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Jelly Roll Morton on Luis Russell (Library of Congress Recordings, 1938) 

Christopher Fonda
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TRANSCRIPTION FOLLOWING THESE REMARKS.....
I am posting this because I want to know if anyone can identify the clacking percussion instrument in this recording. I also found it pretty interesting and entertaining. Morton's opinions are his own and I offer my apologies to Luis Russell's followers (including his daughter, singer Catherine Russell.) Trust me, Luis Russell COULD play jazz. Now for the transcription...
A. Lomax: ….Play it like you played it.
JRM: All right....(unintelligible)....it goes like this.....
This is one of the tunes...
(listening to the sound of the clacking percussion instrument) That sounds like a drum... (laughs)
Uh, this is one of the tunes that … Luis Russell played...
Luis Russel was a Panamanian. He got his learning....in New Orleans.
AL: When?
JRM: Uh, he came to New Orleans...I'm not quite sure, but....I would say....around 1916.
'Course these are all New Orleans riffs....
(speaking of the riffs he is playing) ...making 'em there....that's the way we used to make 'em there....
AL: (Unintelligible, but serving to prompt JRM to state the title to the song.)
JRM: Uh, the name of this number is “Call of the Freaks.”
Luis Russell came to New York some years ago after playing with King Oliver's band from the Plantation....in Chicago....(clearing throat) Ahem!......That whiskey is lovely!.....
They invaded New York with a terrible band in spite of the fact that they had some..some of the very best musicians in the world....in the Jazz music.
Luis Russell is not considered a jazz piano player because he cannot play jazz.....
I'm playing this in the typical jazz tempo.....
But he's a very good musician...and he can 'knock the bird's eyes down!'....
He invaded New York with this thing and happened to get a job after King Oliver...
had failed with these great musicians....and had to leave town.....(he even stole a few men of mine when he left for Chicago.)
(Continuing to speak about Oliver...) He didn't know that it was better to have some..some fellows that could play together than to have a bunch of 'stars' that couldn't. So he failed and his trip to New York at the Savoy Ballroom----
Luis Stayed. Finally got a job at a place in New York called 'The Nest'....run by...Johnny Carey.
He wrote this number as a kind of theme and named it.....
AL: (unintelligible, but digging for gossip about Russell's sexual orientation...)
JRM: No. No, Luis Russell is not a sissy....
He wrote this number and called it 'Call of the Freaks' accounting there were so many freaks in the city of New York who were so bold, they would do anything for a dollar-and-a-half. (Laughter)
When he start to playin' this thing....why, they would start walkin'.....they all becomes in order, too.... and throw their hands way up high in the air and keep astride of the music.....and walkin'...

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15 май 2015

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Комментарии : 26   
@kimpeter9253
@kimpeter9253 3 года назад
"When he sang he kept time by stomping on the hard floor, every sound overamplified by a cheap crystal microphone on a metal stand." (Liner notes ´John Szwed´ Rounder 8cd-box 11661-1888-2 BK01)
@odietamo9376
@odietamo9376 2 года назад
Thank you for posting this. It is an absolute treasure. I am crazy about Luis Russell and his music. I’m trying to learn more about him. I also love Jelly Roll, but at least I’ve known about him for a long time, whereas I just stumbled onto Russell a few days ago. It’s tempting to think I was born at the wrong time. I effortlessly connect with this music, but almost nothing produced today has such an effect on me.
@VoxRox
@VoxRox Год назад
Thankfully, there is a huge legacy of recorded music from the jazz and swing era to explore! Happy hunting, Odi!
@spencerchampan
@spencerchampan 5 лет назад
his foot and the metronome possibly... since the knock isn't always perfectly the same on time... Sometimes, it kind of hits one after another but still in the pocket... Think of when you snap your fingers at the same time over and over again. sometimes they are close, but not exact same time, and it makes a fatter sound. It reminds me remotely of the way that clicking sound comes through the speakers.
@VoxRox
@VoxRox 5 лет назад
Thank you, Spents, for a very thoughtful and interesting comment. I love playing around with metronomes (especially mechanical clock-work metronomes) but I never thought of "fattening" the sound with foot stomps or the like. I am definitely going to try out your suggestion. Cheers!
@spencerchampan
@spencerchampan 5 лет назад
Cheers! I show people Jelly Roll all the time, very few appreciate him. But when I play some new chords on the guitar and sing his songs the same, all of the sudden it can become their favorite songs. I am on a mission to do Jelly Roll covers in some fashion today. I think it can be done extremely well, so let me know if you have any favorite songs or ideas! @@VoxRox
@VoxRox
@VoxRox 5 лет назад
I love that whole thing about Mamie Desdunes and how he plays Mamie's Blues (2:19 Blues) off of these Library of Congress recordings. That is my absolute favorite. After that, it is the famous recordings of Sidewalk Blues, Dead Man Blues, Mr. Jelly Lord, and The Crave. I hope I can get to listen to whatever you come up with!
@spencerchampan
@spencerchampan 5 лет назад
I came up with a new way to play the murder ballad 2 nights ago on the guitar... Rather interesting and fun. I'll refine it for a bit and share it on IG or youtube, I'll let you know! My favorites are Make me a pallet, Hesitation blues, pretty baby, animule dance, murder ballad, Spanish swat, and of course the rest. He also played this sweet jazz blues and narrated how no one knows what jazz really is or something to that effect.. I loved how he was humble and cocky at the same time. I heard Duke Ellington once said he played piano poorly. But I never liked anything Duke did as much as Jelly. @@VoxRox
@warrendoris9669
@warrendoris9669 9 месяцев назад
This guy is for sure a genius. He tell a gr😊eat story,on top of all that piano playing and singing.
@VoxRox
@VoxRox 9 месяцев назад
Yep. He has the perfect stride. Ciao!
@Pentagonshark666
@Pentagonshark666 Год назад
Ol Jelly Roll - Y
@VoxRox
@VoxRox Год назад
Ah! Mr. Jelly!
@VoxRox
@VoxRox 8 лет назад
I am still trolling for ideas on what makes the clacking sound. Anyone?
@RagtimeIrvin
@RagtimeIrvin 8 лет назад
it's his foot making that sound.. he talks about on jelly roll blues.
@lesterwyoung
@lesterwyoung 6 лет назад
His foot.
@jmart4721
@jmart4721 7 лет назад
Metronome
@VoxRox
@VoxRox 7 лет назад
That would be great, jmart47, but could you tell me where I can find a metronome that sounds that fat? I can only find ones that click or beep.
@maxkeenlyside
@maxkeenlyside 7 лет назад
Definitely not a metronome. Jelly Roll famously tapped his right foot, which he makes reference to on several occasions in the LoC sessions. You'll find that most New Orleans musicians of that era did.
@VoxRox
@VoxRox 7 лет назад
Most people agree with you, Max. A friend of mine attributes the extra fat clacking sound to the placement of the microphone and recorder. You all are probably right and it is his foot, but I have always wanted to believe there was a special percussion instrument to get that sound. I like it so much (and I can't say why) and want to reproduce it for myself.
@davidcavalari226
@davidcavalari226 День назад
If you listen to his performance of Jelly Roll Blues in the LOC recordings, after he sings he says "That's my foot that you hear there."
@thardingau
@thardingau 6 лет назад
Yes, it's a metronome, but I have never understood the purpose of it on this recordings. It is annoying and distracting.
@rhythmfield
@rhythmfield 2 года назад
I don’t think it’s a metronome - it’s just very straight persistent foot taps amplified by a microphone - I believe that to be the case, because it stops exactly when he wants it to at the end, but picks up again… This guy just has a nearly perfect beat. … or so I believe.
@davidcavalari226
@davidcavalari226 День назад
No, it's not. Listen to the LOC recording of Jelly Roll Blues and you will hear Jelly Roll Morton himself say "that's my foot that you hear there" right after he stops singing
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