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Bruce
Boyd Raeburn
Curator
Hogan Jazz Archive
Jones Hall
Tulane University Libraries
New Orleans LA 70118
ph: 504-865-5688
fx: 504-865-5761 |
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Bruce Boyd Raeburn, Ph.D.
Curator, Hogan Jazz Archive
The best way to account for the early development of jazz in New
Orleans is to familiarize yourself with the cultural and social history
of this marvelously distinctive regional culture. If you are near a
university library which has a Music Library, I would suggest consulting
the entry under "jazz" in
- The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, 2 vols (Macmillan, 1988),
which has a very useful thumbnail sketch of jazz history.
- Also, Donald M. Marquis, In Search of Buddy Bolden (LSU,
1978) is currently in print and provides many insights into the New
Orleans music scene at the turn of the century.
One of the ethnic groups which gives New Orleans culture its
distinctive characteristics is the Creoles of Color, who come from an
Afro-French heritage.
- Joseph Logsdon and Arnold Hirsch, Creole New Orleans (LSU,
1992) has a variety of articles which examine the social and
cultural history of this group.
One might say that jazz is the Americanization of the New Orleans
music developed by the Creoles, occuring at a time when ragtime, blues,
spirituals, marches, and popular "tin pan alley" music were
converging. Jazz was a style of playing which drew from all of the above
and presented an idiommatic model based on a concept of collective,
rather than solo, improvisation.
Ultimately, New Orleans players such as Louis Armstrong and Sidney
Bechet developed a new approach which emphasized solos, but they both
began their careers working in the collective format, evident in the
early recordings by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band (1917 ff.), Kid
Ory's Sunshine Orchestra (1921), the New Orleans Rhythm Kings
(1922, 1923) and King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band (1923).
Armstrong's impact became apparent with the popularity of his Hot
Five and Hot Seven recordings (1925-28), redirecting everyone's
imagination toward inspired solos. Meanwhile, in New Orleans, community
connections such as "jazz funerals" in which brass bands
performed at funerals held by benevolent associations continued to
underline the role of jazz as a part of everyday life. Jazz may have
been a luxury (entertainment) in New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, but
in New Orleans it was a necessity--a part of the fabric of life in the
neighborhoods. And it still is.
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