Note: Adapted
from a post on this date in 2010
On June 9, 1924 Jelly
Roll Morton stepped into a Chicago studio
and recorded a solo piano version of Jelly Roll Blues, one of the most
important early jazz pieces. In
fact to hear Morton tell it, it was THE first jazz song and he invented
jazz. While both claims are hard to
prove, Morton was certainly on hand from the beginning and was one of the most
influential composer/arranger/pianist/band leaders in the early days.
Ferdinand
Joseph LaMothe was born in New Orleans to a common law Creole couple. No original birth certificate has ever been
found, but at various times he later listed dates of birth ranging from 1884 to
1890. September 20, 1885 is the date
most commonly accepted. In youth he took the last name Morton by Anglicizing the last name of his step
father, a man named Mouton.
By the turn
of the 20th Century he was regularly
playing popular ragtime music in Storyville, the Crescent City’s brothel district.
Another young piano player, Tony
Jackson influenced his style, as did the Spanish habanera dance style.
Morton later claimed to “invent” jazz as a distinct style from rag time
in 1902 while still a teen ager.
After the
grandmother he was living with found out that he wasn’t working in a barrel
factory, but making good money playing piano in a whore house, he was on the
streets and on his own. By 1904 he was
barnstorming the South in minstrel shows
and playing in Black barrel houses.
It was in
those years that he first composed Jelly
Roll Blues, King Porter Stomp, New Orleans Blues, and a number of
other tunes. Composed did not mean they
were written down, rather they were committed to memory and themes were
improvised on. None of the songs would
be notated for several years and lack of written proof of authorship left the
credit for some of the songs in question.
But they
were all undoubtedly in Morton’s repertoire when he came north to Chicago in 1910 and New York City the next year. In both places he was among the first to
perform blues and jazz. After touring in a vaudeville
act for two years, he returned to Chicago, already becoming a magnet for
southern Blacks and a destination for fellow New Orleans musicians.
Playing
local clubs with small bands, he began transcribing the songs he had written
earlier. In 1915 Jelly Roll Blues was published and is considered the first jazz
composition ever published. In 1917 he
played piano for bandleader William
Manuel Johnson and his sister Anita
Gonzalez when they went to Los
Angeles. While in California he also performed with
barrel house singer Bricktop. Morton spent the next few years on the west
coast, including frequent trips to Vancouver,
British Columbia where he found an appreciative audience. When not playing in clubs or touring the
vaudville circuit, he supported himself as a gambler, and quite likely, a
pimp.
Back in Chicago in 1924 he discovered that the Prohibition speakeasy era offered
plenty of employment. That year he began
cutting player piano rolls of his
music and recorded a handful of records, including Jelly Roll Blues. In 1926 he
signed with Victor and assembled a
band of New Orleans greats including Kid
Ory, Omer Simeon, George Mitchell, Johnny St. Cyr, Barney Bigard, Johnny Dodds,
and Baby Dodds. The Victor sessions of Jelly
Roll Morton & His Red Hot Chile Peppers are considered along with
recordings by King Oliver and Louis Armstrong the finest example of
the New Orleans/Chicago jazz sound.
After marrying a local show girl, Mabel Bertrand, in 1926, Morton moved to New York where he continued to record
for Victor as a single, with a trio, and with pickup bands. Without the core of solid New Orleans sidemen
the quality of the band recordings fell off and failed to produce hits,
although his solo and trio work still sold well. Morton’s contract with Victor was not renewed
when the Depression collapsed the
market for phonograph records.
He worked
briefly in radio but was soon forced to tour on the low prestige burlesque circuit while younger
musicians like Fletcher Henderson and
Benny Goodman made hits of his
songs, many of which were unprotected by copyright or were considered to have
no indefinable composer.
In 1934
Morton and his wife moved to segregated Washington,
D.C. to become manager and house musician of a local club known variously as the Music
Box, Blue Moon Inn and Jungle Inn.
During his
residency at this club he was “discovered” by Smithsonian folklorist Alan Lomax who eventually recorded hours
of performances and recollections.
Because he recounted his Storyville days in full and vivid detail, the recollections
could not be released until the later years of the century, although Lomax drew
on them for his 1950 book Mister
Jelly Roll.
In 1938
Morton was stabbed and seriously injured in a fight at the club. Refused treatment at a near-by Whites-only hospital,
he suffered infections in the poorly equipped segregated hospital where he was
finally treated. His health never fully
recovered.
At Mabel’s
insistence the couple got out of the dangerous D.C. club and returned to New
York. Morton was hospitalized there for
severe asthma but he was writing and arranging.
In 1940 he
was in Los Angeles with his new material trying to put together a big band to
re-start his career when he died of asthma and complications of his old
injuries on July 10, 1941.
Morton’s
piano style influenced generations, particularly of practitioners of the boogie-woogie style. He was an original “roots” inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. In 1992 his memory got a boost with the
opening of Jelly’s Last Jam on Broadway
staring Gregory Hines and Savion Glover as the older and younger
Morton.
Today Jelly
Roll Morton is considered an almost mythic figure in the saga of American music.
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