New Orleans' unusual history, its unique outlook on life, its rich ethnic and cultural makeup, and the resulting
cultural interaction set the stage for development and evolution of many distinctive traditions. The city is famous for its
festivals, foods, and, especially, its music. Each ethnic group in New Orleans contributed to the very active musical environment
in the city, and in this way to the development of early jazz.
A well-known example of early ethnic influences significant
to the origins of jazz is the African dance and drumming tradition, which was documented in New Orleans. By the mid-18th century,
slaves gathered socially on Sundays at a special market outside the city's rampart. Later, the area became known as Congo
Square, famous for its African dances and the preservation of African musical and cultural elements.
Although dance
in Congo Square ended before the Civil War, a related musical tradition surfaced in the African-American neighborhoods at
least by the 1880s. The Mardi Gras Indians were black "gangs" whose members "masked" as American Indians on Mardi Gras day
to honor them. Black Mardi Gras Indians felt a spiritual affinity with Native American Indians. On Mardi Gras day gang members
roamed their neighborhoods looking to confront other gangs in a show of strength that sometimes turned violent. The demonstration
included drumming and call-and-response chanting that was strongly reminiscent of West African and Caribbean music. Mardi
Gras Indian music was part of the environment of early jazz. Several early jazz figures such as Louis Armstrong and Lee Collins
described being affected by Mardi Gras Indian processions as youngsters, and Jelly Roll Morton claimed to have been a "spyboy,"
or scout, for an Indian gang as a teenager.
New Orleans music was also impacted by the popular musical forms that proliferated
throughout the United States following the Civil War. Brass marching bands were the rage in the late 1880s, and brass bands
cropped up across America. There was also a growing national interest in syncopated musical styles influenced by African-American
traditions, such as cakewalks and minstrel tunes. By the 1890s syncopated piano compositions called ragtime created a popular
music sensation, and brass bands began supplementing the standard march repertoire with ragtime pieces.
Early
Development of Jazz - 1890 to 1917
 Jelly Roll Morton |
Brass bands had become enormously popular in New Orleans as well as the rest of the country. In the 1880s
New Orleans brass bands, such as the Excelsior and Onward, typically consisted of formally trained musicians reading complex
scores for concerts, parades, and dances.
The roots of jazz were largely nourished in the African-American community
but became a broader phenomenon that drew from many communities and ethnic groups in New Orleans. "Papa" Jack Laine's Reliance
Brass Bands, for instance, were integrated before segregation pressures increased. Laine's bands, which were active around
1890 to 1913, became the most well known of the white ragtime bands. Laine was a promoter of the first generation of white
jazzmen.
A special collaborative relationship developed between brass bands in New Orleans and mutual aid and benevolent
societies. Mutual aid and benevolent societies were common among many ethnic groups in urban areas in the 19th century. After
the Civil War such organizations took on special meaning for emancipated African-Americans who had limited economic resources.
The purposes of such societies were to "help the sick and bury the dead" - important functions because blacks were generally
prohibited from getting commercial health and life insurance and other services.
While many organizations in New Orleans
used brass bands in parades, concerts, political rallies, and funerals, African-American mutual aid and benevolent societies
had their own expressive approach to funeral processions and parades, which continues to the present. At their events, community
celebrants would join in the exuberant dancing procession. The phenomena of community participation in parades became known
as "the second line," second, that is, to the official society members and their contracted band.
Other community organizations
also used New Orleans-style "ragtime" brass bands. Mardi Gras walking clubs, notably the Jefferson City Buzzards and the Cornet
Carnival Club (still in existence), were employers of the music.
By the turn of the century New Orleans was thriving
not only as a major sea and river port but also as a major entertainment center. Legitimate theater, vaudeville, and music
publishing houses and instrument stores employed musicians in the central business district. Less legitimate entertainment
establishments flourished in and around the officially sanctioned red-light district near Canal and Rampart streets. Out on
the shores of Lake Ponchartrain bands competed for audiences at amusement parks and resorts. Street parades were common in
the neighborhood, and community social halls and corner saloons held dances almost nightly.
New Orleanians never lost
their penchant for dancing, and most of the city's brass band members doubled as dance band players. The Superior Brass Band,
for instance, had overlapping personnel with its sister group, The Superior Orchestra. Dance bands and orchestras softened
the brass sound with stringed instruments, including violin, guitar, and string bass. At the turn of the century string dance
bands were popular in more polite settings, and "dirty" music, as the more genteel dances were known, was the staple of many
downtown Creole of color bands such as John Robichaux's Orchestra.
But earthier vernacular dance styles were also increasing
in popularity in New Orleans. Over the last decade of the 19th century, non reading musicians playing more improvised music
drew larger audiences for dances and parades. For example, between 1895 and 1900 uptown cornet player Charles "Buddy" Bolden
began incorporating improvised blues and increasing the tempo of familiar dance tunes. Bolden was credited by many early jazzmen
as the first musician to have a distinctive new style. The increasing popularity of this more "ratty" music brought many trained
and untrained musicians into the improvising bands. Also, repressive segregation laws passed in the 1890s (as a backlash to
Reconstruction) increased discrimination toward anyone with African blood and eliminated the special status previously afforded
Creoles of color. These changes ultimately united black and Creole of color musicians, thus strengthening early jazz by combing
the uptown improvisational style with the more disciplined Creole approach.
The instrumentation and section playing
of the brass bands increasingly influenced the dance bands, which changed in orientation from string to brass instruments.
What ultimately became the standard front line of a New Orleans jazz band was cornet, clarinet, and trombone. These horns
collectively improvising or "faking" ragtime yielded the characteristic polyphonic sound of New Orleans jazz.
Most
New Orleans events were accompanied by music, and there were many opportunities for musicians to work. In addition to parades
and dances, bands played at picnics, fish fries, political rallies, store openings, lawn parties, athletic events, church
festivals, weddings, and funerals. Neighborhood social halls, some operated by mutual aid and benevolent societies or other
civic organizations, were frequently the sites of banquets and dances. Early jazz was found in neighborhoods all over and
around New Orleans - it was a normal part of community life.
Sometime before 1900, African-American neighborhood organizations
known as social aid and pleasure clubs also began to spring up in the city. Similar in their neighborhood orientation to the
mutual aid and benevolent societies, the purposes of social and pleasure clubs were to provide a social outlet for its members,
provide community service, and parade as an expression of community pride. This parading provided dependable work for musicians
and became an important training ground for young musical talent.
New Orleans jazz began to spread to other cities
as the city's musicians joined riverboat bands and vaudeville, minstrel, and other show tours. Jelly Roll Morton, an innovative
piano stylist and composer, began his odyssey outside of New Orleans as early as 1907. The Original Creole Orchestra, featuring
Freddie Keppard, was an important early group that left New Orleans, moving to Los Angeles in 1912 and then touring the Orpheum
Theater circuit, with gigs in Chicago and New York. In fact, Chicago and New York became the main markets for New Orleans
jazz. Tom Brown's Band from Dixieland left New Orleans for Chicago in 1915, and Nick LaRocca and other members of the Original
Dixieland Jazz Band headed there in 1916.
Maturation of Jazz - 1917
to the Early 1930s
 Louis Armstrong |
In 1917 the Original Dixieland Jazz Band cut the first commercial jazz recording while playing in New York
City, where they were enthusiastically received. The Victor release was an unexpected hit. Suddenly, jazz New Orleans style
was a national craze.
With the new demand for jazz, employment opportunities in the north coaxed more musicians to
leave New Orleans. For example, clarinetist Sidney Bechet left for Chicago in 1917, and cornetist Joe "King" Oliver followed
two years later. The appeal of the New Orleans sound knew no boundaries. By 1919 the Original Dixieland Jazz Band was performing
in England and Bechet was in France; their music was wholeheartedly welcomed.
King Oliver, who had led popular bands
in New Orleans along with trombonist Edward "Kid" Ory, established the trend-setting Creole Jazz Band in Chicago in 1922.
Also in Chicago, the New Orleans Rhythm Kings blended the Oliver and Original Dixieland Jazz Band sounds and collaborated
with Jelly Roll Morton in 1923.
Perhaps the most significant departure from New Orleans was in 1922 when Louis Armstrong
was summoned to Chicago by King Oliver, his mentor. Louis Armstrong swung with a great New Orleans feeling, but unlike any
of his predecessors, his brilliant playing led a revolution in jazz that replaced the polyphonic ensemble style of New Orleans
with development of the soloist's art. The technical improvement and popularity of phonograph records spread Armstrong's instrumental
and vocal innovations and make him internationally famous. His Hot Five and Hot Seven recordings (1925-28), including his
celebrated work with Earl Hines, were quite popular and are milestones in the progression of the music.
Jelly Roll
Morton, another New Orleans giant, also made a series of influential recordings while based in Chicago in the 1920s. Morton's
compositions added sophistication and a structure for soloists to explore, and his work set the stage for the Swing era.
New
Orleans musicians and musical styles continued to influence jazz nationally as the music went through a rapid series of stylistic
changes. Jazz became the unchallenged popular music of America during the Swing era of the 1930s and 1940s. Later innovations,
such as bebop in the 1940s and avant-garde in the 1960s, departed further from the New Orleans tradition.
Once the
small-band New Orleans style fell out of fashion, attempts were made to revive the music. In the late 1930s, recognizing that
early jazz had been neglected and deserved serious study, jazz enthusiasts turned back to New Orleans. Many New Orleans musicians
and others were still actively playing traditional jazz. Recordings and performances by Bunk Johnson and George Lewis stimulated
a national jazz revival movement, providing opportunities for traditional jazz players that persist today.
Quotations from Jazz Pioneers on the Early History of Jazz
Sidney Bechet, "Treat It Gentle"
 Sidney Bechet |
There was this club, too, that we played at, the Twenty-Five Club. That was about 1912, 1913; and all the
time we played there, people were talking about Freddie Keppard. Freddie, he had left New Orleans with his band and he was
traveling all over the country playing towns on the Orpheum Circuit. At the time, you know, that was something new and Freddie
kept sending back all these clippings from what all the newspapermen and the critics and all was writing up about him, about
his music, about his band. And all these clippings were asking the same thing: where did it come from? It seems like everyone
along the circuit was coming up to Freddie to ask about this ragtime. Especially when his show, the Original Creole Band,
got to the Winter Gardens in New York...that was the time they was asking about it the most. Where did it come from? And back
at the Twenty-Five these friends of Freddie's kept coming around and showing these clippings, wanting to know what it was
all about. It was a new thing then.
Baby Dodds, "The Baby Dodds Story"
[Big
Eye Louis Nelson] lived downtown, and I lived uptown. He was on the north side of town, and I was living on the south side.
In other words, he was a Creole and lived in the French part of town. Canal Street was the dividing line and the people from
the different sections didn't mix. The musicians mixed only if you were good enough. But at one time the Creole fellows thought
uptown musicians weren't good enough to play with them, because most of the uptown musicians didn't read music. Everybody
in the French part of town read music.
Louis Armstrong, "Satchmo: My Life in New Orleans"
The
funerals in New Orleans are sad until the body is finally lowered into the grave and the reverend says, "ashes to ashes and
dust to dust." After the brother was six feet under the ground the band would strike up one of those good old tunes like "Didn't
He Ramble", and all the people would leave their worries behind. Particularly when King Oliver blew that last chorus in high
register.
Once the band starts, everybody starts swaying from one side of the street to the other, especially those
who drop in and follow the ones who have been to the funeral. These people are known as 'the second line', and the may be
anyone passing along the street who wants to hear the music. The spirit hits them and they follow along to see what's happening.
Pops Foster, "Pops Foster: The Autobiography of a New Orleans Jazzman"
From about 1900
on, there were three types of bands playing in New Orleans. You had bands that played ragtime, ones that played sweet music,
and the ones that played nothin' but blues. A band like John Robichaux's played nothin' but sweet music and played the dirty
affairs. On a Saturday night Frankie Duson's Eagle Band would play the Masonic Hall because he played a whole lot of blues.
A band like the Magnolia Band would play ragtime and work the District...All the bands around New Orleans would play quadrilles
starting about midnight. When you did that nice people would know it was time to go home because things got rough after that.
Jelly Roll Morton, "Mr. Jelly Roll" (Alan Lomax)
You see, New Orleans was very organization-minded.
I have never seen such beautiful clubs as they had there...the Broadway Swells, the High Arts, the Orleans Aides, the Bulls
and Bears, the Tramps, the Iroquois, the Allegroes...that was just a few of them, and those clubs would parade at least once
a week. They'd have a great big band. The grand marshall would ride in front with his aides behind him, all with expensive
sashes and streamers.
Nick LaRocca (interviewed by Richard Allen, May 26, 1958)
"The
Livery Stable Blues" became a national hit. It was all over the world, even down in Honolulu and all where American forces
went...we entertained over a million men... I played on the bill with Caruso. I played on the bills with Jolson. I played
on the bills with Eddie Cantor.
This history was prepared by a National Park Service study team to be included in the Special Resource Study
and Environmental Assessment of Suitable/Feasable Alternatives for the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park in 1993.
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