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Home Jazz Ultimate Jazz Archive The Ultimate Jazz Archive CD10 - Louis Armstrong [1926-1931]

The Ultimate Jazz Archive CD10 - Louis Armstrong [1926-1931]

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The Ultimate Jazz Archive CD 10 - Louis Armstrong [1926-1931] [2005]

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01.Cornet Chop Suey
02.Don’t Forget To Mess Around
03.Skid-Dat-De-Dat
04.Twefth Street Rag
05.Struttin’ With Some Barbecue
06.Wild Man Blues
07.Fireworks
08.A Monday Date
09.West End Blues
10.Basin Street Blues
11.Weather Bird
12.Mahagony Hall Stomp
13.(What Did I Do To Be So) Black And Blue
14.Dear Old Southland
15.Dinah
16.If I Could Be With You One Hour Tonight
17.Tiger Rag
18.Them There Eyes
19.Shine
20.Lazy River
21.Star Dust

 

Louis Armstrong (1901-1971) was a trumpet player, singer, and bandleader, and is widely regarded as one of the most influential artists in the history of jazz.

Armstrong was born and brought up in New Orleans, a culturally diverse town with a unique musical mix of creole, ragtime, marching bands, and blues. Although from an early age he was able to play music professionally, he didn’t travel far from New Orleans until 1922, when he went to Chicago to join his mentor, King Oliver. Oliver’s band played primitive jazz, a hotter style of ragtime, with looser rhythms and more improvisation, and Armstrong’s role was mostly backing. Slow to promote himself, he was eventually persuaded by his wife Lil Hardin to leave Oliver, and In 1924 he went to New York to join the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra. At the time, there were a few other artists using the rhythmic innovations of the New Orleans style, but none did it with the energy and brilliance of Armstrong, and he quickly became a sensation among New York musicians. Back in Chicago in 1925, he made his first recordings with his own group, Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five, and these became not only popular hits but also models for the first generation of jazz musicians, trumpeters or otherwise.

Other hits followed through the twenties and thirties, as well as troubles: crooked managers, lip injuries, mob entanglements, failed big-band ventures. As jazz styles changed, though, musical purists never lost any respect for him — although they were sometimes irritated by his hammy onstage persona. Around the late forties, with the help of a good manager, Armstrong’s business affairs finally stablilized, and he began to be seen as an elder statesman of American popular entertainment, appearing in Hollywood films, touring Asia and Europe, and dislodging The Beatles from the number-one position with Hello Dolly”. Today many people may know him as a singer (a good one), but as Miles Davis said: “You can’t play nothing on modern trumpet that doesn’t come from him.”

The 62-year-old Armstrong became the oldest act to top the US charts when “Hello Dolly” reached #1 in 1964. Four years later Satchmo also became the oldest artist to record a UK #1, when “What a Wonderful World” hit the top spot. ---last.fm

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Last Updated (Wednesday, 06 February 2013 15:08)

 

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