Happy Kid Ory's Birthday to those who celebrate.

https://youtu.be/Yxxg2YayTFQ

#jazz #trombone #KidOry #LouisianaCreole

Kid Ory C'est L'Autre Can Can

YouTube

One Hundred Years of the Hot Five

Exactly one hundred years ago today, on 12th November 1925, five musicians gathered in the Okeh studios in Chicago to create musical history. The band was Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five and they were about to embark on a series of recording sessions that would result in a rich treasury of 20th century music in the form of 33 sides recorded between November 1925 and December 1927.

The band (pictured above) consisted of Louis Armstrong (on cornet on this track, although he switched to trumpet by the time of the later sessions). Kid Ory played trombone Johnny Dodds Clarinet. Lil Hardin (who was married to Louis Armstrong at the time and credited as Lil Armstrong) played piano and Johnny St Cyr played banjo or guitar. For many people, the collective imagination and sheer drive of Armstrong, Dodds and Ory made them just about the perfect front line. The way they take this one out at the end is a great example.

I won’t even try to write a detailed analysis of this historic record. I’ll just make a couple of points about the Hot Fives.

First, this band never played together as such in live concerts; they were strictly a studio band. In fact, they always sounded like a bunch of friends getting together to have fun making music, which is no doubt because that’s what they were. Most of the records they made were done in a single take, too.

Second, the line-up was unusual because it didn’t have a full rhythm section. At least part of the reason for this was that, at the time, drums were very difficult to record. In Louis Armstrong’s recorded reminiscences he talks about the fact that drums would often make the needle jump when cutting a record if they were were positioned close to the recording equipment. On the other hand if they were too far away to avoid that happening then they often couldn’t be heard at all. The low-frequency response of old fashioned recording systems made bass lines largely inaudible too. Anyway, it was decided that the excellent combination of Lil Hardin’s piano and Johnny St Cyr’s banjo would provide a sufficient framwork. So they were, though later on, in May 1927, a brass bass and drums were added to create the Hot Seven who made a further 11 sides, including the all-time classic Potato Head Blues.

Finally I’ll just remark that according to Satchmo’s memoirs, this track Gut Bucket Blues was the first to be recorded. It does sound like it too, as he introduces the members of the band. I wonder if they knew at this first session what a sensation these records were going to create?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J8Tagn1MRf8

P.S. I know it’s a bit scratchy, but it’s 100 years old. It’s amazing to me that you can hear anything at all.

#GutBucketBlues #JohnnyDodds #JohnnyStCyr #KidOry #LilArmstrong #LilHardin #LouisArmstrong #LouisArmstrongAndHisHotFive

"Muskrat Ramble" is a #jazz #composition written by #KidOry in 1926. It was first recorded on February 26, 1926, by #LouisArmstrongAndHisHotFive, and became the group's most frequently recorded piece. It was paired on the flip side with another one of Armstrong's hits, "Heebie Jeebies." It was a prominent part of the #DixielandRevival repertoire in the 1930s and 1940s, and was recorded by #BobCrosby, #RoyEldridge, #LionelHampton, #WoodyHerman, #MuggsySpanier.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SUiRiXz07iA
Harry James And His Orchestra - Muskrat Ramble

YouTube
"Muskrat Ramble" is a #jazz #composition written by #KidOry in 1926. It was first recorded on February 26, 1926, by #LouisArmstrongAndHisHotFive, and became the group's most frequently recorded piece. It was paired on the flip side with another one of Armstrong's hits, "Heebie Jeebies." It was a prominent part of the #DixielandRevival repertoire in the 1930s and 1940s, and was recorded by #BobCrosby, #RoyEldridge, #LionelHampton, #WoodyHerman, #MuggsySpanier.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2EUdMqVlxk
Muskrat Ramble

YouTube

Wishing all a Happy Kid Ory's Birthday

https://youtu.be/EBJgFHFj9pY

#jazz #KidOry

SOUTH by Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band 1944

YouTube

Happy Kid Ory's Birthday to those who celebrate.

https://youtu.be/UtrjrrwrPxg?si=jaYrZzw2ZYe1kCSz

#KidOry #Jazz #25December

ORY'S CREOLE TROMBONE by Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band 1945

YouTube
Look at these fantastic photographs of Kid Ory. Now that’s personality! #jazz #KidOry

@YakyuNightOwl

Great.
Jackson Avenue, New Orleans. And that red house seen in the background? Kid Ory house, a local preservation success story.
https://acloserwalknola.com/places/edward-kid-orys-house/

https://www.fellers.se/Kid/1910_Kid_Orys_house_N_O.html

#NewOrleans #MardiGras #NOLA #KidOry

Edward “Kid” Ory’s House - New Orleans Music Map

Edward “Kid” Ory (1886-1973) lived here during the 1910s. It was near the homes of other important jazz musicians including Buddy Bolden, King Oliver, and Johnny and Baby Dodds. In the mid-1900s, Ory and King Oliver co-led a ragtime/jazz band, which was one of the most popular dance bands in the city among both white …

New Orleans Music Map

Via 1811 Kid Ory Historic House:

101 years ago later this month, King Oliver and Kid Ory play a Mardi Gras Ball....in Oakland, California.
While much of the story of great migration focuses on Chicago, California was also landing spot for migrating Southern Black people.
#1922 #jazz #KidOry #KingOliver #Oakland #MardiGras