Showing posts with label Jelly Roll Morton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jelly Roll Morton. Show all posts

Monday, July 22, 2019

Jelly Roll Morton - Classic Piano Solos

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 35:28
Size: 83,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:42)  1. Grandpa's Spells
(3:03)  2. Kansas City Stomps
(2:39)  3. King Porter
(2:47)  4. New Orleans Joys
(3:24)  5. Wolverine Blues
(3:10)  6. Jelly Rolls Blues
(2:54)  7. Shreveport Stomp
(2:52)  8. Stratford Hunch
(3:01)  9. Bucktown Blues
(2:59) 10. Big Foot Ham
(2:44) 11. Perfect Rag
(3:08) 12. Tom Cat Blues

One of the very first giants of jazz, Jelly Roll Morton did himself a lot of harm posthumously by exaggerating his worth, claiming to have invented jazz in 1902. Morton's accomplishments as an early innovator are so vast that he did not really need to stretch the truth.  Morton was jazz's first great composer, writing such songs as "King Porter Stomp," "Grandpa's Spells," "Wolverine Blues," "The Pearls," "Mr. Jelly Roll," "Shreveport Stomp," "Milenburg Joys," "Black Bottom Stomp," "The Chant," "Original Jelly Roll Blues," "Doctor Jazz," "Wild Man Blues," "Winin' Boy Blues," "I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say," "Don't You Leave Me Here," and "Sweet Substitute." He was a talented arranger (1926's "Black Bottom Stomp" is remarkable), getting the most out of the three-minute limitations of the 78 record by emphasizing changing instrumentation, concise solos and dynamics. He was a greatly underrated pianist who had his own individual style. Although he only took one vocal on records in the 1920s ("Doctor Jazz"), Morton in his late-'30s recordings proved to be an effective vocalist. And he was a true character.  Jelly Roll Morton's pre-1923 activities are shrouded in legend. He started playing piano when he was ten, worked in the bordellos of Storyville while a teenager (for which some of his relatives disowned him) and by 1904 was traveling throughout the South. He spent time in other professions (as a gambler, pool player, vaudeville comedian and even a pimp) but always returned to music. The chances are good that in 1915 Morton had few competitors among pianists and he was an important transition figure between ragtime and early jazz. He played in Los Angeles from 1917-1922 and then moved to Chicago where, for the next six years, he was at his peak. Morton's 1923-24 recordings of piano solos introduced his style, repertoire and brilliance. Although his earliest band sides were quite primitive, his 1926-27 recordings for Victor with his Red Hot Peppers are among the most exciting of his career. With such sidemen as cornetist George Mitchell, Kid Ory or Gerald Reeves on trombone, clarinetists Omer Simeon, Barney Bigard, Darnell Howard or Johnny Dodds, occasionally Stomp Evans on C-melody, Johnny St. Cyr or Bud Scott on banjo, bassist John Lindsay and either Andrew Hilaire or Baby Dodds on drums, Morton had the perfect ensembles for his ideas. He also recorded some exciting trios with Johnny and Baby Dodds. With the center of jazz shifting to New York by 1928, Morton relocated. His bragging ways unfortunately hurt his career and he was not able to always get the sidemen he wanted. His Victor recordings continued through 1930 and, although some of the performances are sloppy or erratic, there were also a few more classics. Among the musicians Morton was able to use on his New York records were trumpeters Ward Pinkett, Red Allen and Bubber Miley, trombonists Geechie Fields, Charles Irvis and J.C. Higginbotham, clarinetists Omer Simeon, Albert Nicholas and Barney Bigard, banjoist Lee Blair, guitarist Bernard Addison, Bill Benford on tuba, bassist Pops Foster and drummers Tommy Benford, Paul Barbarin and Zutty Singleton. 

But with the rise of the Depression, Jelly Roll Morton drifted into obscurity. He had made few friends in New York, his music was considered old-fashioned and he did not have the temperament to work as a sideman. During 1931-37 his only appearance on records was on a little-known Wingy Manone date. He ended up playing in a Washington D.C. dive for patrons who had little idea of his contributions. Ironically Morton's "King Porter Stomp" became one of the most popular songs of the swing era, but few knew that he wrote it. However in 1938 Alan Lomax recorded him in an extensive and fascinating series of musical interviews for the Library of Congress. Morton's storytelling was colorful and his piano playing in generally fine form as he reminisced about old New Orleans and demonstrated the other piano styles of the era. A decade later the results would finally be released on albums. Morton arrived in New York in 1939 determined to make a comeback. He did lead a few band sessions with such sidemen as Sidney Bechet, Red Allen and Albert Nicholas and recorded some wonderful solo sides but none of those were big sellers. In late 1940, an ailing Morton decided to head out to Los Angeles but, when he died at the age of 50, he seemed like an old man. Ironically his music soon became popular again as the New Orleans jazz revivalist movement caught fire and, if he had lived just a few more years, the chances are good that he would have been restored to his former prominence (as was Kid Ory). Jelly Roll Morton's early piano solos and classic Victor recordings (along with nearly every record he made) have been reissued on CD. https://www.allmusic.com/artist/jelly-roll-morton-mn0000317290/biography

Personnel: Jelly Roll Morton - Piano.

Classic Piano Solos

Monday, May 15, 2017

Jelly Roll Morton - The Pearls

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1988
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:48
Size: 167,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:12)  1. Black Bottom Stomp
(3:26)  2. Smokehouse Blues
(3:11)  3. The Chant
(3:32)  4. Sidewalk Blues
(3:13)  5. Dead Man Blues
(3:07)  6. Steamboat Stomp
(2:53)  7. Grandpa's Spells
(3:08)  8. Original Jelly Roll Blues
(3:26)  9. Doctor Jazz
(2:51) 10. Cannon Ball Blues
(3:24) 11. The Pearls
(3:18) 12. Wolverine Blues
(2:50) 13. Mr. Jelly Lord
(2:30) 14. Georgia Swing
(2:53) 15. Kansas City Stomps
(3:14) 16. Shreveport Stomp
(3:25) 17. Mournful Serenade
(3:09) 18. Red Hot Pepper Stomp
(3:27) 19. Deep Creek
(2:55) 20. Freakish
(3:09) 21. Tanktown Bump
(3:13) 22. I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say
(3:11) 23. Winin' Boy Blues

This astounding 23-track compilation deserves a place in everybody's jazz collection it's that important, that listenable, and that essential. It takes the cream of Morton's sessions from his legendary 1926 Red Hot Peppers to his 1939 dates leading a small New Orleans band, with all the essential stops along the way, including a 1927 trio with the Dodds brothers in Chicago. This is hot jazz nearing the apex of sophistication, just before Duke Ellington took it even more uptown. ~ Cub Koda http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-pearls-mw0000651986

Personnel: Piano, Arranged By – Jelly Roll Morton; Banjo – Johnny St. Cyr;  Bass – John Lindsey;  Bass Clarinet – Omer Simeon;  Clarinet – Barney Bigard, Darnell Howard , Johnny Dodds , Omer Simeon;  Cornet – George Mitchell;  Drums – Andrew Hilaire , Baby Dodds , Tommy Benford;  Guitar – Johnny St. Cyr;  Trombone – Geechy Fields, Kid Ory 

The Pearls

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Jelly Roll Morton - Birth Of The Hot

Styles: New Orleans Jazz, Piano Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:52
Size: 172,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:13)  1. Black Bottom Stomp
(3:27)  2. Smoke House Blues
(3:12)  3. The Chant
(3:29)  4. Sidewalk Blues [Take 3]
(3:14)  5. Dead Man Blues [Take 1]
(3:04)  6. Steamboat Stomp
(3:29)  7. Someday Sweetheart
(2:53)  8. Grandpa's Spells [Take 3]
(3:04)  9. Original Jelly-Roll Blues
(3:24) 10. Doctor Jazz
(3:31) 11. Cannon Ball Blues [Take 2]
(3:09) 12. Hyena Stomp
(3:30) 13. Billy Goat Stomp
(3:08) 14. Wild Man Blues
(3:26) 15. Jungle Blues
(3:15) 16. Beale Street Blues
(3:26) 17. The Pearls
(3:20) 18. Wolverine Blues
(2:52) 19. Mr. Jelly Lord
(3:33) 20. Sidewalk Blues [Take 2]
(3:18) 21. Dead Man Blues [Take 2]
(2:54) 22. Grandpa's Spells [Take 2]
(2:51) 23. Cannon Ball Blues [Take 1]

When in 1995 RCA reissued 19 titles and four alternate takes from the first nine months of Jelly Roll Morton's adventure as a Victor recording artist, the producers elected to christen the album "Birth of the Hot". This title, which is a takeoff on that of Miles Davis' 1949 Birth of the Cool album (later echoed in modified phraseology by the Gil Evans Impulse LPs Out of the Cool and Into the Hot) accurately pegs these exciting 1926-1927 recordings as archetypal manifestations of the classic New Orleans "hot" jazz style that Morton pioneered first as a pianist, then with a series of groups that paved the way for the successes of his supremely adept and well-rehearsed Red Hot Peppers band. This excellent sampler ought to whet the appetite for a larger selection of Morton's works as reissued by numerous labels including Classics, Proper, JSP, and of course RCA Victor. If all you need is a straight shot of Jelly, this is the genuine article. ~ arwulf arwulf  http://www.allmusic.com/album/birth-of-the-hot-mw0000645330

Personnel: Jelly Roll Morton (vocals, piano); Johnny St. Cyr (spoken vocals, guitar, banjo); Lew LaMar (vocal effects); Paul "Stump" Evans (alto saxophone); George Mitchell (cornet); Kid Ory, Gerald Reeves (trombone); Quinn Wilson (tuba); Omer Simeon (clarinet, bass clarinet); Johnny Dodds, Barney Bigard, Darnell Howard (clarinet); J. Wright Smith, Clarence Black (violin); Bud Scott (guitar); John Lindsay (bass); Andrew Hilaire, Baby Dodds (drums); Marty Bloom (special effects).

Birth Of The Hot

Friday, July 25, 2014

Jelly Roll Morton - Jazz King Of New Orleans

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 48:54
Size: 112.0 MB
Styles: New Orleans jazz, Piano jazz
Year: 2002/2006
Art: Front

[3:11] 1. Black Bottom Stomp
[3:02] 2. Steamboat Stomp
[3:29] 3. Cannon Ball Blues
[3:24] 4. Doctor Jazz
[3:28] 5. Jungle Blues
[2:58] 6. Original Jelly Roll Blues
[3:30] 7. Someday Sweetheart
[3:24] 8. The Pearls
[3:15] 9. Shreveport
[3:27] 10. Mournful Serenade
[3:07] 11. Red Hot Pepper
[3:29] 12. New Orleans Bump
[3:03] 13. Blue Blood Blues
[2:52] 14. Gamblin' Jack
[3:08] 15. Winin' Boy Blues

Jelly Roll Morton (vocals, piano); Johnny St. Cyr (guitar, banjo); Lee Blair, Howard Hill, Lawrence Lucie, Bernard Addison, Bud Scott (guitar); Barney Alexander (banjo); Clarence Black (violin); Omer Simeon (clarinet, bass clarinet); George Baquet, Johnny Dodds, Albert Nicholas, Russell Procope (clarinet); Paul Barnes (soprano saxophone, alto saxophone); Sidney Bechet (soprano saxophone); Stump Evans, Walter "Foots" Thomas (alto saxophone); Joe "Cornbread" Thomas , Happy Caldwell, Joe Garland (tenor saxophone); Edwin Swayzee, Ed Anderson, Ward Pinkett, Sidney DeParis (trumpet); George Mitchell (cornet); William Kato, Geechie Fields, Gerald Reeves, Kid Ory, Claude Jones, Charlie Irvis (trombone); Billy Taylor, Sr., Pete Briggs, William Moore, Harry Prather, Quinn Wilson (tuba); Andrew Hilaire (drums, washboard); William Laws, Manzie Johnson, Baby Dodds, Tommy Benford, Zutty Singleton, Bill Beason (drums). Recording information: Camden, NJ (09/15/1926-10/09/1930); Chicago, IL (09/15/1926-10/09/1930); New York, NY (09/15/1926-10/09/1930).

Jazz King Of New Orleans