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1890 - 1920 Buddy Bolden's Band plays
Standing, left to right: Jimmy Johnson, Buddy Bolden, Willie Cornish, William Warner. Sitting, left to right: Jefferson Mumford and Frank Lewis. Buddy Bolden, considered the "father of jazz," was born in New Orleans in 1877 and died in 1931. The peak of his career was from 1890 to 1920. He played music at Milneburg and other lakeshore resorts. First of the great New Orleans jazz figures was Buddy Bolden, a barber who blew his horn to glory. Deeper, deeper, Buddy Bolden plunged into his music...He dominated...New Orleans, playing at saloons, lakefront parties... Buddy made up one song after another His playing had one feature that later jazz authorities recognized as indispensable- "the trance,' and ability to sink himself in the music until nothing mattered but himself and the cornet, in fervent communion. As the 1900s approached...a small, bulkily built boy listened nightly to the silver magic of Buddy's notes. Nobody paid any attention to him then. He was young Louis Armstrong. The New Orleans sound had begun around 1900 with brass ensembles which, like ragtime, took the marching military bands as their models. In addition to cornets, trombones, and an occasional tuba these groups included clarinets, banjos or guitars, and fiddles. The bass and the piano were excluded because of their size, although the piano was a popular solo instrument in the dives, honky-tonks, and 'sporting houses." Buddy Bolden's band with Bunk Johnson was playing In honky-tonks as early as 1895, and the Olympia Brass Band existed on and off from 1900 to 1915 led by coronetist Freddie Keppard, with Joe Oliver playing second cornet and Alphonse Picou, Sidney Bechet, and Lorenzo Tio on clarinets. Oscar "Papa" Celestin formed the Original Tuxedo Orchestra in 1910. Keppard later led the Original Creole Band, while Joe 0liver worked for trombonist Kid Ory in his Brownskin Band. When Oliver left for Chicago, as Keppard had done, Louis Armstrong replaced him on coronet, There were probably a hundred of these seminal groups, and their players seemed infinitely interchangeable. All of them understood the basic premise of the music: collective improvisation. Source: New Oleans Online-Music http://www.neworleansonline.com/music/bolden.shtml Around the turn of the century, when the great Buddy Bolden was the king of New Orleans jazz, the legendary musician played his cornet all over town: Rampart and Perdido streets, Uptown, the lakefront and across the river. Source: Gambit Weekly-Blake Pontchartrain http://www.gambit-no.com/1998/0901/blak.html Buddy Bolden's music was never recorded.

1877-1931 - Buddy Bolden #1
"Around the turn of the century, when the great Buddy Bolden was the king of New Orleans jazz, the legendary musician played his cornet all over town: Rampart and Perdido streets, Uptown, the lakefront and across the river." Source: Gambit Weekly-Blake Pontchartrain http://www.gambit-no.com/1998/0901/blak.html Deeper, deeper, Buddy Bolden plunged into his music...He dominated...New Orleans, playing at saloons, lakefront parties... Source: New Orleans Music Online http://www.neworleansonline.com/music/bolden.shtml Bolden played for dances, for pinics out at Milneburg, (Jelly Roll Morton says that he most surprising thing that happened to him in connection with the misspelling fo the name Milneburg was a long letter from a patriotic German citizen who was pleased that someone from the States had celebrated the Joys of the German City Milenburg with such wonderful jazz) for parties at Johnson Park (when Buddy Bottle used to make his balloon ascensions)... Source: http://home.att.net/~joeshepherd/jazz/jazz13.html Buddy Bolden is considered by many to be "The Father of Jazz".

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Buddy Bolden is generally considered to be the first bandleader to play the improvised music which later became know as Jazz. He was the first "King" of cornet in New Orleans, and is remembered by the musicians of that time period as one of the finest horn players they had ever heard. He is remembered for his loud, clear tone. His band starting playing around 1895, in New Orleans parades and dances, and eventually rose to become one of the most popular bands in the city. In 1907 his health deteriorated and he was committed to a mental institution where he spent the remainder of his life. Trombonist Frankie Dusen took over the Bolden Band and renamed it the Eagle Band and they continued to be very popular in New Orleans until around 1917. Bolden made no recordings, but was immortalized in the Jazz standard "Buddy Bolden's Blues" (I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say) which is based on Bolden's theme song "Funky Butt". Several early Jazz musicians, like Sidney Bechet (as a child musician) and Bunk Johnson, apparently played in Bolden's bands occasionally.
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The Eagle Band
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The Eagle Band was a very important band in the history of Jazz. When Buddy Bolden went insane in 1907, Frankie Dusen took over Buddy Bolden's Band and renamed it the Eagle Band after the Eagle Saloon at Perdido and South Rampart Street in the Storyville district of New Orleans. The band was very popular in New Orleans between 1907 and 1917 and reportedly continued to play much of the same repertoire as when Bolden was the leader of the group. Many of the musicians that passed through the Eagle Band in the Teens would become the chief proponents of Hot Jazz during the 1920s. The band made no recordings, but the Eagle Band was the link between the dawn of Jazz as represented by Buddy Bolden and the cultural phenomenon that jazz would become during the 1920s. Sidney Bechet remembered the band this way, "The Eagle Band was much more of a barrelhouse band, a real gutbucket band, a low down band which really played the blues, and those slow tempos. To tell the true the Eagle Band was the only band that could play the blues. That was really a band".
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| Artist |
Instrument |
| Sidney Bechet |
Clarinet |
| Peter Bocage |
Trumpet, Guitar |
| Walter Brundy |
Drums |
| Jack Carey |
Trombone |
| Tig Chambers |
Trumpet |
| Edward Clem |
Trumpet |
| Baby Dodds |
Drums |
| Johnny Dodds |
Clarinet |
| Frankie Dusen |
Trombone, Leader |
| Chinee Foster |
Drums |
| Pops Foster |
Bass |
| Ed Garland |
Bass |
| Tubby Hall |
Drums |
| Bill Johnson |
Bass |
| Bunk Johnson |
Trumpet |
| Joe Johnson |
Trumpet |
| Frank Keelin |
Trumpet |
| Freddie Keppard |
Trumpet |
| Brock Mumford |
Guitar |
| Big Eye Nelson |
Clarinet |
| King Oliver |
Trumpet |
| Richard Payne |
Guitar |
| John Penerton |
Trumpet |
| Dandy Lewis |
Bass |
| Frank Lewis |
Clarinet |
| Dandy Lewis |
Bass |
| Bob Lyons |
Bass |
| Big Eye Louis Nelson |
Clarinet |
| Willie Parker |
Clarinet |
| Buddie Petit |
Trumpet |
| Lorenzo Staulz |
Guitar |
| Cliff Stones |
Guitar |
| Lorenzo Tio, Jr. |
Clarinet |
| Wild Ned |
Trumpet |
| Henry Zeno |
Drums |
| In Search of Buddy Bolden by Donald M. Marquis, Louisiana State University Press, 1978 |
| Buddy Bolden And The Last Days Of Storyville by Danny Barker, Continuum, 1998 |
| Buddy Bolden Says by E.W. Russell, Candence Jazz Books, 2000 |
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New Orleans' Storyville Area
At the turn of the last century, the undisputed center of good times in the Big Easy was literally ‘carved out’ of the New Orleans landscape by Alderman Sidney “Story.” Storyville - as it came to be known, was the city’s experimental district for legalized prostitution, and it flourished for 20 years.
Fabulous bordellos were lavishly decorated, and cultural barriers blurred as people of all income levels came together to share their passions… for good times and good music. Racial distinctions were still made, however, with blacks males unable to patronize white bordellos, or black women to work with white.
Today, there is a new Storyville District minus the prostitution, of course.
A unique Storyville tradition began in 1898… the best bordellos each hired a house pianist universally known as “The Professor.” “The Professor” would greet visitors and invite the city’s most talented musicians to get together and perform for bordello patrons.
Jelly Roll Morton, Tony Jackson, Clarence Williams, King Oliver and Manuel Perez were just a few of the musicians who captivated Storyville audiences nightly with vibrant performances.
Well, as you might have guessed, Storyville didn't endure. The United States entered World War I on April 6, 1917, and the mood in the country grew more puritanical (Prohibition was begun just after the war, in 1919).
The Federal Government closed Storyville down in 1917, and, until recently, the renowned historic attraction was lost forever to New Orleans. Post-Victorian sentiment had overruled experience.
Today, there is a new Storyville district... minus the prostitution, of course!
In 1998, renowned restaurateur Ralph Brennan, Jazz & Heritage Festival Producer/Director Quint Davis, jazz impresario George Wein and famed architect Arthur Davis teamed-up to produce a world-class entertainment venue, the Storyville District entertainment complex, that honors this "noble experiment."
The new Storyville District is literally the gateway to the world famous Bourbon Street. It features a 12,000 square foot complex with many rooms with continuous live entertainment from afternoon to night.
In addtion to the music that made New Orleans famous, the Storyville District has, as you'd expect with Ralph Brennan involved, some of the best food you'll find in the city.
So, Storyville brings together the very best of New Orleans… the best music, the best food, the best address.
Those are just a few of the reasons that Storyville has been named the “Must See - Must Do - Don’t Miss” attraction of the French Quarter by Southern Living, National Geographic Traveler, American Way, New Orleans Magazine and the national Restaurant Hospitality magazine.
Storyville District is literally “The Home of Jazz in the Home of Jazz,” and Jazz has never tasted so hot!
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