Description of New Orleans & Early Jazz
This category groups together the various styles of jazz that predominated from its birth around the start of the twentieth century through the rise of Swing in the 1930s. Included here are the New Orleans- and Chicago-bred "hot jazz" group sounds pioneered by musicians such as cornetist King Oliver and pianist/composer Jelly Roll Morton; the Stride piano stylings developed in 1910s New York by the likes of James P. Johnson; and the classically influenced orchestral jazz of bandleader Paul Whiteman. Also included here are post-Swing musicians who sought to revive earlier styles (Dixieland artists such as clarinetist George Lewis, who was most popular in the '50s) or, in the case of more recent groups such as the Dirty Dozen, update those styles by merging early brass band traditions with modern Funk and R&B rhythms.
Top New Orleans & Early Jazz Tracks
New Orleans & Early Jazz Key Albums
Jazz
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New Orleans & Early Jazz
New Orleans & Early Jazz Key Artists
Fats Waller
Fats Waller's unparalleled
piano playing influenced
generations of pianists and
his comedic demeanor is a
delight even today.
Fletcher Henderson
Not only did Henderson
lead the first great big band,
he also helped define the
sound of the Swing era.
Henderson's band includ...
Hoagy Carmichael
This legendary American
pop and jazz
singer-songwriter often
performed with a
comfortable, lazy demean...
Jelly Roll Morton
Although many beg to
differ, the legendary New
Orleans pianist considered
himself the inventor of jazz.
Morton angered his respe...
Louis Armstrong
Ladies and gentlemen, jazz
and pop music starts right
here with Mr. Louis
Armstrong, the crown
prince of American music...
Sidney Bechet
This New Orleans sax player
and clarinetist cut the first
significant jazz solos in
recorded history. He was
born in 1897.