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Smokestack Lightnin' Home Page -- The Blues Profile Page
Jelly
Roll Morton was the first great composer and piano player of Jazz.
He was a talented arranger who wrote special scores that took advantage of
the three-minute limitations of the 78 rpm records. But more than all these
things, he was a real character whose spirit shines brightly through
history, like his diamond studded smile. As a teenager Jelly Roll Morton
worked in The Whorehouses of Storyville as a piano player. From 1904 to 1917
Jelly Roll rambled around the South. He worked as a gambler, pool shark,
pimp, vaudeville comedian and as a pianist. He was an important transitional
figure between ragtime and jazz piano styles. He played on the West Coast
from 1917 to 1922 and then moved to Chicago and where he hit his stride.
Morton's 1923 and 1924 recordings of piano solos for the Gennett label were
very popular and influential. He formed the band the Red Hot Peppers and
made a series of classic records for Victor. The recordings he made in
Chicago featured some of the best New Orleans sidemen like Kid Ory, Barney
Bigard, Johnny Dodds, Johnny St. Cyr and
Baby Dodds. Morton relocated to New York in 1928 and continued to record for
Victor until 1930. His New York version of The Red Hot Peppers featured
sidemen like Bubber Miley, Pops Foster and Zutty Singleton. Like so many of
the Hot Jazz musicians, the Depression was hard on Jelly Roll. Hot Jazz was
out of style. The public preferred the smoother sounds of the big bands. He
fell upon hard times after 1930 and even lost the diamond he had in his
front tooth, but ended up playing piano in a dive bar in Washington D.C. In
1938 Alan Lomax recorded him in for series of interviews about early Jazz
for the Library of Congress, but it wasn't until a decade later that these
interviews were released to the public. Jelly Roll died just before the
Dixieland revival rescued so many of his peers from musical obscurity. He
blamed his declining health on a voodoo spell.
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