For today’s side‑session, we’re flipping over those two versions of Double Check Stomp from Duke Ellington that we heard yesterday - because around here, the B‑side is never just an afterthought.
The Victor Flip: “Jazz Lips” (1930)
We’ll start with the Victor disc. Its flipside is an Ellington original called Jazz Lips.
As far as I can tell, Duke only recorded this one once, and I don’t think anyone else ever took a crack at it. But it’s a fun little number — compact, confident, and unmistakably Ellington.
What’s funny is that Jazz Lips actually sounds more “jungle‑y” than the Jungle Band flipside we’re about to hear. The growls, the textures, the rhythmic snap - it’s like they accidentally put the Jungle Band track on the wrong label!
The Brunswick Flip: “Accordion Joe” (1930)
Things get a bit wilder when we flip over the Brunswick record, credited to The Jungle Band.
You may remember that accordionist Cornell Smelser (recording as Joe Cornell) sat in on Double Check Stomp. On Accordion Joe, he steps right into the spotlight - and he’s joined by the ubiquitous session vocalist Dick Robertson.
It’s honestly a little surreal to hear Smelser and Robertson dropped into a Jungle Band session. It’s like someone shuffled the personnel cards when nobody was looking. The result is a stylistic curveball in the Ellington library - part novelty tune, part hot dance record, part “wait… what band is this again?”
The All‑Star “Joe”: Cornell and His Orchestra
And the plot thickens...
This take features a vocal by Artie Dunn, and the studio band is stacked with ringers:
- Jack Teagarden
- Jimmy Dorsey
- Adrian Rollini
It’s basically a who’s‑who of 1930 studio royalty backing an accordion novelty. Only in the 78 era could something this odd — and this delightful — exist.
Which Flip Makes You Flip?
So what’s your pick?
Do you go for Duke’s one‑off Jazz Lips, with its sly, jungle‑tinged swagger?
Or does the all‑star accordion madness of Cornell Smelser’s Accordion Joe win the day?
Either way, it's proof once again that Ellington’s universe is full of delightful detours if you’re willing to flip the record!
Note: There's also a Fleischer Studio cartoon from 1930 titled "Accordion Joe" which does feature the song. It's historically interesting as it features an early prototype of Betty Boop as love interest for Bimbo, the star of the cartoon. It's more than a bit racially insensitive, however, so I won't link to it. You can find it if you look for it.









