James
Price Johnson was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1894. He was a ragtime
turned stride pianist whose composition, “The Charleston,” became one of the
anthems of the “jazz age” of the Twenties. Johnson and Jelly Roll Morton were
probably the two pianists most responsible for taking ragtime music and turning
it into jazz via the piano.
Although
he started out playing ragtime music in the tradition of Scott Joplin, Johnson
became the innovator of a jazz sub-genre of piano playing that was dubbed, “stride.”
This piano style got its name from the walking or “striding” sound produced by
the pianist’s left hand. Stride piano incorporated elements of the blues and it
allowed for on the spot improvisation which is an essential characteristic of
jazz music. Ragtime was a rigidly composed form of music which stifled improvisation.
A future
jazz star, Fats Waller, would become Johnson’s protégé’, adopt his stride style,
and later expose it to the masses.
Johnson
was a prolific composer, and he wrote some of the most familiar compositions of
the roaring Twenties. Aside from the Charleston, he penned, “You’ve Got to Be
Modernistic,” “If I Could Be with You One Hour Tonight,” “Carolina Shout,”
“Keep Off The Grass,” and “Old Fashioned Love,” among others. In addition to
jazz and pop tunes, Johnson wrote waltzes, ballets and symphonic pieces.
Johnson’s
finest recordings can be found on a number of compilation albums including the
multi-volume “Chronological Classics: James P. Johnson” (1996) series and “Snowy
Morning Blues” (1991), “Harlem Stride Piano” (1992), and “Father of Stride
Piano” (2001).
The Original Dixieland Jazz Band was originally
an off-shoot of Stein’s Dixie Jass Band and started out under the leadership of
cornetist, Nick LaRocca. By 1917, the band had moved from Chicago to New York,
where in February of that year, they would make the first-ever jazz recording,
“Livery Stable Blues/Dixie Jass Band One Step” for Victor.
The recording was a huge commercial
success, and it introduced jazz to a nationwide audience. The huge sales of
that first recording motivated other record labels to record jazz and thus
sparked the spread of the music.
The initial incarnation of the band
recorded several other excellent sides including, “Darktown Strutter’s Ball,” “Ostrich
Walk,” and “Tiger Rag.” Their music was typical early Dixieland jazz, but the
ODJB had some of the finest musicians in jazz music at the time including
Larocca on cornet, “Daddy” Edwards on trombone, Henry Ragas on piano, and Larry
Shields on clarinet.
The ODJB was a white band, and Larocca was
a proud member of the white race who always maintained that it was not African-Americans
who had created jazz, but white musicians. Larocca’a overt racism has probably
hurt the reputation of the ODJB and encouraged many observers to write them off
as simply a bunch of second-rate white musicians who only had the opportunity
to make the first jazz recording due to the institutionalized racism of the
time. However, this is clearly not the case. Freddie Keppard, an
African-American cornetist, turned down the opportunity to make the first jazz
recording, in 1916.
The ODJB reunited several times in the Thirties and toured Europe. Drummer Tony
Sbarbaro was the only original member to appear on all the band’s recordings
between 1917 and 1938.
Several compilations of the band’s early
sides can be found including, “The Complete Original Dixieland Jazz Band
(1917-1938)” (1995). The band also appears on several compilations of early
recorded jazz.
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Benny
Goodman and long-time rival, Artie Shaw, are the two greatest and best-known
white clarinetists in the history of jazz. Both men achieved huge commercial
and critical success during their respective careers. It was Goodman, however,
who would forever be identified with the title, “King of Swing,” for his role
in the invention of the most popular jazz subgenre during the height of the
music’s popularity.
Benny
Goodman was born in Chicago,
Illinois, in 1909. His parents
were Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire who struggled to provide for
their large family. Despite the family’s relative poverty, David Goodman
arranged for music lessons for three of his sons, including Benny, at a local Chicago synagogue. After
a year’s training, Benny Goodman, aged eleven, joined a boys’ club band and
received further musical training from the club’s director, and later from a
classically-trained clarinetist. With this solid foundation, Goodman would
launch a career that would span seven decades and would span musical genres
from early classic jazz to classical music.
Goodman’s
began his jazz career as a clarinetist in the Ben Pollack Orchestra at the age
of sixteen. He would make his first recording with the Pollack Orchestra in
1926. He would continue performing and recording with the Pollack Orchestra and
its various off-shoots until 1929. During this frenetic period, Goodman also
recorded with nationally- known bands of Ben Selvin, Red Nichols, and Ted
Lewis. He also recorded under his own name with trombonist Glenn Miller and
others as “Benny Goodman’s Boys.”
In the
early Thirties, John Hammond of Columbia records arranged for Goodman to record
in the company of other stellar jazz musicians in a jazz “all star” band. Other
members of the band included pianist Teddy Wilson and drummer Gene Kroupa, two
musicians that would form the core of the rhythm section of Goodman’s later orchestra.
In 1935, Goodman expressed interest in appearing on the nationwide radio dance
music show, “Let’s Dance.” At the advice of John Hammond, Goodman secured
“swinging” arrangements of songs from Fletcher Henderson, leader of one of New York’s best jazz
orchestras. These arrangements helped make Goodman a hit with the West Coast
audience that heard his performance.
On the
strength of the Let’s Dance performance and the rave reviews of Goodman’s
recordings of “King Porter Stop” and “Sometimes I’m Happy” with Fletcher
Henderson arrangements, a large and enthusiastic crowd of young fans were
waiting in Oakland, California when the band played a show there
in August of 1935. When the Goodman band began to play, the crowd went wild.
The same reaction greeted the band in Los
Angeles during the debut of a three week engagement at
the Palomar Ballroom in August, 1935. During the three-week engagement the “Jitterbug”
dance was born, and along with it, the “Swing Era.”
In the
wake of the tremendous success of the Goodman band in California, Fletcher Henderson disbanded his
great orchestra and become Goodman’s full-time arranger. With the addition of
Henderson and pianist Teddy Wilson, both African-Americans, Goodman’s band became
the first racially-integrated jazz band in America. Goodman would later add
another African-American, the great Charlie Christian, on guitar.
Goodman was
coined, “The King of Swing” in 1937, and was secured as such when his orchestra
became the first jazz band to play New
York’s Carnegie Hall, in 1938. The concert, which
included members of Count Basie’s and Duke Ellington’s orchestras, was a true
test for jazz music as an art form. If the high-brow Carnegie Hall set could be
moved by jazz, the music would earn a much needed stamp of approval from the
music establishment. After an uninspired start, the Goodman Orchestra slowly
built momentum and climaxed with an epic version of “Sing, Sing, Sing”
featuring spectacular solos by Goodman and pianist, Jess Stacy.
In 1939,
John Hammond introduced the electric guitarist, Charlie Christian, to Goodman
as a prospective band member. Despite initial doubts, Goodman was greatly
impressed with Christian’s playing and included him in the Benny Goodman Sextet
for the next two years. The sextet recordings with Christian including “Rose
Room,” “Breakfast Feud,” and “Grand Slam” are some of the finest recordings in
jazz history.
Goodman
continued to have tremendous success as a big band leader until the mid-Forties
when swing music began to lose steam. Goodman flirted with be-bop music and
even formed a bebop band before finally denouncing the music. In 1949, at the
age of 40, Goodman turned his back on jazz to devote himself to the study of
classical music. Following a lengthy retirement from jazz, Goodman died of a
heart attack in 1986.
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Bessie Smith was known as the “Empress of
the Blues,” so it’s only fitting that her mentor and senior, Ma Rainey, should
be forever remembered as “The Mother of the Blues.” Ma Rainey was born Gertrude
Pridgett in Columbus, Georgia, in 1886. She acquired the
moniker, “Ma,” after she married William “Pa” Rainey in 1904.
Rainey began performing music when she was
12-years-old, and she and her husband eventually became members of the
legendary touring ensemble, F.S. Walcott’s Rabbit’s Foot Minstrels. From 1914,
the Raineys became known as “Rainey and Rainey, Assassins of the Blues.” Ma
Rainey eventually met Bessie Smith, and she acted as a mentor for the younger
singer.
Mamie Smith became the first African-American
woman to make a blues record in 1920, and the sensation that her recording,
“Crazy Blues,” stirred led to record companies searching out other African-American
blues singers. Paramount
discovered Rainey in1923, and enabled her to make her first recordings. She
went to Chicago
in late 1923 to make her first record “Bad Luck Blues,” Bo-Weevil Blues,” and
“Moonshine Blues.”
Rainey would record over 100 sides for Paramount over the next
five years. She was marketed as “Mother of the Blues” among other tags. In 1924,
she recorded with the young Louis Armstrong on “See See Rider Blues,” “Jelly
Bean Blues,” and “Countin’ the Blues.”
As the Thirties approached, Rainey’s brand
of Vaudeville blues was beginning to lose popularity, and Paramount failed to renew her recording
contract. Rainey died in Rome,
Georgia, in
1939, of a heart attack.
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Alberta Hunter was
one of the first female blues singers to record. She was born in Memphis, Tennessee,
in 1895, and made her first recordings, “Bring Back the Joys/ How Long, Sweet
Daddy, How Long,” in 1921, for the Black Swan label. By 1922, she had moved on to
the Paramount label and established herself as
one of the most prolific blues performers of the early Twenties.
Hunter continued to
perform and record late into her long life. She died in New York City in 1984 and the age of 89. Among
several compilation albums of Hunter’s music are “Complete Recorded Works”
(Volumes 1-4) (1996) and “Young Alberta Hunter: The 20’s and 30’s” (1996).
Johnson was one of the best of the early acoustic
blues guitarists. He possessed a technical proficiency that separated him from
his peers, and he was always in high demand as a session guitarist for blues
and jazz recordings. Johnson was a fine vocalist as well, and his prodigious
chops made him a hot recording property in the Twenties.
The place and date of his birth are the subject of
some debate, although many believe his birthplace to be New Orleans. It is known for sure that
Johnson was raised in New Orleans and later
moved to St. Louis
in the Twenties where he began recording for Okeh Records. That label would
release his first side, “Mr. Johnson’s Blues,” in 1925. Johnson recorded
numerous sides for the label including, “Very Lonesome Blues,” “Lonesome Jail
Blues,” Five o’clock Blues,” “Backwater Blues,” and many others.
Johnson lent his nimble guitar skills to Louis Armstrong’s Hot Five recordings in
1927. The next year, Johnson and the white jazz guitarist, Eddie Lang, made
some of the first racially-integrated jazz recordings. Johnson’s career
suffered during the Depression Era of the Thirties when Okeh went bankrupt and
he relocated to Canada.
Johnson died in 1970, in Toronto,
from injuries he had suffered in a car accident.
Like most other musicians of his era, Johnson’s work
is best heard on any number of compilation albums. “Blues in My Fingers: The
Essential Recordings of Lonnie Johnson” (1994), and “Complete Recorded Works
1925-1932” (1991) are the best compilations available for this artist.
Kid Ory, born in La Place, Louisiana, in 1886, was the king of the trombone in the
early years of jazz music in New
Orleans. He started out played banjo, but later
switched to trombone. Ory would become known for his “tailgate” style that had
the trombone playing rhythmic lines underneath the free soloing of clarinets
and cornets. From 1912 to 1919, Ory led an extremely popular band in New Orleans which had as
members, King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, Johnny Dodds, Sidney Bechet and Jimmie
Noone.
Ory moved to California
in 1919, and in 1922, King Ory’s Creole Orchestra became the first
African-American jazz band to make a recording when they recorded the songs “Ory’s
Creole Trombone” and “Society Blues.” In 1925, Ory moved to Chicago,
joining the migration of New Orleans jazz
musicians who were seeking fame and fortune in the WindyCity.
In Chicago, Ory
played with King Oliver’s Creole Jazz band, Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five and
Hot Seven and later with Jelly Roll Morton’s Red Hot Peppers.
During the Depression, Ory found himself out of work along with many
of his colleagues. For several years he ran a chicken ranch with his brother
and returned to music when the New
Orleans style jazz revival happened in the Forties. He
reformed the Kid Ory’s Creole Jazz Band in 1943, and Ory was able to play jazz
until he retired in 1966, and he died at a ripe old age in 1973.
The compilation albums, “Ory’s Creole Trombone: Greatest Recordings
1922-1944” (1995) and “The Chronological Classics: Kid Ory 1922-1945” (1999)
are among the best available compilations of his music.
Clarinettist Johnny Dodds was born in New Orleans, Louisiana,
in 1892. Johnny Dodds was one of the greatest jazz clarinetists of the Twenties and he possessed a very soulful and emotional style of playing. Dodds and Louis
Armstrong complimented each other perfectly when the two musicians worked
together in King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band and later in Armstrong’s Hot Five
and Seven recording bands.
Dodds played in many of the leading jazz
bands of the classic jazz era. Dodds played in Kid Ory’s band in New Orleans from 1912 to 1919, and like Armstrong, he
played on riverboats with Fate Marable before moving to Chicago in 1921 to play with King Oliver’s
Creole Jazz Band. Dodds also lent his fine clarinet chops to Jelly Roll Morton’s
band, The Red Hot Peppers. Dodds appeared on most of Armstrong’s classic Hot
Five recordings and recorded numerous excellent sides under his own during the
Twenties.
The best of Dodds’ solo recordings include,
“Clarinet Wobble,” “Wild Man Blues,” and “Piggly Wiggly.” Dodds continued to
play and record in Chicago
throughout the Thirties, and also ran a taxi cab company with his brother,
drummer Baby Dodds, until his death in 1940.
The 2009 compilation, “The Complete Johnny
Dodds,” is the best collection of his works. Dodds is also included on “The
Chronological Classics: Johnny Dodds” series from 1991/1992.
Benny Goodman and long-time rival, Artie
Shaw, are the two greatest and best-known white clarinetists in the history of
jazz. Both men achieved huge commercial and critical success during their
respective careers. It was Goodman, however, who would forever be identified
with the title, “King of Swing,” for his role in the invention of the most
popular jazz subgenre during the height of the music’s popularity.
Benny Goodman was born in Chicago, Illinois,
in 1909. His parents were Jewish immigrants from the Russian Empire who
struggled to provide for their large family. Despite the family’s relative
poverty, David Goodman arranged for music lessons for three of his sons,
including Benny, at a local Chicago
synagogue. After a year’s training, Benny Goodman, aged eleven, joined a boys’
club band and received further musical training from the club’s director, and
later from a classically-trained clarinetist. With this solid foundation,
Goodman would launch a career that would span seven decades and would span
musical genres from early classic jazz to classical music.
Goodman’s began his jazz career as a
clarinetist in the Ben Pollack Orchestra at the age of sixteen. He would make
his first recording with the Pollack Orchestra in 1926. He would continue performing
and recording with the Pollack Orchestra and its various off-shoots until 1929.
During this frenetic period, Goodman also recorded with nationally- known bands
of Ben Selvin, Red Nichols, and Ted Lewis. He also recorded under his own name
with trombonist Glenn Miller and others as “Benny Goodman’s Boys.”
In the early Thirties, John Hammond of
Columbia records arranged for Goodman to record in the company of other stellar
jazz musicians in a jazz “all star” band. Other members of the band included
pianist Teddy Wilson and drummer Gene Kroupa, two musicians that would form the
core of the rhythm section of Goodman’s later orchestra. In 1935, Goodman
expressed interest in appearing on the nationwide radio dance music show,
“Let’s Dance.” At the advice of John Hammond, Goodman secured “swinging”
arrangements of songs from Fletcher Henderson, leader of one of New York’s best jazz
orchestras. These arrangements helped make Goodman a hit with the West Coast
audience that heard his performance.
On the strength of the Let’s Dance
performance and the rave reviews of Goodman’s recordings of “King Porter Stop”
and “Sometimes I’m Happy” with Fletcher Henderson arrangements, a large and
enthusiastic crowd of young fans were waiting in Oakland, California
when the band played a show there in August of 1935. When the Goodman band
began to play, the crowd went wild. The same reaction greeted the band in Los Angeles during the
debut of a three week engagement at the Palomar Ballroom in August, 1935.
During the three-week engagement the “Jitterbug” dance was born, and along with
it, the “Swing Era.”
In the wake of the tremendous success of
the Goodman band in California,
Fletcher Henderson disbanded his great orchestra and become Goodman’s full-time
arranger. With the addition of Henderson and pianist Teddy Wilson, both
African-Americans, Goodman’s band became the first racially-integrated jazz
band in America.
Goodman would later add another African-American, the great Charlie Christian,
on guitar.
Goodman was coined, “The King of Swing” in
1937, and was secured as such when his orchestra became the first jazz band to
play New York’s
Carnegie Hall, in 1938. The concert, which included members of Count Basie’s
and Duke Ellington’s orchestras, was a true test for jazz music as an art form.
If the high-brow Carnegie Hall set could be moved by jazz, the music would earn
a much needed stamp of approval from the music establishment. After an
uninspired start, the Goodman Orchestra slowly built momentum and climaxed with
an epic version of “Sing, Sing, Sing” featuring spectacular solos by Goodman
and pianist, Jess Stacy.
In 1939, John Hammond introduced the
electric guitarist, Charlie Christian, to Goodman as a prospective band member.
Despite initial doubts, Goodman was greatly impressed with Christian’s playing
and included him in the Benny Goodman Sextet for the next two years. The sextet
recordings with Christian including “Rose Room,” “Breakfast Feud,” and “Grand
Slam” are some of the finest recordings in jazz history.
Goodman continued to have tremendous
success as a big band leader until the mid-Forties when swing music began to
lose steam. Goodman flirted with be-bop music and even formed a bebop band
before finally denouncing the music. In 1949, at the age of 40, Goodman turned
his back on jazz to devote himself to the study of classical music. Following a
lengthy retirement from jazz, Goodman died of a heart attack in 1986.
A plethora of fine collections are
available for Goodman’s recordings at various phases of his career including
the fine four volume “Chronological Classics: Benny Goodman and His Orchestra”
(1996) while “The Famous 1938 Carnegie Hall Jazz Concert Vol.1-2” (1950) is one
of the finest live recordings of popular music ever made.
Billie Holiday’s life is the stuff of jazz
legend. She rose from poverty and abuse to become one of the biggest stars of
jazz during the Thirties and Forties. Holiday
was a great singer who did not possess a great voice. She employed her voice like
a horn player would his horn, and had a reputation for taking mediocre songs
and transforming them into greatness. Her singing style was influenced by
Bessie Smith’s singing and Louis Armstrong’s trumpet playing. Fellow jazz musicians
referred to her as simply, “Lady Day.”
Holiday was born in Baltimore, Maryland,
in 1915. In 1933, she was discovered by the legendary John Hammond, talent
scout extraordinaire. Hammond
signed her to Columbia Records, and she recorded for some of the company’s
subsidiary labels.
Despite being offered only mediocre
material to record, she was supported by some of the finest musicians in jazz,
including pianist Teddy Wilson and saxophonist, Lester Young, who would coin
her “Lady Day” and become her closest friend and musical collaborator.
In 1937, Holiday
toured with the Count Basie Orchestra and later joined Artie Shaw’s Orchestra.
She stayed with Columbia Records until 1942, only leaving once for the
Commodore label with which she recorded the classic and searing song about
lynching, “Strange Fruit.” In 1942, she signed with Decca records and later
ended up recording for Verve. One of her last sessions with Columbia produced the classic side, “God
Bless the Child.” In the late Forties, Holiday
was convicted of heroin possession and spent several months in prison. Due to
the conviction, she was unable to obtain a cabaret card, making it impossible
for her to find work in New York City
clubs. Suffering from both liver and heart disease, Billie Holiday died in a New York hospital, in
1959.
Holiday’s best recordings can be found on
the following collections: “Lady Sings the Blues” (1956), “Songs for Distingue
Lovers” (1958), “Lady in Satin” (1958), “The Billie Holiday Story” (1959), “The
Golden Years” (1962), “Billie Holiday’s Greatest Hits” (1967), “Lady Day: The
Complete Billie Holiday on Columbia (1933-1944)” (2001), “Lady Day: The Best of
Billie Holiday” (2001), “The Ultimate Collection” (2005), and “Lady Day: The
Master Takes and Singles” (2007).
Artie Shaw was the greatest white
clarinetist of jazz, save perhaps, Benny Goodman. Like Goodman, Shaw was a
classically trained musician that excelled at playing other styles of music
besides jazz. Shaw had his own orchestra which rivaled Benny Goodman’s
orchestra in popularity during the Thirties. Shaw had a huge pop hit with the
song, “Begin the Beguine” in 1939.
Shaw was born Arthur Jacob Arshawsky in New York City. He faced a
great deal of anti-Semitic discrimination during his youth in New Haven, Connecticut,
so anglicized his name as Shaw. During the Thirties and Forties, Shaw was the
rival of fellow clarinetist and band leader, Benny Goodman.
Shaw’s best work was with the small band he
assembled called, The Gramercy Five. The Gramercy Five recordings are
considered by jazz critics to be among the best ever jazz recordings.
Essential recordings by Shaw include the
following studio albums and collections: The Great Artie Shaw” (1959), “This is
Artie Shaw” (1971), “The Complete Gramercy Five Recordings” (1989) and “The
Chronological Classics: Artie Shaw and His Orchestra 1938” (1998), and “The
Chronological Classics: Artie Shaw and His Orchestra 1939” (1999).
The great jazz trumpeter, Dizzy Gillespie,
was one of the musicians at the forefront of the development of be-bop music in
the Fifties. He was born John Birkes Gillespie in Cheraw, South Carolina,
in 1917. Gillespie earned the moniker, “Dizzy,” for his ebullient personality
and antics while performing.
After hearing the great Roy Eldridge on the
radio as a child, Gillespie decide then and there that he, too, wanted to be a
jazz trumpeter. Gillespie got his start in New York City, in 1935, playing in the bands
of Teddy Hill and Edgar Hayes. It was with the Teddy Hill Orchestra that
Gillespie would make his first recording, “King Porter Stomp.” Gillespie stayed
with Hill for one year and then freelanced with several bands for a while
before finally winding up in Cab Callaway’s Orchestra in 1939. Calloway would
fire Gillespie three years later following an altercation between the two men.
In 1943, Gillespie would join Earl Hines
band which featured Charlie Parker and was beginning to create a new music
which would become bebop. From there, it was on to the Billie Ekstine band,
which also featured Parker. He would later leave the Ekstine band because he
wanted to play in a smaller ensemble.
In the mid-Forties, Gillespie, Parker and
other jazz musicians such as Max Roach, Bud Powell, Thelonious Monk, and Kenny
Clark would meet at clubs such as Minton’s Playhouse and Monroe’s Uptown to jam and experiment. It was
at these jams that bebop was born.
Gillespie would become a member of the
“Quintet,” the legendary be-bop supergroup formed in Toronto in 1953, with Parker, Powell, Charles
Mingus and Max Roach. Following his one-show tenure with the Quintet, Gillespie
would form his own Dizzy Gillespie Orchestra.
Among the best of the classic sides that
Gillespie recorded in the Forties and Fifties are: “A Night in Tunisia,” “Salt Peanuts,” “Hot House,” “Manteca,” “Perdido,” and
“Night and Day.”
Gillespie’s best albums begin with the
Quintet. His “Salt Peanuts” from the album “Live at Massey Hall” is perhaps the
best moment of many brilliant moments on that live recording of the Quintet’s
only show. Other fine Gillespie albums include, “Dizzy In Paris” (1953), “For
Musicians Only” (1958), ”Gillespiana” (1960), “Groovin’ High” (1953).
After Gillespie had had his fill of bebop,
he became interested in Afro-Cuban music. Gillespie died in 1993.
Fletcher Henderson
was a jazz pianist and bandleader born in Cuthbert,
Georgia, in
1897. Henderson
was the leader of one of the best African-American jazz bands of the Twenties.
Henderson
was born to a middle-class family that valued education, and Henderson would go
on to earn a degree in chemistry from Atlanta University. When he moved to New
York in 1920, he was rejected by employers in the chemistry field due to his
skin colour. He went to work for W.C. Handy’s music publishing company and then
became a manager at the Black Swan recording label.
In 1922, Henderson led a band at a club which would
become the legendary Roseland Ballroom. Henderson and his band, which would
later become known as the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra, would stay on at the
Roseland for ten years. Henderson’s Orchestra featured some of the best
musicians in jazz and included at various times, Coleman Hawkins, Louis
Armstrong, Joe Smith, and many other star soloists. With stellar members such
as Hawkins and Armstrong, the Henderson Orchestra made some of the finest sides
of jazz in the Twenties including, “Sugar Foot Stomp,” “Shanghai Shuffle,” “Jim
Town Blues,” “Christopher Columbus,” “Stealin’ Apples,” “King Porter Stomp,”
and “Stampede.”
The Fletcher Henderson Orchestra continued to tour
and record until 1939 when Henderson joined the Benny Goodman Orchestra as the
pianist and arranger. The hiring of Henderson by Goodman was a watershed moment
in jazz, as it was the first time that a white band had hired a black musician
as arranger. Henderson’s participation would help secure Goodman’s reputation
as the “King of Swing,” a music which Henderson had pioneered with his work
with his own orchestra years before.
Henderson died in 1952, following several years with
heart problems. The classic sides of the Henderson Orchestra can be fairly
easily found on several compilations of the band’s work, and on compilations of
classic early jazz, including the series, “The Chronological Classics: Fletcher
Henderson.” (1996).
James
Price Johnson was born in New Brunswick, New Jersey, in 1894. He was a ragtime
turned stride pianist whose composition, “The Charleston,” became one of the
anthems of the “jazz age” of the Twenties. Johnson and Jelly Roll Morton were
probably the two pianists most responsible for taking ragtime music and turning
it into jazz via the piano.
Although
he started out playing ragtime music in the tradition of Scott Joplin, Johnson
became the innovator of a jazz sub-genre of piano playing that was dubbed, “stride.”
This piano style got its name from the walking or “striding” sound produced by
the pianist’s left hand. Stride piano incorporated elements of the blues and it
allowed for on the spot improvisation which is an essential characteristic of
jazz music. Ragtime was a rigidly composed form of music which stifled improvisation.
A future
jazz star, Fats Waller, would become Johnson’s protégé’, adopt his stride style,
and later expose it to the masses.
Johnson
was a prolific composer, and he wrote some of the most familiar compositions of
the roaring Twenties. Aside from the Charleston, he penned, “You’ve Got to Be
Modernistic,” “If I Could Be with You One Hour Tonight,” “Carolina Shout,”
“Keep Off The Grass,” and “Old Fashioned Love,” among others. In addition to
jazz and pop tunes, Johnson wrote waltzes, ballets and symphonic pieces.
Johnson’s
finest recordings can be found on a number of compilation albums including the
multi-volume “Chronological Classics: James P. Johnson” (1996) series and “Snowy
Morning Blues” (1991), “Harlem Stride Piano” (1992), and “Father of Stride
Piano” (2001).
Louis Armstrong is one of the most
important figures in the history of Western popular music, and likely the most
important figure in the history of jazz music. He is not only the most famous
jazz musician, but he is considered by many to be the most brilliant musician
who ever played the music. It was Armstrong’s innate genius as a cornet soloist
during the Twenties that helped transform jazz from disposable dance music to
the art form that it has become.
Louis Armstrong was born in New Orleans, Louisiana,
in 1901. His father abandoned the family shortly thereafter, leaving little
Louis to live with his mother and sister. Armstrong and his mother lived in a
section of New Orleans
which was so violent, that it was referred to as “The Battlefield.”
By the time Armstrong was around five-years-old, he was already performing on New Orleans street corners,
and he later landed a job hauling a junk wagon. Sometimes, Armstrong would
fetch coal, which could be used for warmth on cold nights, for local
prostitutes. His employer, the Karnofsky family, provided him with the money to
buy his first cornet, and Armstrong took the instrument home and taught himself
to play.
On New Years’s Day, 1912; Armstrong was
arrested for firing a pistol into the air on New Years’s Eve. Armstrong was
known to local police for his often colourful behavior, and he was removed from
his home and sent to the “Colored Waif's Home for Boys.”
At the waif’s home Armstrong received music lessons on the cornet from musician
Peter Davis, and eventually became the leader of the Waif's Home Band. He was
released in 1914, and during a coal delivery to the Storyville district, met
Joe “King” Oliver, the best-known cornet player in the New Orleans. Oliver became Armstrong’s
mentor, and helped him get work with a number of local bands.
By 1918, Armstrong was a member of the Kid Ory band with Oliver as its leader.
When Oliver moved to Chicago,
Armstrong took over the leadership of the band. The next year Armstrong was
hired by Fate Marable to play in his band aboard Mississippi
River steamboats.
In 1922, Armstrong was lured to Chicago by
Oliver to join his band, “King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band,” which featured a
stellar lineup of musicians including Oliver on cornet, Kid Ory on trombone,
Johnny Dodds on clarinet, Baby Dodds on drums, Charlie Jackson on banjo, and
Lil Hardin on piano. Armstrong became the second cornetist and with Oliver,
created a sensation at the city’s LincolnGardens with the
brilliance of their cornet duets.
Armstrong made his first recordings with the
Creole Jazz Band for the Gennett label in 1923. The first recording Armstrong
appeared on was “Chimes Blues” which featured a brilliant Armstrong solo. With
Armstrong on second cornet, The Creole Jazz Band made some of the best and most
influential recordings of early jazz including, “Mandy Lee Blues,” “Dippermouth
Blues,” “Just Gone,” and “Canal Street Blues.”
Armstrong married the band’s pianist, Lil Hardin, in 1924. Later that year, he
moved to New York City and joined Fletcher
Henderson’s orchestra and continued to perform and record superb solos for Henderson. During this
period, Armstrong established himself as the premier blues sideman on
recordings with Bessie Smith, Bertha “Chippie” Hill, and others. Perhaps the
most famous of Armstrong’s blues collaborations is the session with Bessie
Smith that produced “St. Louis Blues” and “Reckless Blues.”
Despite achieving much in New
York, Armstrong quit Fletcher Henderson’s band and returned to Chicago in 1925 to make
his first recordings for Okeh with his recording group, “Louis Armstrong and
His Hot Five.”
Although it didn’t seem possible for
Armstrong to outdo his work with Oliver, he did just that with a set of
recordings of unparalleled brilliance, “The Hot Fives and Hot Sevens.” With
support from former Creole Jazz Band members, Johnny Dodds, Baby Dodds, Lil
Hardin, and Kid Ory, plus banjo player Johnny St. Cyr, Armstrong redefined jazz
music on colourful recordings with equally colourful titles such as “Struttin’
with Some Barbeque,” Skid-Dat-De-Dat,” “Cornet Chop Suey,” “Big Butter and Egg
Man,” and “Yes! I’m in the Barrel.”
Armstrong would be heard singing for the
first time on these recordings and revealed that in addition to being the best
jazz instrumentalist, he was also a vocalist of exceptional ability. Armstrong
was credited with creating the wordless singing style of “scat” during a Hot
Five recording session for “Heebie Jeebies” when he dropped the paper which
contained the words to the song. Instead of stopping, Armstrong improvised some
wordless vocalization.
By the late Twenties, The Hot Five had
expanded to the Hot Seven with the addition of the great Earl Hines on piano
and some shuffling of the original Hot Five lineup. This new outfit continued
to produce sides of jazz genius such as, “Willie the Weeper,” “Potato Head
Blues,” “Wild Man Blues,” “Alligator Crawl,” and the recording which has been
cited by many jazz critics as the single most brilliant recording of jazz
music, “West End Blues.”
While recording with the Hot Five,
Armstrong worked with Erskine Tate and the Carroll Dickerson Orchestra. Armstrong
moved with Dickerson to New York City
in 1929, and appeared the same year in the Broadway musical; “Hot Chocolates.” In
1931, Armstrong appeared in his first film, “Ex-Flame.”
Armstrong was gradually becoming a nationally-known music star, and his fame
began to spread abroad largely due to the success of the Hot Five and Hot Seven
recordings. He toured the United States
and Europe throughout the Thirties. During the
Forties, his appearances in films and exposure via radio solidified and magnified
his star status. He would perform at Carnegie Hall, in New York City, in 1947.
Armstrong continued to be an extremely
popular figure in jazz throughout the evolutions of the music through swing,
bebop, and the avant-garde. While many of the musicians who were with him
during the creation of the music had been forgotten, Armstrong never ceased to
have a viable career. He continued to tour the world, including visits to
Eastern Europe and Africa. He also continued
to record with his fellow jazz musicians. His health began to deteriorate in
1959, however, when he was hospitalized following a heart attack in Italy.
In 1964, Armstrong’s single “Hello, Dolly!” became the number one hit on Billboard’s
pop charts, just as the Beatles were first experiencing “Beatlemania” in
America. Armstrong’s hit with Hello Dolly was the last time a jazz recording
would top the pop charts before rock and roll took full control of them.
Armstrong continued making movie and
television appearances, in addition to performing live, despite continuing
heart problems, hospital stays and advice from his doctors to rest. Armstrong’s
rendition of the song, “What a Wonderful World,” became a hit in 1968. The song
would become a hit again in 1988, when it was included in the film, “Good
Morning Vietnam.” In 1971, after performing at the Waldorf Astoria in New York City, Armstrong died
in his sleep at his home.
Armstrong’s best recorded works are from
the Twenties, but fortunately, these recordings are quite well-preserved. Even
his first recordings with King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band are quite
high-fidelity considering they were recorded before the use of microphones.
Several excellent compilations of the Hot Fives and Hot Sevens and Armstrong’s
later Twenties work are available from Columbia,
and they all feature excellent sound quality. Good compilations can also be
found of Armstrong’s recordings with King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band.
Armstrong started recording full-length
albums in the Fifties, and his best albums include, “Louis Armstrong Plays WC
Handy” (1954), “Satch Plays Fats” (1955), “Louis Armstrong Meets Oscar
Peterson” (1959), and “Satchmo Plays King Oliver” (1960).
Sippie Wallace was another of the early
female blues singers who started her recording career in the Twenties on the
heels of Mamie Smith’s 1920 recording of “Crazy Blues,” the first-ever blues
recording. Wallace was born Beulah Thomas in Houston, Texas, in 1898.
Wallace made her first recordings for the
Okeh label in 1924 with “Leaving Me Daddy is Hard to Do.” She enjoyed a number
of hits with Okeh during the Twenties with the songs, “I’m a Mighty Tight
Woman,” “Jack O Diamonds Blues,” “Dead Drunk Blues,” and “Lazy Man Blues.” Wallace,
like Alberta Hunter and Ida Cox, would enjoy a lengthy career and continue to
perform well into old age. Wallace died in Detroit in 1986.
Her music is best heard via the
compilations, “Complete Recorded Works, Vol. 1 (1923-1925)” (1995) and “Complete
Recorded Works, Vol.2 (1925-1945)”