West End Blues

"West End Blues"
Twelve-bar blues by Joe "King" Oliver
Released 1928 (1928)
Recorded June 11, 1928 (1928-06-11)
Genre Jazz
Label Brunswick
Composer(s) Joe "King" Oliver

"West End Blues" is a multi-strain twelve-bar blues composition by Joe "King" Oliver. It is most commonly performed as an instrumental, although it has lyrics added by Clarence Williams.

King Oliver and his Dixie Syncopators made the first recording for Brunswick Records on June 11, 1928.[1] Clarence Williams later added lyrics to the instrumental tune. He recorded the song several times in 1928, first with vocals Ethel Waters, then with Hazel Smith (with King Oliver playing trumpet),[2] then again with Katherine Henderson.[3]

The "West End" of the title refers to the westernmost point of Lake Pontchartrain in Orleans Parish, Louisiana. In its heyday, it was a thriving summer resort with live music, dance pavilions, seafood restaurants, and lake bathing.

Louis Armstrong's recording

"West End Blues"
Twelve-bar blues by Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five
Released 1928 (1928)
Recorded June 28, 1928 (1928-06-28)
Genre Traditional jazz, blues[4]
Label Okeh
Composer(s) Joe "King" Oliver

By far the best known recording of "West End Blues" is the 3-minute-plus, 78 RPM recording made by Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five on 28 June 1928.

Armstrong plays trumpet and sings, backed by a band including pianist Earl Hines, clarinetist Jimmy Strong and drummer Zutty Singleton. Armstrong's unaccompanied opening cadenza is considered to be one of the defining moments of early jazz, incorporating a rhythmic freedom that anticipated many later musical developments.[5] Also notable is Armstrong's scat vocal chorus (in a duet with clarinetist Strong), and a piano solo by Hines. The final chorus is dominated by a four bar (12 second) long high Bb note played by Armstrong. The number is closed by a metallic click by drummer Zutty Singleton.

This recording was inducted in the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1979.[6]

King Oliver's Recordings

Joe "King" Oliver wrote West End Blues, and was the first to record it on June 11, 1928, with his band The Dixie Syncopators.[1] This recording established the basic form of the song that Armstrong's later recording followed.[2] On January 16, 1929 Oliver recorded the song again, borrowing from the Hot Five arrangement, though at a quicker tempo. The opening trumpet cadenza (based heavily on Armstrong's 1928 recording) has frequently been incorrectly credited to Oliver, but was in fact played by trumpeter Louis Metcalf.[2] Pianist Luis Russel also takes a solo, in turn basing it on Earl Hines' solo from the Hot Five recording.

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 Laird, Ross. Brunswick Records: A Discography of Recordings, 1916-1931, Greenwood Press (2001), p. 592. ISBN 0-313-30208-1
  2. 1 2 3 Riccardi, Ricky (June 28, 2012). "84 Years of West End Blues". The Wonderful World of Louis Armstrong.
  3. "Blues Influence". Facebook.com. Retrieved 2014-09-13.
  4. Feather, Leonard (August 21, 1987). From Satchmo to Miles. Da Capo Press. p. 40. ISBN 030680302X.
  5. Schuller, Gunther (1968). Early Jazz: Its Roots And Musical Development. Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195040432.
  6. "GRAMMY Hall Of Fame History". GRAMMY.org. 1974-03-02. Retrieved 2016-10-30.
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