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  2. Jelly Roll Morton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jelly_Roll_Morton

    Jelly Roll Morton - Tiger Rag Morton claimed to have written "Jelly Roll Blues" in 1905. Morton was born Ferdinand Joseph LaMothe (or Lemott), into the Creole community [ 9 ] in the Faubourg Marigny neighborhood of New Orleans around 1890; he claimed to have been born in 1884 on his WWI draft registration card in 1918.

  3. Red Hot Peppers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Hot_Peppers

    The Red Hot Peppers were a recording jazz band led by Jelly Roll Morton from 1926–1930. They were a seven- or eight-piece band formed in Chicago which recorded for Victor and featured some of the best New Orleans-style freelance musicians available, including cornetist George Mitchell, trombonist Kid Ory, clarinetists Omer Simeon and Johnny Dodds, banjoists Johnny St. Cyr and Bud Scott ...

  4. Jelly Roll Blues - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jelly_Roll_Blues

    "Original Jelly Roll Blues", usually shortened to and known as "Jelly Roll Blues", is an early jazz fox-trot composed by Jelly Roll Morton. He recorded it first as a piano solo in Richmond, Indiana, in 1924, and then with his Red Hot Peppers in Chicago two years later, titled as it was originally copyrighted: "Original Jelly-Roll Blues".

  5. Jelly's Last Jam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jelly's_Last_Jam

    Jelly's Last Jam is a musical with a book by George C. Wolfe, lyrics by Susan Birkenhead, and music by Jelly Roll Morton and Luther Henderson.Based on the life and career of Ferdinand Joseph LaMothe, known as Jelly Roll Morton and generally regarded as one of the primary driving forces behind the introduction of jazz to the American public in the early 20th century, it also serves as a social ...

  6. Jelly Roll Morton: The Complete Library of Congress Recordings

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jelly_Roll_Morton:_The...

    In 1938, noted musicologist and Morton biographer Alan Lomax conducted a series of interviews with Morton at the Library of Congress. [1] Richard Cook and Brian Morton describe these recordings as Jelly Roll Morton's "virtual history of the birth pangs of jazz as it happened in the New Orleans of the turn of the century.

  7. Black Bottom Stomp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_Bottom_Stomp

    John Szwed notes that in "Black Bottom Stomp," "Morton practiced what he preached, managing to incorporate in one short piece the 'Spanish tinge,' stomps, breaks, stoptime, backbeat, two-beat, four-beat, a complete suspension of the rhythm section during the piano solo, riffs, rich variations of melody, and dynamics of volume, all of the elements of jazz as he understood it."

  8. Morton vs. Diamond Crystal Kosher Salt: What’s the Difference?

    www.aol.com/morton-vs-diamond-crystal-kosher...

    Morton kosher salt is relatively coarse, and is made by rolling cubes into flakes that have a distinctly square-ish shape. Produced since 1886 in St. Clair, Michigan, Diamond Crystal Kosher Salt ...

  9. General Records - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Records

    The most notable General Records releases were piano solos by Jelly Roll Morton.General Records 4001–4005 were reissued by Commodore Records in August 1946 in a set titled New Orleans Memories.