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TODAY'S ARTISTS


Winard Harper


Winard Harper

___

Drummer Winard Harper is passionate about jazz. "This music is powerful," he says. "It can do a lot of good for people. If they'd spend some time each day listening to it, we would see many changes in the world."



Come Into the Light

Come Into the Light





The EDGE


In Memory Of

Lena Horne,

1917 - 2010

Stormy Weather



Hank Jones,

1918 - 2010

Willow Weep For Me, a 1994 Carnegie Hall performance



Benjamin Hooks,

1925 - 2010



Gene Lees,

1928 - 2010



Dorothy Height,

1912 - 2010



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Think About It


"To some will come a time when change itself is beauty, if not heaven."

- Edwin Arlington Robinson, 1869 - 1935



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Today's Gift Idea

Lithographs and Giclees by Barbara Freeman

Chet Baker

 


_________


Recently Published


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James Gavin, author of Stormy Weather: The Life of Lena Horne

Lena Horne

Stormy Weather, by Lena Horne


*

Larry Tye, author of Satchel: The Life and Times of an American Legend


*

David Robertson, author of W.C. Handy: The Life and Times of the Man Who Made the Blues

W.C. Handy

St. Louis Blues, by W.C. Handy's Memphis Blues Band


*

If you could have dinner with three people, who would they be?

Among those participating in the twelfth edition of Reminiscing in Tempo: Memories and Opinion are Gary Bartz, John Scofield, Billy Cobham and Esperanza Spalding

Gary Bartz


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Graham Lock and David Murray, co-editors of Thriving on a Riff: Jazz and Blues Influences in African American Literature and Film and The Hearing Eye: Jazz and Blues Influences in African American Visual Art

The Death of Bessie Smith, by Rose Piper


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In the twenty-seventh edition of Great Encounters, David Robertson, author of W.C. Handy: The Life and Times of the Man Who Made the Blues, tells the story of Handy's first recording session, and his meeting with James Reese Europe

W.C. Handy
*

Marybeth Hamilton, author of In Search of the Blues

Leadbelly


*

Trudy Carpenter is the winner of the Jerry Jazz Musician Short Fiction contest. Her story is called "Bumps Out Then Bumps Back "


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Jazz: Through the Life and Lens of Milt Hinton: An online photo exhibit



Milt Hinton

Laughing At Life, by Milt Hinton


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Ben Ratliff, author of Coltrane: The Story of a Sound

John Coltrane

Giant Steps


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Ralph Ellison biographer Arnold Rampersad, on the complex life of the author of Invisible Man

Ralph Ellison


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In cooperation with The Jazz Image author Lee Tanner, Jerry Jazz Musician presents "Masters of Jazz Photography," this month featuring the work of Jerry Stoll

photo of Pee Wee Russell and Gerry Mulligan by Jerry Stoll


*

Up From New Orleans: Life Before, During and After Katrina -- A conversation with transplanted New Orleans musicians Devin Phillips and Mark DiFlorio

Devin Phillips


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An Online Story of Jazz in New Orleans, with an introduction by Nat Hentoff

Jelly Roll Morton

New Orleans was a free and easy place, comments by Jelly Roll Morton


*



Now in the Art Gallery

The Art of James Allen



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Heroes...We all had them. For years, we have been asking the guests we interview to talk about theirs. You can read them at our Heroes page. Now, we invite you to write about the person you recall being your own childhood hero. All submissions are published...



Willie Mays


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Coming Soon

Interviews with Stormy Weather: The Life of Lena Horne author James Gavin, and Robin D.G. Kelley, author of Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times of an American Genius



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Jerry Jazz Musician Home Page
Jazz/Jerry Jazz Musician/An Online Story of Jazz in New Orleans/Chapter One

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An Online Story of Jazz in New Orleans


With an introduction by Nat Hentoff


__________


Featuring the complete text of chapters 1 - 5 from Hear Me Talkin' To Ya: The Story of Jazz As Told By the Men Who Made It, a 1955 book by Nat Shapiro and Nat Hentoff


(Published with the consent of Nat Hentoff)




Chapter    

1     2      3      4     5

   

Nat Hentoff's Introduction




*





Chapter 1


It was always a musical town – especially The District – Storyville




_____________




Among those featured in Chapter 1:




 

Danny Barker

Clarence Williams

Louis Armstrong

Alphonse Picou

Jelly Roll Morton

Bunk Johnson



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Storyville

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Canal Street Blues, by King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band




          DANNY BARKER

One of my pleasantest memories as a kid growing up in New Orleans was how a bunch of us kids, playing, would suddenly hear sounds. It was like a phenomenon, like the Aurora Borealis – maybe. The sounds of men playing would be so clear, but we wouldn't be sure where they were coming from. So we'd start trotting, start running – "It's this way!"  "It's that way!" – And, sometimes, after running for a while, you'd find you'd be nowhere near that music. But that music could come on you any time like that. The city was full of the sounds of music...

          CLARENCE WILLIAMS

Yes, New Orleans was always a musical town – a happy town. Why, on Mardi Gras and Christmas all the houses were open and there were dances all over. It was "open house" everywhere, and you could walk in almost any door and have a drink and eat and join the party.

photo by John N. Teunisson

Canal and Rampart Streets

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King Porter Stomp, by Jelly Roll Morton

          DANNY BARKER

There were countless places of enjoyment that employed musicians, not including private affairs, balls, soirees, banquets, marriages, deaths, christenings, Catholic communions, confirmations, picnics at the lake front, country hay rides, and advertisements of business concerns. During the carnival season (Mardi Gras) any little insignificant affair was sure to have some kind of music and each section would engage their neighborhood favorite. It might be Joe Oliver, who lived around the corner; or Cheeky Sherman, on somebody's piano; or Sandpaper George; or Hudson, on toilet pipe, now called the bazooka; or Picou, on the kazoo, a kazoo inserted into an old E-flat clarinet, which he fingered as he blew.

     The colored and white bands battled (or bucked), frequently from opposite lake-front camps. It was the custom to have picnics and family outings on Sundays during the summer at places like Spanish Fort, West End, Milenberg, Birch Town, and Seabrook.

     The city was split by Canal Street, with one part of the people uptown and the Creoles downtown. When people would come into New Orleans, like gamblers and workers from Memphis, and they'd say "Let's go down to Frenchtown," that meant you went below Canal Street. Storyville was below Canal Street on the outer part.

     But the people I knew called all that was in Storyville "The District."  I never heard it called Storyville. It got called that when somebody up here in the North read about it. It was never Storyville to me. It was always The District – the red light district.

photo George Francois Mugnier

Live oak, Audubon Park

       

       

  © Estate of E. J. Bellocq/Lee Friedlander

Storyville prostitute, 1912

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New Orleans Stomp, by King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band       

          LOUIS ARMSTRONG

There was so much good music that was played in Storyville -- they talked about it and its musicians so much until the word District being used so much wouldn't sound so good. . .Storyville has been discussed in colleges and some of the largest universities in the world. . .If not all over the world. . .I'll bet right now most of the youngsters and hot club fans who hear the name Storyville hasn't the least idea that it consisted of some of the biggest prostitutes in the world. . .Standing in their doorways nightly in their fine and beautiful negligees – faintly calling to the boys as they passed their cribs.

     Storyville was kind of divided – I'd say – about middle ways of the City of New Orleans. . .Canal Street was the dividing line between the uptown and the downtown section. . .And right behind Canal Street was Storyville. . .And right off Canal Street was the famous Basin Street which was also connected with Storyville. . .And somewhere in or near Storyville was a famous gambling joint called Twenty-Five. . .That was the place where all the big-time pimps and hustlers would congregate and play "Cotch" (that's a game they played with three cards shuffled and dealt from the bottom of the deck). . .And you could win or lose a whole gang of money. . .These pimps and hustlers, et cetera, would spend most of their time at Twenty-Five until their girls would finish turning tricks in their cribs. . .Then they would meet them and check up on the night's take. . .Lot of the prostitutes lived in different sections of the city and would come down to Storyville just like they had a job. . .There were different shifts for them. . .Sometime – two prostitutes would share the rent in the same crib together. . .One would work in the day and the other would beat out that night shift. . .And business was so good in those days with the fleet of sailors and the crews from those big ships that come in the Mississippi River from all over the world – kept them very very busy.

         
          ALPHONSE PICOU

Those were happy days, man, happy days. Buy a keg of beer for one dollar and a bag full of food for another and have a cowein. These boys don't have fun nowadays. Talking 'bout wild and wooly! There were two thousand registered girls and must have been ten thousand unregistered. And all crazy about clarinet-blowers!

          DANNY BARKER

New Orleans, until the 'twenties, was the safest haven in the Americas for the world's most vicious characters. There was a charge, that a person could be arrested for, called "D and S" (dangerous and suspicious) whereby the police had the power to arrest anyone who could not walk to the 'phone booth to call his or her employer and prove that they earned an honest livelihood, or anyone who looked crafty, slick, or sinister.

     Most arrests were Negroes who frequented barrooms and gambling joints during working hours.

     As for the big sporting houses in The District, they were for whites. It was before my time, but they tell me that a mulatto passing for white could get in. And there were farmers and sugar men and riverboat men all through Louisiana who were mulattoes. So, if you looked white or Spanish, you went in. Lulu White and the Countess Willie Piazza were themselves reputed to be Creole.

Cornelius Durkee Photograph Collection

St. Ann and Chartres Streets, 1901


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New Orleans was a Free and Easy Place, comments by Jelly Roll Morton

       

The townhouse brothels of Storyville


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The Stomping Grounds, comments by Jelly Roll Morton



Sobbin' Blues, by the New Orleans Rhythm Kings, with Jelly Roll Morton

          JELLY ROLL MORTON

So, in the year of 1902, when I was about seventeen years old, I happened to invade one of the sections where the birth of jazz originated from.

     The Tenderloin District in New Orleans was considered second to France, meaning the greatest in the world, with extensions for blocks and blocks on the north side of Canal Street.

     Every place in New Orleans had a gambling house, and I don't know of any time that the racetracks were ever closed – a hundred days of races at City Park, then they would be at the Fair Grounds for another hundred days – and so they would go on continuously for three hundred and sixty-five days a year.

     I'm telling you this Tenderloin District was like something that nobody has ever seen before or since. The doors were taken off the saloons there from one year to the next. Hundreds of men were passing through the streets day and night. The chippies in their little-girl dresses were standing in the crib doors singing the blues.

     The streets were crowded with men. Police were always in sight, never less than two together, which guaranteed the safety of all concerned. Lights of all colors were glittering and glaring. Music was pouring into the streets from every house...

     Some very happy, some very sad, some with the desire to end it all by poison, some planning a big outing, a dance, or some other kind of enjoyment. Some were real ladies in spite of their downfall and some were habitual drunkards and some were dope fiends as follows: opium, heroin, cocaine, laudanum, morphine, et cetera. I was personally sent to Chinatown many times with a sealed note and a small amount of money and would bring back several cards of hop. There was no slipping and dodging. All you had to do was walk in to be served.

     They had everything in The District from the highest class to the lowest – creep joints where they'd put the feelers on a guy's clothes, cribs that rented for about five dollars a day and had just about room enough for a bed, small-time houses where the price was from fifty cents to a dollar and they put on naked dances, circuses, and jive. Then, of course, we had the mansions where everything was of the highest class. These houses were filled up with the most expensive furniture and paintings. Three of them had mirror parlors where you couldn't find the door for the mirrors, the one at Lulu White's costing thirty thousand dollars. Mirrors stood at the foot and head of all the beds. It was in these mansions that the best of the piano players worked.

     
         SPENCER WILLIAMS

All along this street of pleasure there were the dance halls, honky-tonks, and cabarets, and each one had its music. My old friend, Tony Jackson, who composed Pretty Baby and Some Sweet Day, used to play piano at a house run by Miss Antonia Gonzales, who sang and played the cornet. The largest of the cabarets on Basin Street was the Mahogany Hall, owned by my aunt, Miss Lulu White, and when my mother died, I went to live with her and became her adopted son. I'd go to sleep to the sound of the mechanical piano playing ragtime tunes, and when I woke up in the morning it would still be playing. The saloons in those days never had the doors closed, and the hinges were all rusty and dusty. Little boys and grownups would walk along the avenues, swaying and whistling jazz tunes.

          BUNK JOHNSON

That was the Crescent City in them days, full of bars, honky-tonks, and barrel houses. A barrel house was just a piano in a hall. There was always a piano player working. When I was a kid, I'd go into a barrel house and play 'long with them piano players 'til early in the mornin'. We used to play nuthin' but the blues.

     I knew Mamie Desdoumes real well. Played many a concert with her singing those same blues. She was pretty good looking, quite fair, with a nice head of hair. She was a hustlin' woman. A blues-singing poor gal. Used to play pretty passable piano around them dance halls on Perdido Street.

     When Hattie Rogers or Lulu White would put it out that Mamie was going to be singing in their place, the white men would turn out in bunches and them whores would clean up.

Tony Jackson


_____


Jelly Roll Morton talks about Tony Jackson, part one



Pretty Baby, written by Tony Jackson and performed by Jelly Roll Morton

         

       

          LOUIS ARMSTRONG

Lulu White was a famous woman of the sporting world in Storyville. . .She had a big house on Basin Street called Mahogany Hall. . .The song was written after her house had gotten so famous. . .Rich men came there from all parts of the world to dig those beautiful Creole prostitutes. . .And pay big money. . .Lulu White was colored. . .Around the corner from Lulu White was the famous Cabaret of Tom Anderson. . .All the race-horse men went there during their stay and the racing season in New Orleans. . .In those days a band who played for those places didn't need to worry about salaries. . .Their tips were so great until they did not even have to touch their nightly gappings. . .Most of the places paid off the musicians every night after the job was over instead of the weekly deal. . .That was because those places were threatened to be closed any minute. So the musicians and the performers didn't take any chances.

The parlor of Lulu White's Mahogany Hall

_____

Tiger Rag, by Jelly Roll Morton


MAHOGANY HALL

 "SOUVENIR" BOOKLET

The NEW Mahogany Hall




A picture of which appears on the cover of this souvenir was erected specifically for Miss Lulu White at a cost of $40,000. The house is built of marble and is four story; containing five parlors, all handsomely furnished, and fifteen bedrooms. Each room has a bath with hot and cold water and extension closets.

The elevator, which was built for two, is of the latest style. The entire house is steam heated and is the handsomest house of its kind. It is the only one where you can get three shots for your money –

The shot upstairs,

The shot downstairs,

And the shot in the room. . .

This famous West Indian octoroon first saw the light of day thirty-one years ago. Arriving in this country at a rather tender age, and having been fortunately gifted with a good education it did not take long for her to find out what the other sex was in search of.

In describing Miss Lulu, as she is most familiarly called, it would not be amiss to say that besides possessing an elegant form she has beautiful black hair and blue eyes, which have justly gained for her the title of the "Queen of the Demi-Monde."

Her establishment, which is situated in the central part of the city, is unquestionably the most elaborately furnished house in the city of New Orleans, and without a doubt one of the most elegant places in this or any other country.

She has made a feature of boarding none but the fairest of girls – those gifted with nature's best charms, and would, under no circumstances, have any but that class in her house.

As an entertainer Miss Lulu stands foremost, having made a life-long study of music and literature. She is well read and one that can interest anybody and make a visit to her place a continued round of pleasure.

ADVERTISEMENT

NEW ORLEANS BLUE BOOK

COUNTESS WILLIE PIAZZA

Is one place in the Tenderloin District you can't very well afford to miss. The Countess Piazza has made it a study to try to make everyone jovial who visits her house. If you have the "blues," the Countess and her girls can cure them. She has, without a doubt, the most handsome and intelligent octoroons in the United States. You should see them; they are all entertainers.

If there is anything new in the singing and dancing line that you would like to see while in Storyville, Piazza's is the place to visit, especially when one is out hopping with friends – the women in particular.

The Countess wishes it to be known that while her mansion is peerless in every respect, she only serves the "amber fluid."

"Just ask for Willie Piazza."

PHONE 4832 MAIN

317 N. Basin

         

© Estate of E. J. Bellocq/Lee Friedlander

© Estate of E. J. Bellocq/Lee Friedlander



          DANNY BARKER

There were all kinds of characters and all kinds of places in The District. I've been keeping a scrapbook, based on what I remember and on what other musicians have told me. Here are some of the things from my book:

          Definitions of Different Types of Joints

          Whore house – managed by a larceny-hearted landlady, strictly business

          Brothel – juice joint with rooms, and a bunk or a cot near.

          Sporting house – lots of stimulants, women, music. An old queer or cripple serves

          Crib – Two or three stars venture for themselves, future landladies.

          House of assignation – women pull shifts and report where they are needed.

          Clip joint – While one jives you, another creeps or crawls in and rifles your pockets.

And here are some sporting women and the nicknames of a few well-known Crescent City characters:

Albertine McKay, former sweetheart of Lee Collins. She marched him around with a .38 special loaded with dum-dum bullets.

Daisy Parker, Louis Armstrong's moll, who greeted him with a brickbat.

Kidneyfoot Rella, who is said to have spit in Black Benny's face as he lay dead in his coffin.

Also -- Flamin' Mamie, Crying Emma, Bucktown Bessie, Dirty Dog, Stell Arm Johnny, Mary Meathouse, Gold Tooth Gussie, Big Butt Annie, Naked Mouf Mattie, Bird Leg Nora, Bang Zang, Boxcar Shorty, Sneaky Pete, Titanic, Coke Eye Laura, Yellow Gal, Black Sis, Boar Hog, Yard Dog, Bodidily, Roody Doody, Big Bull Cora, Piggy, Big Piggy, Stingaree, Bull Frog Sonny, Toot Nan, Knock on the Wall, Sore Dick, Sugar Pie, Cherry Red, Buck Tooth Rena, Bad Blood, Copper Wire, Snaggle Mouf Mary, Linker-Top, Topsy, Scratch, Joe the Pimp, Onery Bob, Tee Tee, Tee Nome, Tee Share, Tee Boy, Raw Head, Smoke Stack, Stack O Dollars, Pupsy, Boogers, Copper Cent, Street Rabbit, Boo Boo, Big Boo Boo, Fast Black, Eight Ball, Lily the Crip, Tenderloin Thelma, Three Finger Annie, Charlie Bow Wow, Good Lord the Lifter, Peachanno, Cold Blooded Carrie, Miss Thing, Jack the Bear.

© Estate of E. J. Bellocq/Lee Friedlander





*





© Estate of E. J. Bellocq/Lee Friedlander

          CLARENCE WILLIAMS

Those places were really something to see – those sportin' houses. They had the most beautiful parlors, with cut glass, and draperies, and rugs, and expensive furniture. They were just like millionaires' houses. And the girls would come down dressed in the finest of evening gowns, just like they were going to the opera. They were just beautiful. Their hair-dos were just so, and I'm telling you that Ziegfeld didn't have any more beautiful women than those. Some of them looked Spanish, and some were Creoles, some brown-skins, some chocolate-brown. But they all had to have that figure.

     Places like that were for rich people, mostly white. On, once in a while a sailor might come, but generally only the wealthiest would come. Why, do you know that a bottle of beer was a dollar? The customers would buy champagne mostly and would always get tired, there would be a player piano that you put a quarter in and we'd make money then too. Those houses hired nothing but the best, but only piano players, and maybe a girl to sing. And there was no loud playin' either. It was sweet, just like a hotel.

     Of course, those houses were so impressive that lots of people would be scared to go in. But, in the other part of the section, there were cabarets and dance halls and lots of hustlers. There were places like the Red Onion, the Keystone, and Spanola's, which was one of the roughest. Spanola's was on Basin Street, a place where the roustabouts and the lowest of people went. There a man could meet a gal, then do his business without any fuss at all.

     Talk about those jam sessions you have today! Why, you should have seen the sessions we had then. 'Round about four A.M., the girls would get through work and would meet their P.I.'s (that's what we called pimps) at the wine rooms. Pete Lala's was the headquarters, the place where all the bands would come when they got off work, and where the girls would come to meet their main man. It was a place where they would come to drink and play and have breakfast and then go home to bed.

     Most of the P.I.'s were gamblers and pianists. The reason so many of them were pianists was because whenever they were down on their luck, they could always get a job and be close to their girls – play while the girls worked.

     Some of the P.I.'s would wear diamonds the size of dimes. And do you know that you could buy all of the cocaine, morphine, heroin, and hop you wanted in the section, almost right out in the open? But I never knew hardly any musicians that took dope. It was mostly the girls who were out to destroy themselves if their man left them or something like that. And in those days there were no teen-agers or anything like that takin' dope. Of course, there were lots of young girls workin' in the sportin' houses, but that was different. Another thing about the section, there was never a holdup or robbery that I could remember. You could drinnk and never be afraid that anybody'd take your money.

     Well, at Pete Lala's, everybody would gather every night and there'd be singin' and playin' all night long. The piano players from all over the South would be there, in for the races, and everybody would take a turn until daylight.



__________________________




An Online Story of Jazz in New Orleans


Chapter    

1     2      3      4      5

   

Nat Hentoff's Introduction





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