My frequently referred to poor mp3 of a recording I really like because it is all I could find anywhere is online, sounding better, and free. here are two sites with it. I think the first sounds better, but the second has a picture of the label. If you are too young to be familiar with 78RPM disks, pretty much everything not an opera or a folk song was labeled a "Fox Trot."

Absolutely smashing orchestration and vocal. Credit the quality to six years studio experimentation with'electrical' recording techniques as opposed to singing and playing into a cone. Whiteman's arrangements were more 'jazzy' than jazz...
Paul Whiteman was not considered a real Jazz bandleader in 1934, or earlier, because there was so much of the real thing in the Twenties and the swing era. I believe he was even embarrassed eventually by being called "The King Of Jazz." But he was accomplished and a serious bandleader, wanting to hire black players but like other white leaders running afoul of the way it was then. He still had the cash to hire the best white players, which he did. While his band may not have swung, it sure as hell had jump. This recording is an outstanding example of that, and of the state of recording at this time. This is the big band that first debuted Gershwin's Rhapsody in Blue, with Gershwin playing the piano parts. So play it LOUD, like it sounded live. Man, just listen to how tight his orchestra was.

https://archive.org/details/PaulWhitemanwithRamonaDavies


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zrWrKmvspGw