
JULY 10

Jelly Roll Morton
Born October 20, 1890, New Orleans, Lousiana
Died July 10, 1941, Los Angeles, California
American jazz composer and pianist
Jell Roll
Morton
byname of Ferdinand Joseph La Menthe
American jazz composer and pianist who pioneered
the use of prearranged, semiorchestrated effects
in jazz-band performances.
Morton learned the piano as a child and from 1902
was a professional pianist in the bordellos of
the Storyville district of New Orleans. He was
one of the pioneer ragtime piano players, but he
would later invite scorn by claiming to have
invented jazz in 1902. He was,
nevertheless, an important innovator in the
transition from early jazz to orchestral jazz
that took place in New Orleans about the turn of
the century. About 1917 he moved west to
California, where he played in nightclubs until
1922. He made his recording debut in 1923, and
from 1926 to 1930 he made, with a group called
Morton's Red Hot Peppers, a series of recordings
that gained him a national reputation. Morton's
music was more formal than the early Dixieland
jazz, though his arrangements only sketched parts
and allowed for improvisation. By the early
1930s, Morton's fame had been overshadowed by
that of Louis Armstrong and other emerging
innovators.
As a jazz composer, Morton is best remembered for
such pieces as Black Bottom Stomp,
King Porter Stomp, Shoe
Shiner's Drag, and Dead Man
Blues.
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