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1. NEW ORLEANS JAZZAND DIXIELAND1910 - 1940
2. New Orleans Jazz 1890s in New Orleans
The first black jazz bands were large marching bands called upon to play for funeral processions and Mardi Gras
3. James Reese Europe
One of the most influential American musicians of the early 20th century
4. James Reese Europe1881-1919 Violin student of Enrico Hurlei, Asst. Dir. U.S. Marine Band
1904 - directed music for several all-black shows
1910 - organized more than 100 black musicians into the Clef Club
1913, 1914 - recorded for RCA Victor
5. James Reese Europe Called The Paderewski of syncopation
Emergence of the Fox Trot
Europe enlisted in the 15th New York Regiment (the 369th Infantry) in 1917
The Hell Fighters
Recruited black musicians, trained them, wrote music for them, and went to Europe
6. James Reese Europe A multiple function band
Marching and drilling
Evening concerts
hymns
dances
The players introduced complex rhythms and idiosyncratic articulation
7. James Reese Europe Paris, August, 1918
Theatre des Champs-Elysees
Tuileries Gardens - 50,000 people
Now called the 369th U.S. Infantry Jazz Band, they returned to America
The Band that Played the Hell Fighters on to Victory
8. 369th Hell Fighters Band The Band that Set all France JAZZ MAD
Activities in U.S.
Manhattan Opera House concert
24 discs for Pathe
Tour of the Unites States
9. May 9, 1919, Europe was stabbed to death by Herbert Wright, one of his drummers
10. Castle House Rag Europes Society Orchestra, Febr. 10, 1914
Europe organized the Clef Club, a sort of union and fraternity
Europe came to national attention with the release of 4 Victor records through Vernon and Irene Castle
This composition is not a rag, but rather a Trot and One-Step
11. Castle Walk Composed by Europe and Ford T. Dabney
Febr. 10, 1914
Instrumentation includes:
Banjos, mandolins, violins, clarinet, cornet, traps, and drums
12. Memphis Blues March 7, 1919composed by W.C. Handy and W. George Norton
Illustrates improvisation (or hot) playing by a large band
13. The Storyville District A district created in 1898 by Alderman Sidney Story outside of which prostitution would be prohibited
Music was constantly heard throughout the district
At its peak, Storyville employed
2200 prostitutes
70 professional gamblers
30 piano players
And had as many as 230 houses
14. The Storyville District The experiment was very successful, but the district was closed by the federal government in 1917 and all the buildings were demolished
The new Storyville district recaptures the architecture and atmosphere of the original
15. Dixieland Dixieland Instrumentation included:
Cornets or trumpets
Clarinets
tailgate trombones
Tubas, banjos, and drums
Smaller groups formed to play in bars in Storyville
16. Collective Improvisation Dixieland came from these bands but the rhythm section might include a string bass and piano instead of tuba
Collective improvisation is the essence of Dixieland
The three lead instruments (the horns) improvise contrapuntal melodies over the steady beat of the rhythm section
17. Dixieland Followed certain patterns and formulas
The beat is in flat-four (4/4 time)
Early masters include:
Buddy Bolden, Bunk Johnson, Freddie Keppard
The term Dixieland came into use in the 1920s
18. Original Dixieland Jass Band Band members:
Nick LaRocca, trumpet
Larry Shields, clarinet
Eddie Edwards, trombone
Tony Sbarbaro, drums
Henry Ragas, piano
19. Dominic Nick LaRocca 1889-1961 Claimed to have invented jazz
Formed the ODJB in New Orleans in 1914
They called themselves Americas First Jazz Band
The band came to Chicago under the name Steins Dixie Jass Band
Name changed to the Original Dixieland Jass Band in 1917
LaRocca retired from music after 1938 and became a building contractor in New Orleans
20. Firsts
FIRST ever jazz record made by this band for Columbia and Victor Records in 1917!
RESPONSIBLE for securing the name "jazz" (music style name) as we know it today! (In 1917 the ODJB was responsible for securing the musical term JAZZ as a musical definition term. Prior to the ODJB recording the music of the time was known as Ragtime and many other style names but not jazz. There were three or four other groups that used the name jass within their band name dating back to 1914, but the term was used more in general language slang and was not used to describe a musical style until the ODJB secured it with their recording in 1917.)
FIRST jazz band to sell over 1.5 million Victrola records worldwide within the year of its release! (This event introduced millions of people worldwide to JAZZ for the very first time.)
FIRST jazz band to travel to Europe in 1919!
FIRST jazz band to appear in a motion picture! ("The Good For Nothing", 1917 Peerless Productions, Distributed by World Pictures, Directed by Carlyle Blackwell and Produced by William Brady.)
FIRST jazz band ever to perform for US servicemen during WWI!
21. Dixieland The OriginalDixielandJass Band
Billed themselves as the originators of Jazz
The recordingLivery Stable Blues, coupled with Dixie Jass Band One Step was the first Jazz record ever released (February 26, 1917) for the Victor Talking Machine Company
22. Buddy Bolden Often called the first jazz musician
Born in 1877
Formed a band in 1895
Placed in an institution in 1907
Died in 1931
No recordings
23. King Oliver, who joined Keppard in Chicago, made the first major impact in the North
24. Joe King Oliver1885 - 1938 Born in New Orleans
1899 joined a boys brass band (cornet)
1901 blinded in one eye
1907 lead cornetist
Melrose Brass Band
Magnolia Band
Eagle Band
25. King Oliver Mentor and teacher to Louis Armstrong
1917, when Storyville closed down,
Oliver joined Bill Johnson in Chicago
1921 he went to California and played with
Kid Ory (San Francisco)
Jelly Roll Morton (LA)
His own band (Oakland)
26. The Creole Jazz Band 1922 returned to Chicago
Sent for Louis Armstrong to fill out in his most famous band
The combination of Oliver and Armstrong
The band became the envy of the jazz world
First successful recordings by a black jazz band
27. The Worlds Greatest Jazz Cornetist Oliver billed himself
His new band, the Dixie Syncopators recorded a series of Race records for Vocalion
Deadman Blues, West End Blues
Oliver turned down a contract at The Cotton Club (Duke Ellington accepted)
Oliver cut his last record for Victor in 1931
28. King Oliver Toured the South
Victimized
Bus breakdowns and accidents
Caught in a blizzard in West VA
Oliver suffered from
Musical disappointments
pyorrhea
High blood pressure
29. King Oliver Could not afford medical treatment
Ran a fruit stand
Became a janitor for a pool hall
Died of a cerebral hemorrhage on April 8, 1938
Swing was now king
30. Sidney Bechet 1897-1959 Choice of unusual instrument: the soprano saxophone
Timbre
Vibrato
Born in New Orleans in 1897
Musical family
Opera
instruments
31. Sidney Bechet Age 6 - clarinet lessons
Teenager - played with
Bunk Johnson
Louis Armstrong
King Oliver
Freddie Keppard
Could not read music
32. Sidney Bechet Greatest New Orleans reed man
Became a star in France
Europe in 1919
Joined Ellington in 1932, tutored Johnny Hodges
Southern Taylor Shop in Harlem
Opened a music school in Brooklyn after the war 1951 France
Married the third time
Life mag.
33. Blue Horizon - 1944 SCCJ 1-11 The band:
Clarinet - Sidney Bechet
Trumpet - Sidney De Paris
Trombone - Vic Dickenson
Piano - Art Hodes
Bass - George Pops Foster
Drums - Manzie Johnson
Recorded by the Bluenote Jazzmen, 12/44
34. Blue Horizon .00 Slow blues tempo; the snare drum is played with the brushes; the clarinet plays in the low register with a wide vibrato; the piano can be heard in the background.
.42 2nd chorus; the trombone responds to the clarinet.
1.25 3rd chorus: A new melodic idea using large intervals is introduced; other horns provide a slow Dixie-like texture.
2.08 4th chorus: The piano plays a tremolo; the clarinet moves to a higher register.
2.53 5th chorus: Blue notes are emphasized in the solo.
3.35 6th chorus: The clarinet plays in the extreme high register; a heavy, driving beat is supplied by the drums and the pipano; the trombone continues responding; this is the most climatic chorus.
4.13 Ending.
4.20 End.
35. Edward Kid Ory 1886-1973 Creole
Homemade instruments
Picnics
Employed the greats in his band
King Oliver, Sidney Bechet, Louis Armstrong
LA after WWI
Chicago in 1924
LA in 1929
36. Kid Ory on Trombone 1945 Time The Kid Comes Back
Movies
Struttin with Some Barbeque
The Band:
Cornet - Louis Armstrong
Trombone - Kid Ory
Clarinet - Johnny Dodds
Piano - Lil Armstrong
Banjo - Johnny St. Cyr
37. Struttin with Some Barbeque SCCJ 1-15 .00 Introduction, the verse of the song; cornet takes the lead, all others accompany with collective improvisation.
.14 Beginning of the main melody, the chorus, or principal strain.
.34 2nd chorus.
.52 Banjo fill.
.54 Clarinet solo, low register, melody is structured around main chordal notes; banjo plays a flat-four pattern.
1.11 Solo break.
1.13 Trombone solo; flat-four banjo with accents on 2nd and 4th beats of each measure; the piano plays only on the accented beats. 1.30 Solo break for the trombone.
1.33 Cornet solo with chords on only the 2nd and 4th beat5s of each measure (stop time), a different feeling to solo over.
1.50 Double-time fill (solo break).
2.03 Cornet plays a ragtime melody pattern.
2.10 Syncopated tutti rhythm.
2.15 Collective improvisation over a flat-four banjo part.
2.33 Banjo fill.
2.45 Syncopated tutti rhythm returns and becomes softer until the ending.
2.59 End.
38. Additional Listening Jelly Roll Mortons Red Hot Peppers
Granhpas Spells SCCJ 1-8
Dead Man Blues SCCJ 1-7
Black Bottom Stomp SCCJ 1-6
Louis Armstrong and His Orchestra
I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues SCCJ 1-20
Bix Beiderbecke (Frankie Trumbauer and His Orchestra)
Riverboat Shuffle SCCJ 1-22
Singin the Blues SCCJ 1-21