records primarily at white audiences. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
Glad Rag Doll
2,0062Dusting The Donkey - aka "The Pay-Off"
2783The Flapper Wife
1674The Charleston
1435Bit By Bit You're Breaking My Heart (Pm 20279, 1559-3)
896The Right Kind Of Man
577Looking at the World Thru Rose Colored Glasses
568I've Got A Song For Sale (That My Sweetie Turned Down) (Pm 20279, 1560-3)
539I Want to Be Bad
5110Charleston- fox trot
48Music of the Lost Generation 1910's - 1930's
The Great 1920s & Swingin' Gatsby 20s Classics - 100 Classic Speakeasy Jazz Hits from the Gatsby Inspired Roaring Twenties
Crazy Words Crazy Tunes
Hot Dance Of The Roaring 20's
100 Roaring Classics Of The 1920s
The Rise & Fall of Paramount Records, Volume 1 (1917-1927)

Ain't She Sweet (1926 - 1927)
Edison Diamond Disc-51542-R

Tiger Rag (1925)
The Big Broadcast, Vol. 3: Jazz and Popular Music of the 1920s and 1930s
The Sentimental Gentleman Of Swing - The Tommy Dorsey Centennial Collection
The Great 1920s & Swingin' Gatsby 20s Classics - 100 Classic Speakeasy Jazz Hits from the G