© - Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all
rights reserved.
“There is no confusion these
days about what New Orleans
"tailgate" trombone playing is all about. Most modern practitioners
of that venerable style tend toward an exaggerated down-home aesthetic:
screaming yawps, wild-man growls, howling blasts, blaring gutbucket smears.
That is, all the unsubtle tricks and tropes that make people think of the
trombone as a carnival novelty act.
If the current state of trad
jazz trombone is any indication, then the philosopher was right-history does
repeat itself as farce. But the first time around, New
Orleans slip-horn playing was not the self-parody
it has become. All the proof you could ever need is to be found in a new box
set from Mosaic records: The Complete Kid Ory Verve Sessions. Recorded in the
late 1950s, when Ory was in his early 70s, the Verve sides compiled by Mosaic
demonstrate that Kid Ory's Creole trombone playing may not have been
particularly complex or harmonically challenging, but for all its
rambunctiousness, his music is nonetheless subtle and lyrical.”
- Eric Felten, JazzTimes review of The Complete Kid Ory Verve Recordings [Mosaic Records ]
“Kid Ory is neither celebrity
nor myth. He was a flesh-and-blood jazzman who arrived on the scene in New
Orleans at the same time as the music itself. The
man and the music came up together, reached maturity together and, ultimately,
faded from the scene together.”
- John McCusker
“Then Jack Teagarden
introduced the daddy of the tailgate trombonists, Edward “Kid” Ory. This
septuagenarian strolled on stage looking extremely dapper in his white jacket
and performed as though he might have been a “kid” for real.
His featured number was the
great old standard he himself wrote about 40 years ago – “Muskrat Ramble” – and
just to show he was riding with the times, he even shouted out a vocal using
the lyrics written just a few years ago by Hollywood writer, Ray Gilbert.
Then Higginbotham and
Teagarden joined Ory for a three-‘boned blast at that other perennial favorite
– “High Society.”
- Bill Simon, liner notes to the 1957
Newport Jazz Festival appearance by Red Allen, Kid Ory, & Jack Teagarden
with J.C. Higginbotham, Buster Bailey and Cozy Cole [Verve MGV-8233].
I had no idea who
Kid Ory was when I first encountered him on the evening of July 4,
1957 at the
Newport Jazz Festival.
But that wasn’t
unusual in those days as I was still finding my way through Jazz. [Frankly I
still am.]
The only familiar
member of the group Kid Ory played with that night was fellow trombonist Jack
Teagarden, whom my father idolized and was probably the reason why he picked
that night for us to attend the NJF.
Perhaps another
reason was that all of the groups appearing that evening were doing so in
celebration of Louis Armstrong’s 57th birthday.
I found out much
later that there was a strong connection between Kid and Pops as Ory had been a
member of Armstrong Hot Five when it produced the monumental records that
ignited the Jazz world in 1925-1927.
I gather, too,
that all of the other musicians on the stand that night in Freebody Park had
played in one of the many bands that Pops had over the years including New
Orleans-born trumpeter Henry “Red” Allen who had always idolized Louis.
J.C. Higginbotham
on trombone, Buster Bailey on clarinet, Claude Hopkins on piano and Cozy Cole
on drums all had historical connections to Pops and bassist Arvell Shaw was a
member of Pops’ current band in 1957.
Kid Ory’s performance
that night was the first time I saw and heard the “tailgate” trombone style
that had developed when the first Jazz bands were towed around New Orleans in a
horse-drawn wagon and the trombonist was seated at the end of the wagon with
its tailgate down to allow clearance for the trombone slide to reach the lower
positions on the horn.
By comparison, it
was fascinating to watch Teagarden whose trombone slide rarely extended beyond
the bell of the horn as Jack had developed a technique that allowed him to lip
the lower positions without extending the slide at arms length. This technique
involved less slide movement in general and allowed Jack to play the trombone
easier at faster tempos.
A year or so after
the concert I was a fortunate to find a Verve LP of this concert which was
simply entitled Red Allen, Kid Ory, & Jack Teagarden with J.C. Higginbotham, Buster
Bailey and Cozy Cole [MGV-8233].
Over the years, I
picked-up a little information about Kid Ory from Gunther Schuller’s Early
Jazz and Nat Shapiro and Nat Hentoff’s Here Me Talkin’ To You, but
I didn’t really understand his significance in terms the development of Jazz
from the death of Buddy Bolden until the advent of the first Jazz recordings by
the Original Dixieland Jazz Band in 1917.
Before he left New Orleans for the West Coast in 1920, Kid Ory
maintained one of the hottest bands in the Crescent City which was responsible for giving many
young players their start in the music, including giving Louis Armstrong his
first gig.
Kid Ory, then, was
a trombonist, composer, recording artist, and early New Orleans jazz band leader. Creole
Trombone: Kid Ory And The Early Years Of Jazz tells his story
from birth on a rural sugar cane plantation in a French-speaking, ethnically
mixed family, to his emergence in New Orleans as the city’s hottest band leader.
In 1925 Edward
“Kid” Ory moved to Chicago , where he made records with King Oliver, Louis Armstrong, and
Jelly Roll Morton that captured the spirit of the jazz age. His most famous
composition from that period, “Muskrat Ramble,” is a jazz standard. Retired
from music during the Depression, he returned in the 1940s and enjoyed a
reignited career.
In Creole
Trombone: Kid Ory And The Early Years Of Jazz (University Press Of
Mississippi), author John McCusker tells the story of a jazz musician
arriving on the scene in New Orleans at the same time as the music itself. The
man and the music came up together, reached maturity together and, ultimately,
faded from the scene together.
The tale covers
the years between 1900 and 1933 and that period is the book’s main focus. Kid
Ory’s remembrances carry the story only to this point, and it would have been
difficult to fill the remaining years without his voice. While the tale of
his career revival in the forties is interesting, it is far less so than the
earlier period and less relevant to the historical question:
“Who was Kid Ory?”
By way of
background on the writer of the book that attempts to answer this question, John
McCusker spent nearly 30 years as a staff photographer for The Times-Picayune. He was part of the
team that shared the 2006 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service Journalism for
coverage of Hurricane Katrina and its immediate aftermath. He was recently
hired as staff photographer of the New Orleans bureau of The Advocate. Throughout his career, John has documented the people
and places that gave New Orleans one of its many nicknames – The Cradle of Jazz.
The editorial
staff at JazzProfiles found this insight review of John McCusker’s Creole
Trombone: Kid Ory And The Early Years Of Jazz (University Press Of
Mississippi) in the June 2013 edition of Downbeat.
© - Jennifer O’Dell/Downbeat, copyright protected;
all rights reserved.
Life
of an Overlooked Bandleader
“The way the story
of early New Orleans jazz is often told, there's a gap between Buddy Bolden,
whose brief career ended with his institutionalization in 1907, and the
recordings made by Joe "King" Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton and Louis
Armstrong in the early '20s. What gets glossed over are key facets of the
music's development: With Bolden suddenly out of the picture, how did his
danceable blues and gutbucket wails continue to inspire bands to play
"hot," polyphonic music interspersed with solos? What made that
music catch on and spread beyond race lines and outside of the Crescent City ? What legacies from this early period
later contributed to the death of the Jazz Age?
As John McCusker
writes in Creole Trombone: Kid Ory And The Early Years Of Jazz
(University Press Of Mississippi), the life of one largely overlooked
bandleader is a testament to this turning point in jazz that helps answer
these questions. McCusker states, this is the "story of a jazz musician
arriving on the scene at the same time as the music itself. The man and the
music came up together, reached maturity together and, ultimately, faded from
the scene together."
A longtime
photojournalist for the New Orleans
Times-Picayune who moonlighted as a jazz history tour guide, McCusker's
pursuit of information about Ory began in the mid-'90s after someone in his
group challenged his dismissive remarks about the trombonist's importance. McCusker
consulted with Bruce Raeburn at Tulane University 's Hogan Jazz Archive, who agreed with the
tourist, positing that Edward "Kid" Ory's career was vital to the development
of jazz. Raeburn's suggestion prompted a 15-year research odyssey for McCusker,
who worked through— and in part, inspired by—the loss of his home and
possessions in 2005, and of his wife just a few years later.
Using oral
histories, recordings and what he describes as "loose pages" from an
unfinished Ory autobiography, McCusker pieces together the story of a driven
young musician who helped usher in the era of so-called "hot"
playing, cherry-picked and nurtured the talents of Armstrong and Oliver, and
eventually made the first recordings by an all-black New Orleans jazz band.
Ory's early recordings, both as a leader and in bands led by Armstrong and
Morton, are covered here (along with an in-depth discography), as is his role
in the 1940s revival of traditional New Orleans jazz. But the picture McCusker paints of Louisiana 's music scene from 1900-1919 is the book's
highlight.
An early follower
of Bolden and an astute student of both the music and the music business,
Ory's path was self-determined. He formed a band in his rural hometown of LaPlace , La. , with homemade instruments and wrangled
gigs at fish fries and picnics until he could buy real instruments for his
young group, who frequently stole off into the night in search of visiting
bands such as those led by Bolden or John Robichaux.
Ory showed
leadership skills from the outset, taking careful notice of variances in
style, set-building techniques and, in McCusker's words, the "cutthroat
and bargain basement" nature of New Orleans ' music scene. He combined the most
successful elements of everything he learned and plowed ahead with a business
acumen as sharp as his musicianship.
During
"cutting contests," where wagons carrying bands to advertise shows
would battle one another with music, Ory became notorious for pushing his group
to win. He promoted his own shows, finding crafty ways with few resources to
cut out competition. His tenacity in playing for diverse audiences helped him
create what Armstrong called "one of the hottest jazz bands that ever hit New Orleans ." (Giving Satchmo his first steady
gig didn't hurt.)
McCusker also
offers an honest picture of the murky meanings of the term "Creole"
from one parish or one New Orleans neighborhood to another during that time. Sight-reading Creole
musicians in places like the Seventh Ward, for example, played a different
style than the Uptown players Ory identified with, despite his own mixed-race
heritage.
Creole Trombone fills a needed hole in research about one
of the period's most important bandleaders. But the story of Ory's success —
and, after his move to California in 1919, his slow movement out of the picture
until the 1940s — tells as much about the artist as it does about the
development of the music and of New Orleans as a cultural center, making it a
crucial text in the canon of Crescent City jazz history.”
You can order
copies directly from the publisher ay www.upress.state.ms/.
The following
video features Edward “Kid” Ory in performances from the concert
that took place at the Newport Jazz Festival on the evening of July 4,
1957 when Kid was
joined by Red Allen, Jack Teagarden, J.C. Higginbotham, Buster Bailey, Claude
Hopkins, Arvell Shaw and Cozy Cole.
The musical website is really good.The attached video is looking great .solo music artist photo pic picture
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