
Arnett Nelson aka King Mutt: An ‘Unknown’ Clarinet Player
Arnett T. Nelson was born March 3, 1892, in Ellisville, Mississippi, and grew up in Laurel, Mississippi (142 miles northeast of New Orleans, LA). According

Adelaide Hall’s secret visit to Billie Holiday’s bedside before her death.
A little-known fact in the Billie Holiday death saga is that jazz singer Adelaide Hall made a personal visit to Billie’s bedside at the Metropolitan

From the Back to the Front: ‘Sophisticated Lady’ Jeanette Kimball
If there’s one thing my Sherrie Tucker-inspired scribblings—to which I collectively refer as “my forgotten ladies”—have revealed, it’s that behind many of history’s greatest jazzmen

Rhythm in the Rocks
“I submit that there is nothing that anybody in the world has ever done that is more civilized or sophisticated than to dance elegantly, which

Remembering Burt Bales 1916-1989
In 1966, while visiting a friend in San Diego, our conversation turned to my obsession with traditional jazz. My friend said, “I think my dad

Unearthing and Restoring One Step to Chicago: The Never-Before-Heard Album from Legendary Producer George Avakian
Whenever some new discovery of historical interest is made, it always fascinates me to think that the newly uncovered thing was really there all along.

Verna Burrichter: Breaking the Glass Ceiling at the Bix Society
Hal Smith: Recently, fellow columnist Jeff Barnhart suggested the idea of an article about Verna Burrichter. Verna was a volunteer at the Bix Jazz Fest;

GoFundMe set up for Ken Peplowski
Legends come and legends go. While they walk amongst us, when we have an opportunity to show our gratitude we should strongly consider doing so.

Hot Jazz Jubilee Cancelled due to Hotel Renovations
The Board and Co-Directors of the 2022 Hot Jazz Jubilee are devastated to report that we have been forced to cancel the upcoming festival over

Jazz Diva Laurel Massé Celebrates 50 Years in Music
This year marks the 50th anniversary of a fateful cab ride in New York, during which a 20-year-old waitress named Laurel Massé got to chatting

The New York Classic Seven Make Swiss Time
It may have been the traditional jazz equivalent of a happy accident. The New Orleans jazz band Tuba Skinny couldn’t make its date for Switzerland’s

Pianist Donald Ryan: Versatility in Rhythm
I first saw, but did not meet personally, versatile pianist Donald Ryan at the 2019 West Coast Ragtime Festival. When I learned he was appearing

Texas Shout #22 Christmas Records
Set forth below is most of the twenty-second “Texas Shout” column. It first appeared in the October 1991 issue of the West Coast Rag, (now Syncopated

Texas Shouts #19-21: Chicago Style Dixieland
Set forth below are the combined 19th-21st “Texas Shout” columns. This three-part essay appeared in the July, August, and September 1991 issues of the West Coast

Texas Shout #71 Major Labels
Set forth below is the seventy-first “Texas Shout” column. It first appeared in the April 1996 issue of TAR. The text has not been updated

From The 2022 Glenn Miller Festival
On the second weekend in June I attended for the first time the Glenn Miller Festival in Clarinda, Iowa, his birthplace, an event that has

From the 2022 Scott Joplin Ragtime Festival
The weather gods smiled on this year’s Scott Joplin Ragtime Festival on June 1-4 in Sedalia, Missouri. After a cold front dumped 2.9 inches of

From the 2022 Charles Templeton Ragtime and Jazz Festival
I made my first visit to the Charles Templeton Ragtime and Jazz Festival on the last weekend in March at Mississippi State University in Starkville.

Magnolia Stroll • A Compilation Of Original Works by Tuba Skinny

Lester’s Blues • Blue Label: Radio Rhythm

Eyal Vilner Big Band • The Jam

Danny Jonokuchi & The Revisionists • Together Again

The Chicago Cellar Boys • Busy ’Til Eleven

New Chris Barber 6 CD Box Set Includes 105 Unreleased Tracks

Bob Wallis & the Storyville Jazzmen • Live in Leipzig: 1976

The Eighty-Seven Years Of Doc Cheatham

Crazy Rhythm: My Journey from Brooklyn, Jazz and Wall Street to Nixon’s White House and Beyond…

Life Through The Eyes Of A Jazz Journalist: My Jazz Memoirs by Scott Yanow

New Orleans Music Observed: The Art of Noel Rockmore and Emilie Rhys

Life Through The Eyes of a Jazz Journalist: My Jazz Memoirs by Scott Yanow

Bing Crosby: Jazz Singer
In his career, Bing Crosby showed that he could sing practically everything other than opera. Whether it was classic American pop tunes, traditional Irish songs,

Profiles in Jazz: Charlie Barnet
When one thinks of the top swing era bandleaders, the names of Benny Goodman, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Tommy Dorsey, Glenn Miller, and Harry James

Stuff Smith: Profiles in Jazz
The violin was part of some of the earliest jazz bands in New Orleans but it was not taken seriously as a solo instrument in

Late Summer Events in New Orleans
From French Quarter Festivals and Offbeat Magazine: Satchmo SummerFest presented by Chevron returns for two full days of music, food and celebration! Every year we

Hot Jazz in the Hot (but Dry) Desert
Starting the summer back in Arizona, the May meeting of the Arizona Classic Jazz Society in Chandler, Arizona, featured Cheryl Thurston’s annual birthday party celebration

How Lucky Can One Gal Be?
The long awaited New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival did take place beginning April 29th through May 8th and delivered all that was promised! We

Bix: “Ain’t None Of Them Play Like Him Yet!” (1981) on DVD
It would be impossible to put together a documentary on the brilliant cornetist Bix Beiderbecke today without relying exclusively on third-hand accounts. Since Bix passed

Catherine Russell, Marcus Roberts Celebrate Ellington at Carnegie
For the first time since 2020, now able to return to Carnegie Hall after the long pandemic “intermission,” the American Symphony Orchestra conducted by Leon

The Adrian Cunningham Trio Swings at Shanghai Jazz
For almost 30 years Shanghai Jazz in Madison New Jersey has been sought out by both musicians and fans of various jazz styles. Tom Donohoe

Len Spencer Goes on Tour
In 1899, recording artist Len Spencer decided to make a bold move: take his small group of phonograph friends on tour in a minstrel troupe.

New York City Trip Wrap-Up
Even with all the adventures I had in NYC, as described in the previous three articles, there are still a few things I have not

Long Island Haunts of the Hagers
Perhaps the most memorable part of my New York trip was spending two days with the descendants of Fred and Jimmy Hager. On the second

What’s in a Name?
In general, artistic “titles” such as actor, dancer, painter, potter can have a set of preconceived notions or stereotypes that go along with them. I

Chick Singer Jokes and Other Clichés
Oh, the chick singer jokes…..“if they ask me I could write a book.” From day one I was educated about how to avoid being the

The Woman Behind the Iron Curtain
I had an enlightening summer in the mid ’90s. I met a lifelong friend, was employed with work I loved, and had a unique experience

Ada Leonard Part Two, 1943-55 and The Sharon Rogers Band Overseas, 1945-46
The all-female Big Band of Ada Leonard (see Part 1) was the best-known of around 100 “all-girl” Swing orchestras playing for the troops during WWII.

Ada Leonard and the All-American Girl Orchestra, Part One 1940-43
Bandleader Ada Leonard was a dancer, singer and show business professional who led the first all-female Swing orchestra touring Army training camps during WWII filling

The Real Billie Holiday, Part Three – 1950s
Billie Holiday (Eleanora Fagan, 1915-59) continued a busy schedule of recordings, concerts, radio broadcasts, television appearances and international tours in the 1950s. Publication of her

Jerry Lewis
As a musician, over the years, we occasionally have the opportunity to play with some giants or the industry. And about a decade ago, I

How to Impress Your Date with Modern Jazz
So you’ve just met that special someone, but you’re worried they might be a little “out of your league.” You’ve taken them on a few

The Age We Live In
After many years touring in the US, playing traditional jazz festivals, cruises and what have you, there’s an unavoidable truth that we’ll have to address

Goat Glands, Border Blasters, and the Carter Family
As a child in 1949, I had a routine of surreptitiously going into the living room after everyone was asleep to listen to late night

Show Business Neighbors
When Joe Bebco forwarded an inquiry about Max Morath from Anne Phillips recently, I anxiously responded. Anne and her husband, bassist Bill Phillips, were neighbors

Sheet Music Orgy
Have you ever immersed yourself in a trivial pursuit while important tasks needed your immediate attention? Well, a friend recently added six inches of sheet

Iowa Bandleader Kenny Paulsen has died
Davenport Iowa based bandleader Kenneth R. “Kenny” Paulsen passed away on July 10th, he was 82. He had a career in law enforcement, working for

San Francisco Mourns Jazz Legend Pat Yankee, 94
The jazz community lost a true legend with the passing of vocalist-bandleader Pat Yankee on Memorial Day, May 30, at the age of 94. The

Clarinetist and Bandleader Skip Parsons has died
Clarinetist and bandleader George “Skip” Parsons, died April 21, following a stroke. He was 86. For 66 years, Skip Parsons’ Riverboat Jazz Band reigned as