Jerry Jazz Musician Pledge Drive



SEARCH

  


Subscribe
(or manage your subscriptions)

JJM Newsletter (sample)

Quiz Show! (sample)

Name:
Email:
Format:
Subscribe
Unsubscribe

Tell your friends about us!




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

J.D. Salinger,

1919 - 2010


*


_________

Think About It


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

- Edwin Arlington Robinson, 1869 - 1935



_________


Today's Gift Idea

Lithographs and Giclees by Barbara Freeman

Chet Baker

 


_________


Recently Published


*

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


*

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


*

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


*

Karen Karlitz is the winner of the Jerry Jazz Musician Short Fiction contest. Her story is called "No Thanks"

Karen Karlitz


*

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



Milt Hinton

Laughing At Life, by Milt Hinton


*

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

John Coltrane

Giant Steps


*

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

Ralph Ellison


*

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


*


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



_________

Test your wits! Subscribe to Quiz Show, which is delivered to your desktop every other Friday .



Play Quiz Show

_________


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


_________


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



...ensure you won't miss any of this (and much more in the works) by subscribing to our newsletter.

_________



"The political and commercial morals of the United States are not merely food for laughter, they are an entire banquet."

- Mark Twain




JJM

 



SPONSORS

Search Now:
In Association with Amazon.com


Help support Jerry Jazz Musician.

Begin your Amazon.com shopping here.

Cool Titles




Judgement

by the Pete Zimmer Quintet

Down or Up




Amazon


KPLU Jazz Radio


Listener supported KPLU Radio of Tacoma, Washington is quite possibly the best jazz station in the country. We are proud to offer their 24 hour jazz programming.

Listen!





 

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

Print Friendly Version





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 2

For every occasion dances, funerals, parties, and parades there was a band and there were some mighty battles.




_____________




Among those featured in Chapter 2:




Louis Armstrong

 

Danny Barker

Wingy Manone

Nat Towles

Kid Ory

Zutty Singleton

Alphonse Picou

Johnny St. Cyr

Edmond Hall

George Lewis



_____________



New Orleans: Ragging Home, by Romare Bearden, 1974

_____

Flee As a Bird, by the Olympia Brass Band

                                                                                                                                                                     

_____________




          LOUIS ARMSTRONG

As many bands as you heard, that's how many bands you heard playing right.

     I thought I was in Heaven playing second trumpet in the Tuxedo Brass Band – and they had some funeral marches that would just touch your heart, they were so beautiful.

       
          DANNY BARKER

My grandfather worked for Emile Labat, the Creole section's most successful burial establishment. Emile Labat owned two famous horses – the most beautiful in New Orleans. They always pulled the hearse, which was driven by a very old, dark, very solemn man who never smiled. His name was Joe Never Smile. On occasions, if the widow of the deceased person was sincere in her sorrow, the undertaker would suggest that the horses be draped with a beautiful ace covering. If the deceased was grown, the covering was black. If a child, white. The fee for that was fifteen or twenty dollars extra, and it gave the funeral procession a very solemn look. In fact, the spectators felt extra sad and would say, "They sure putting so-and-so away in fine style."

     Now getting back to Joe Never Smile and the two horses. It was known throughout New Orleans and vicinity that these two horses cried on certain occasions. That is if the deceased person were going upward and not below. It was a mystery to everybody, and, on one of my trips to New Orleans, I casually asked Grandfather what was the gimmick. He said Joe Never Smile was a very slick character. Joe always kept a quart wine bottle full of onion juice, and, in Joe's spare moments, he would buy a sack of onions and squeeze the juice in the bottle. Just before leaving for a funeral, he would pour the juice on a cloth and wipe the horses' eyes while no one was around.

     Emile Labat would have raised hell as he was kind to his animals and a humanitarian. . .   

Danny Barker, c. 1954

_____

Oh Didn't He Ramble, by the Preservation Hall Jazz Band

      

A New Orleans marching brass band, 1950       

_____


Baby Dodds talks about New Orleans brass bands





*





_____


Baby Dodds talks about New Orleans funerals


Baby Dodds talks about returning from the graveyard





     As this observer recalls, in the days before they closed The District (which was 1917), the most exciting form of musical entertainment (aggregation) was not the jazz bands but the brass bands. The bass beat on the bass drum, beautifully executed by Black Benny, would suddenly silence a crowd of some seven or eight thousand loud and boisterous pleasure-seekers. All ears perked up for maybe a minute anxiously awaiting the lead trumpet to blow the three double-eighth note, ta-ta, ta-ta, ta-ta, signaling the band members who were scattered nearby, having wandered among the crowd. Characters like Bunk Johnson, Buddy Petit, Kid Rena, Frankie Duson, Chris Kelly, would be in the nearest barroom drinking – jiving some sporting women and drinking to everybody's health, ruining his own. The bandmen who didn't indulge would be coralled by groups of admirers and answering questions on the merits and playing abilities of the stars.

     It was the greatest thrill of a kid to hold and watch a musician's instrument whom he idolized. The most miserable feeling a youngster in New Orleans can experience is to be in a classroom in school, studying, and hear a brass band approaching, swinging like crazy, then pass the school, and fade off in the distance. You will witness a lot of sad expressions in that room. Now if it happens to be lunch hour, recess twelve to one, when the bell rings at one P.M., a lot of seats will be vacant. That is in schools in the barrel-house section. Now that's an honest fact, as this observer was guilty three or four times himself. The music would excite and move you to such an extent that when you would realize it, you had "second-lined" maybe ten or twenty blocks from school. . .

     There were many funerals that had three or four bands of music.

     It was not rare to see funerals which had three or four brass bands in the procession, because a member probably was active in eight to twelve organizations – Masons, Odd Fellows, Tulane Club or Zulu Club, the Vidalia, Veterans, Charity, and a few more.

     It was more than likely his request to be buried as he lived, among a crowd and lots of music. As in the case of Giles, the greatest of them all, the Excelsior Brass Band's bass drummer – and Black Benny. Every musician in New Orleans offered their services.

     On both occasions it was a sad sight to see their silent bass drums draped in mourning, carried by a close friend behind the hearse.

     The money earned (three or four dollars) for playing a funeral was and is still called "fun money" and is usually quickly spent for drinks after the musicians disband.

          WINGY MANONE

On the way to the graveyard, they all walked slowly, following the cornet player. The cornet player was the boss. Sometimes it took them four hours to get to the cemetery. All the way they just swayed to the music and moaned. At the graveside they chanted questions, such as "Did he ramble?" "Did he gamble?" or "Did he lead a good life until the police shot him down on St. James Street?" Then after the body was buried, they'd go back to town and all the way they'd swing. They just pulled the instruments apart. They played the hottest music in the world.

          
          NAT TOWLES

Yeah, that's just the way it was in those days. You'd march to the graveyard playing very solemn and very slow, then on the way back all hell would break loose! No music, you understand, we didn't know what a sheet of music was. Just six or seven pieces, half a dozen men pounding it out all together, each in his own way and yet somehow fitting in all right with the others. It had to be right, and it was, because it came from the right place.

     Oh, the brass bands might have had more men, two clarinets maybe, or two cornets. Bolden used Bunk on second, but I never heard that outfit. Oliver called Louis north to Chicago, but that was an exception. Usually there were six musicians in a band: a clarinetist, trombonist, banjo player, drummer, bassman, and trumpeter, who was almost always the leader. Once in a while a pianist might be added, but never a saxman! One of the Hall boys, not Edmond and not Robert, tried to make a go of the saxophone. He didn't get many jobs.

          KID ORY

And during Mardi Gras – man! That's when we really had fun. All day and night bands marched up and down the streets playing their heads off. We played sometimes for a local colored fraternity and marched in front of their parade.

     The whites had an idea of a real king – he came in on Canal Street. The colored people had the King of the Zulus and he came in on Basin Street – dressed in funny feathers and straw – boy, that was soemething.

Mardi Gras procession on Canal Street, 1900

*

Louis Armstrong (left) as King Zulu, 1949

_____


When the Saints Go Marching In, by Baby Dodds





         

State Library of Louisiana

Dock workers, c. 1920's

_____

Station Calls, by Celestin's Original Tuxedo Orchestra


*


© Louisiana State Museum

George McCullum, Barnum & Bailey's Circus Band, 1909

_____

Weary Blues, by Bunk Johnson

ZUTTY SINGLETON

There were so many bands in New Orleans. But most of the musicians had day jobs, you know – trades. They were bricklayers and carpenters and cigar makers and plasterers. Some had little businesses of their own – coal and wood and vegetable stores. Some worked on the cotton exchange and some were porters. They had to work at other trades 'cause there were so many musicians, so many bands. It was just about the most musical town in the country. Most all the kids took music lessons of some kind, and I got my inspiration from my uncle, Willie Bontemps, who played bass and guitar in Jack Carey's band. I played my first jobs with Steve Lewis – house parties and such.

     We played for society kids on Saturday afternoons – that was with Papa Celestin and the Tuxedo Band. We also played at the New Orleans Country Club and the Louisiana Restaurant, which was a fine, high-class place.


          DANNY BARKER


Being a musician was not usually a full-time job in New Orleans. The musician had trades and professions. They were skilled craftsmen – master bricklayers, plasterers, roofers, excellent carpenters, cigar makers, pavers, et cetera. For example, there'd be a whole family, all of whom were slaters. And another, all of whom were plasterers. They would become apprenticed to their grandfathers and learn the family craft.

     Some of the families were half-French and half-African. And numerous families were cigar makers, which shows the Spanish influence.

     So, if you were a musician, you had a regular trade, and on weekends, or on some nights, you played music.

         

          ALPHONSE PICOU

I was born in the year 1879. My father was a cigar maker and my mother was a housewife.

     As a boy, the first jazz I heard was a jazz band at the corner of St. Phillips and Claiborne. It was called the Excelsior Band. The only musician I remember from that band was Fice Quiyrit, the trumpet player. It was a long time ago.

     Was it ragtime? No, no, it was nothing but marches they was playing – brass marches – parade music. I think the first ragtime jazz band I ever heard was Boo Boo Fortunea. He was the only man at that time who played the slide trombone. It was approximately – well, before 1900. I was still fifteen or sixteen years old then.

     He played the trombone and he was a barber at that time. He was living right around the corner from where I lived and he heard me practicing my instrument and he came up to my house and knocked on the door. My mother went to the door and she asked him what he wanted. He said, "I would like to see that young man who is playing that instrument." So she said, "That's my son." He said, "Will you call him to the door?" And I went to the door and he says to me, "Were you the one that was playing the clarinet?" I says, "Yes." He says, "Well, I'd like for you to come to my shop around the corner because I want to talk to you."

     So I went to the shop and we had a talk and he said to me, "Will you come here tonight and I would like to have you play with me in my band." I told him, "Of course, Okay." He told me to be there at eight. It was the first time that I ever played with a band. I was sixteen.

     I had been taking lessons before that. I took lessons for about eighteen months. My teacher's name was Mr. Morand. He was a Creole.

     Now let me finish telling you about the band. So I was invited down to the rehearsal that night and I went to the place and I said to him, "What do you want me to do?" I said, "Do you want me to play my instrument? Is there any music?" He said, "Music? You don't need none." I said, "How am I going to play?" He said, "You're going to come in on the choruses." I said, "All right," and then I tuned up; we all tuned up our instruments. He said that when I couldn't come in, to stay out and listen until I could come in. I did just what he told me and we got into it, and through with it, and the whole band shook my hand and told me I was great.

     That was on a Thursday night, the rehearsal, and on the Saturday night following they had an engagement to play a ball (at that time the dances were called balls) on Liberty Street. So I went there and I got there at about eight. The hall was jam-packed. I was not really satisfied about their not having any music but I thought I would try anyway. I went and took a few drinks and the first thing you know I was playing more than them!

      Every number we played the people just clapped their hands. We had to play them two or three times and that's the way I started with a band.

     That particular style of playing without music was very new to me. I think it was impossible to me! It seemed a sort of style of playing without notes.

     I remember when we got a new piece of music we would get the music and play the tunes with the music, then, after that we didn't need that music no more. We'd go "out of the way" with it. That was ragtime.

Alphonse Picou

   

          JOHNNY ST. CYR

     A jazz musician have to be a working class of man, out in the open all the time, healthy and strong. That's what's wrong today; these new guys haven't got the force. They don't like to play all night; they don't think they can play unless they're loaded. But a working man have the power to play hot, whiskey or no whiskey. You see, the average working man is very musical. Playing music for him is just relaxing. He gets as much kick out of playing as other folks get out of dancing. The more enthusiastic his audience is, why, the more spirit the working man's got to play. And with your natural feelings that way, you never make the same thing twice. Every time you play a tune, new ideas come to mind and you slip that on in.

Buddy Bolden




*




photo W.H. Leeson

Odd Fellows Hall

_____

Nearer My God to Thee, by Baby Dodds

Maryland, My Maryland, by Kid Ory

      DANNY BARKER

There was a variety of prices. In my day, you'd get about three dollars for a parade or funeral. It was according to the hours. If the parade lasted from nine A.M. to six P.M. – an all-day parade – you'd probably get eight or nine dollars.

     Everything in New Orleans was competitive. People would always be betting on who was the best and greatest in everything. That's where the battles of music came in.

Lots of the bands couldn't read too much music. So they used a fiddle to play the lead – a fiddle player could read – and that was to give them some protection. The banjo then was strictly a rhythm instrument. Buddy Bolden would say, "Simmer down, let me hear the sound of them feet." The New Orleans bands, you see, didn't play with a flat sound. They'd shade the music. After the band had played with the two or three horns blowing, they'd let the rhythm have it. That's what Buddy Bolden meant when he said that. The rhythm then often would play that mixture of African and Spanish syncopation – with a beat – and with just the rhythm going. They'd let the people use their imagination for the other sounds.

     The marching brass bands used more instruments than the dance bands. And those brass bands could play legitimate marches, the same marches the Army Band of the United States would play for the President if he died. They could play beautiful hymns and marches, like Nearer My God to Thee and Maryland, My Maryland. But when they came back from the funeral – and the band, by the way, never went into the cemetery when the band played for a funeral – well, on the way back, they'd put their music in their pockets and everybody started wailing.

 I remember the Onward Brass Band had to play the marches for the Masonics or the Odd Fellows. They hired on band during the day – a big military band – that would play all the marches and that would introduce each dignitary of the organization with military music. But the band was sitting. And between those introductions and the marching and the drilling, they would play some dance music, so they would swing.

     They played the shuffle beat on the snare drum and mostly two beats on the bass drums. At first, in the bands, the snare drums and the bass drums were played by different men like in the marching bands. But there was one particular guy in New Orleans who put the two drums together and played both himself, and that's where the foot pedal was invented.

             
EDMOND HALL

As for why New Orleans was such a musical city and had so many bands, I think one reason had to do with the clubs. There were a lot of private clubs, organizations, in New Orleans. Two or three guys would get together, you know, and make up the club and it would grow. So, when a member of the club died, they would hire a band for his funeral, and if the club had some part in a parade, they would have a band for that too. All the clubs tried to outdo each other. Like I remember what used to happen when different clubs would go to their camps out on the water by the lake front. There would be one band playing at the camp of one and another band at the camp of another, and each band would try to outplay each other. You could hear music real well over the water, you know.

      One thing about funerals, by the way, that isn't made clear in some of the stories. The bands themselves never went into the cemeteries. . .

     You could always make a living in New Orleans just playing gigs like that – funerals, lawn parties, parades, et cetera. Buddy Petit, for example, never did take a steady job. He didn't have to, and that's true of a lot of men who are good musicians, and who, by the way, have never been written about. Now, Buddy Pedit used to carry a book with him listing the dates he had in advance. He was his own contractor. Buddy could tell you one year from the day he spoke to you where you were playing if he had a job for you – he was booked that far in advance; and Buddy always got a deposit on a job in advance. Even if the job was a year away. What finally killed Buddy's reputation as a contractor was that he often had two or three jobs a night. He couldn't play each one so he'd have other bands out and the people who hired him never knew whether his band was the one that was going to be there or not.

     Louis Armstrong and Buddy played a lot of funerals together, by the way. Buddy is a man they've never written much about. He kind of what you call set a pace around New Orleans. He was a real leader and he set the pace for a lot of the other bands. I mean these other bands would hear Buddy play something and they would all want to play it. So far as I know he only left New Orleans once to go out to California with Jelly Roll Morton – to Los Angeles. I don't know what happened but he didn't stay out there. If Buddy had left New Orleans to go to Chicago when a lot of the other men left, I'm positive he would have had a reputation equal to what the others got. . .

Buddy Petit




*




Buddie Petit Jazz Band

_____


Jelly Roll Morton talks about Funeral Marches

          

Edmond Hall


_____


High Society, by Edmond Hall


     In the very early days of brass bands, in the 'nineties and even before, the music was mostly written – I mean in the kind of band my father played in. As time went on, there was more improvising.

     I started on guitar, not clarinet, in 1917, when I was seventeen. My father was a musician. His name was Edward Hall. As a matter of fact, he was a member of the Onward Brass Band that came to New York from New Orleans in 1891. Some booking agent brought the band to New York that year. I'm not sure though what the occasion was. I remember my father telling me they were in New York eighteen days. The last member of the band who was living, by the way, died a few months ago. He was the tuba player and he was about eighty-three years old when he died.

     The band came all the way from New Orleans just for that New York event. As I remember the story, every state sent a band. It was a kind of festival, and that New Orleans band my father was in won first prize. . .

     In the brass band, on my own instrument they used to have four different clarinets: an E-flat clarinet, a C clarinet, an A clarinet, and a B-flat clarinet. – and a musician had to know all four. The reason for that was when there was something to play in the key of E-flat we would pick up the E-flat clarinet, and the same thing when there was something in the key of A, et cetera. That shows you how much music advances. Today you can take one clarinet and play everything on it. But the fact is that when we had to know all four the standards of musicianship in the brass bands was pretty high. . .

     There were five of us in my family, and when we got to a certain age my father would pass out clarinets. The first four of us each got a different kind of clarinet; the fifth was too young but he picked it up later. He is Herbert Hall, who has the band at the Cinderella Club in Greenwich Village now. . .

     High Society was one of the testing pieces for a clarinet player who wanted to play in a band in New Orleans. The Picou chorus was the accepted one. It was first a piccolo solo in a brass band but Picou was actually the first to play it on the clarinet. Anyway, that's the story I heard. Of course, everybody played their own way on the chorus. Nobody played it note for note. Each man used different ideas, like I remember Barney Bigard's way of playing it. But the Picou chorus was the basic one, the first four bars especially.

          ALPHONSE PICOU

I composed so many tunes. How did I happen to play High Society, the famous chorus? Well, I was seventeen at the time. I was playing at that time with John Robichaux, and before that I was playing with the Manuel Perez band, and he used to get all that old-time music – what they're asking for right now.

     He bought that High Society for me. It was a march tune. We were at Mahogany Hall then. I took the piccolo part and transposed it to my instrument. It made a wonderful hit. So the next night we had to play at another hall where they had all the Creole meetings. At that time they didn't allow a dark man to come in. If you were dark you had to stay out. I was there, and Manuel Perez liked the way I played High Society and he says, "Come on in" – when a crowd was there – "Come on and play High Society," and they let me play that solo by myself. I made a wonderful hit – Lord! They played High Society all night. . .

     I played parades with Manuel Perez and the Onward Brass Band, also with Joe Oliver and Kid Rena. I played funerals too.

       
          KID ORY

I had a brass band too. When I got a job I'd supply any number of men they wanted. If I didn't have them, I could pick them up. I had a sign on my house, "ORCHESTRA AND BRASS BAND." You couldn't miss it. At that time they used to advertise dances and picnics by hiring a wagon with a big sign on the side with the band playing in the wagon. I decided I'd try a new idea and advertise my band that way. I rented a furniture wagon and told a fellow to make signs. "KID ORY," with address and telephone number. After that I began to get lots of calls for jobs and got real well known. . . .

     They used to have "cutting contests" every time you'd get on the streets. Freddie Keppard's band whipped us good because he was a stronger trumpet player than we had at first. Then we started whipping everybody. The public was on my side. When the other band was finished, they'd tie the wagons together. The crowd tied them to keep them from running away from us.

     I used to say, "I'll let you go when I think you should go." Mutt Carey's brother played trombone. I liked him but he didn't like me. He was kind of jealous because Mutt came to play with me. I gave him a spanking in a contest. He stopped me afterward on the corner and said, "He can beat me playing trombone, but he can't whip me!" I threw my arms around him and said, "I just love you, Jack." He turned out to be a preacher before he passed.

photo by George Fletcher

Kid Ory

_____

Mutt's Blues, by Kid Ory and his Creole Jazz Band




A Carnival Group advertising the National Biscuit Company

Cornelius Durkee Photograph Collection

Milk Cart, 1901

          GEORGE LEWIS

We used to come to work or go on parades in big horse-drawn trucks, and when two trucks met, there would be a "cutting contest." One day we caught Buddy (Petit) drunk, and our band really wore them out. The following Sunday we drove up and we saw Buddy sitting there with his head hanging down and his hands flopping, so we got set to go after them again. And then somebody sneaked around and chained the wheel of our truck to theirs so we couldn't get away, and Buddy jumped to his feet, and that day they really wore us out!

          WINGY MALONE

Down the street, in an old sideboard wagon, would come the jazz band from one ballroom. And up the street, in another sideboard wagon, would come the band from another ballroom, which had announced a dance for the same night at the same price. And those musicians played for all their worth, because the band that pleased the crowd more would be the one the whole crowd would go to hear, and dance to, at its ballroom later that night.

     At the back of the wagon were the trombone players, because the only way they could handle their slides was over the end of the wagon. And that's how they got the name "tailgate" trombonists. They all played a Dixieland "vamp" style, because there weren't any room in the wagon for fancy stuff.

          BUNK JOHNSON

Bands in those days fighting all the time. One band get a job in the Love and Charity Hall, another band move right over there and play better through the windows. During Mardi Gras and parades, bands got taken around in wagons, and they'd back them, tailgate to tailgate, and play each other down.

          MUTT CAREY

If you couldn't blow a man down with your horn, at least you could use it to him alongside the head.



__________________________




An Online Story of Jazz in New Orleans


Chapter    

1     2      3      4      5

   

Nat Hentoff's Introduction





Shop for Art & Curiosities Shop for Books Shop for Home and Toys Shop for Apparel & Jewelry Shop for Film Shop for Music Shop for Multimedia
View the items in your shopping basket Help Contact Jerry Jazz Musician





Copyright 1998 - 2004 Jerry Jazz Musician, LLC
Development by JAM & Associates