Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Creole Song 00:00 Tools
Muskrat Ramble 00:00 Tools
Savoy Blues 00:00 Tools
Royal Garden Blues 00:00 Tools
Loveless Love 00:00 Tools
At a Georgia Camp Meeting 00:00 Tools
Careless Love 00:00 Tools
Maryland, My Maryland 00:00 Tools
Get Out Of Here 00:00 Tools
Eh, La Bas 00:00 Tools
Under The Bamboo Tree 00:00 Tools
Shake That Thing 00:00 Tools
Basin Street Blues 00:00 Tools
Four Or Five Times 00:00 Tools
Blues For Jimmy 00:00 Tools
Ballin' The Jack 00:00 Tools
St. James Infirmary 00:00 Tools
South 00:00 Tools
Yellow Dog Blues 00:00 Tools
When The Saints Go Marching In 00:00 Tools
Maple Leaf Rag 00:00 Tools
1919 Rag 00:00 Tools
Panama 00:00 Tools
Mahogany Hall Stomp 00:00 Tools
Tiger Rag 00:00 Tools
Ory's Creole Trombone 00:00 Tools
Aunt Hagar's Blues 00:00 Tools
Do What Ory Say 00:00 Tools
Down Home Rag 00:00 Tools
Maryland My Marieland 00:00 Tools
Mississippi Mud 00:00 Tools
Shine 00:00 Tools
Milenberg Joys 00:00 Tools
Blues For Jimmy Noone 00:00 Tools
South Rampart Street Parade 00:00 Tools
Blues For Jimmie Noone 00:00 Tools
I Found a New Baby 00:00 Tools
Clarinet Marmalade 00:00 Tools
Original Dixieland One Step 00:00 Tools
Birth Of The Blues 00:00 Tools
Tin Roof Blues 00:00 Tools
A Good Man Is Hard To Find 00:00 Tools
The Girls Go Crazy 00:00 Tools
How Come You Do Me Like You Do 00:00 Tools
Weary Blues 00:00 Tools
Dippermouth Blues 00:00 Tools
Snag It 00:00 Tools
Wang Wang Blues 00:00 Tools
Bill Bailey 00:00 Tools
Oh! Didn't He Ramble 00:00 Tools
Creole Love Call 00:00 Tools
High Society 00:00 Tools
A Closer Walk With Thee 00:00 Tools
There'll Be Some Changes Made 00:00 Tools
Yacka Hula Hickey Dula 00:00 Tools
Copenhagen 00:00 Tools
The Girls Go Crazy About the Way I Walk 00:00 Tools
Indiana 00:00 Tools
Original Dixieland One-Step 00:00 Tools
Gettysburg March 00:00 Tools
'Fore Day Creep 00:00 Tools
Wolverine Blues 00:00 Tools
Blanche Touquatoux 00:00 Tools
Oh Didn't He Ramble 00:00 Tools
At the Jazz Band Ball 00:00 Tools
Mecca Flat Blues 00:00 Tools
Down-Hearted Blues 00:00 Tools
Toot, Toot, Tootsie! 00:00 Tools
Sugar Blues 00:00 Tools
Go Back Where You Stayed Last Night 00:00 Tools
Bourbon Street Parade 00:00 Tools
That's a Plenty 00:00 Tools
Good Time Flat Blues 00:00 Tools
Sugar Foot Stomp 00:00 Tools
The Glory Of Love 00:00 Tools
See See Rider 00:00 Tools
Make Me a Pallet on the Floor 00:00 Tools
By and By 00:00 Tools
Come Back Sweet Papa/ Kid Roy's Creole Jazzband 00:00 Tools
Beale Street Blues 00:00 Tools
Panamá 00:00 Tools
Nobody Knows You When You're Down And Out 00:00 Tools
Wabash Blues 00:00 Tools
The World Is Waiting For The Sunrise 00:00 Tools
Creole Bo Bo 00:00 Tools
Eh! La-Bas 00:00 Tools
Memphis Blues 00:00 Tools
Honeysuckle Rose 00:00 Tools
Oh, Didn't He Ramble 00:00 Tools
The World's Jazz Crazy 00:00 Tools
High Society (#1) 00:00 Tools
High Society (#2) 00:00 Tools
All the Girls Go Crazy 00:00 Tools
Jazz Me Blues 00:00 Tools
Oh Lady Be Good 00:00 Tools
Gatemouth 00:00 Tools
Down In Jungle Town 00:00 Tools
1919 00:00 Tools
Washington And Lee Swing 00:00 Tools
12Th Street Rag 00:00 Tools
Come Back Sweet Papa 00:00 Tools
Maryland My Maryland 00:00 Tools
Blues For Jimmy- 00:00 Tools
Papa Dip 00:00 Tools
Creole Song- 00:00 Tools
Bugle Call Rag 00:00 Tools
Tailgate Ramble 00:00 Tools
St. Louis Blues 00:00 Tools
Come Bck Sweet Papa 00:00 Tools
BUCKET GOT A HOLE IN IT 00:00 Tools
High Society - #2 00:00 Tools
Blues for Jimmie 00:00 Tools
Mood Indigo 00:00 Tools
High Society - #1 00:00 Tools
Panama Rag 00:00 Tools
Darktown Strutters Ball 00:00 Tools
Original Dixie one Step 00:00 Tools
Bill Bailey Won't You Please Come Home 00:00 Tools
st louis blues 00:00 Tools
Canal Street Blues 00:00 Tools
Get Out Of Here- 00:00 Tools
Joshua Fit de Battle of Jericho 00:00 Tools
Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home 00:00 Tools
Milneberg Joys 00:00 Tools
How Come You Do Me Like You Do? 00:00 Tools
29th And Dearborn 00:00 Tools
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"Father of Dixieland Jazz." La Place, LA born multi-instrumentalist, Edward Kid Ory ( born Dec 25 1886 - died Jan 23 1973) was active from a young age as a ragtime era musician. Ory kept a band going steadily from the 1890's through the start of the Depression and then afterwards, his career rose like a phoenix in the 1940's, with Ory prolifically recording and playing steadily as a highly regarded trombonist until his retirement at nearly age 80 in 1966. In the early days, as early as age 7, Ory told tales of fashioning his own stringed instruments, such as violins and a banjo from a cigar box to play between innings at baseball games, house parties and country picnics, even before the turn of the 20th century. By 1907 he had started his own band out of Gretna LA, and was performing at bars in New Orleans. Ory soon figured out using abandoned houses, or renting out social halls where he could play and control the profit. His band wore suits and bowties,and played at all white Country Clubs, as well as the raucous dancehalls of black neighborhoods. Ory's entrepreneurial skills led him to a former plantation where he organized fish fry's with 5 cent sandwiches, and sold beer at 5 cents a glass. His band's employees who earned $17.50 a week in 1919, included at one time or another, not only Mutt Carey, King Oliver, but a jolly young orphaned replacement for Oliver named Louis Armstrong. Ory's many early clarinetists included Johnny Dodds, Sidney Bechet, George Lewis and Jimmie Noone. Ory continually struggled to find good pay for himself and even rented instruments to the many poor musicians in his own band who were just starting out, including that coronet-less waif Louis Armstrong. Armstrong apparently left Ory's band when he was offered almost twice Ory's weekly rate, as well as room & board, to play on steamboats along the river. By 1919, Ory had himself decided to move of hot, humid & heavily segregated Louisiana, out west to California and in 1922 became the first black jazz band leader from the Crescent City to record a record, issued under the name of "Spike's Seven Pods of Pepper Orchestra". They laid down the lively songs "Ory's Creole Trombone" and "Society Blues". In California his group included Baby Dodds, Mutt Carey, Ed Garland, Johnny St. Cyr and Wade Whaley before Ory moved on to Chicago in 1925 to play with his old pal King Oliver's then hot group as well as others. His later 1920's resume included a span with Louis Armstrong's Armstrong Hot Seven who recorded his credited composition "Muskrat Ramble" in 1926 which is a well known New Orleans style jazz standard. Ory also did stints with groups such as Louis Armstrongs Hot Five, King Oliver's Dixie Syncopators, Ma Rainey, Lil Armstrong, Dave Peyton, Leon Rene, Clarence Black, The Chicago Vagabonds, and Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers amongst others. During the depression years Ory was inactive and operated a chicken ranch near LA with his brother. By the early 1940's he was coaxed out of premature retirement partly by radio host Orson Welles and to play with clarinetist Barney Bigard and trumpeter Bunk Johnson, as a Dixieland revival started. Ory soon revived his career, assuming leadership of a new group and playing regular gigs for the scenesters at Larry Potter's Jade Supper Club on Hollywood Blvd. in the glamor capital of Los Angeles, He appeared in a few Hollywood films, including the Benny Goodman Story, and his band toured regularly for the next two decades, from 1943 on. Band members and sidemen throughout the 1940's & 50's recorded peak of their activity, as recorded by the Good Time Jazz label included Alvin Alcorn, George Probert, Don Ewell, Barney Kessel, Ed Garland, Minor Hall, Teddy Buckner, Pud Brown, Lloyd Glenn, Julian Davidson , Bob McCracken, Morty Corb, Phil Gomez, Cedric Haywood, Omer Simeon, Darnell Howard and Wellman Braud. He opened a nightclub called "On The Levee" in Los Angeles in 1954, and after a long successful stint at Club Hangover in San Francisco, he opened an "On the Levee" club on the waterfront in that city as well. Not in the best of health, he mainly used his San Francisco nightclub as a home base, sometimes appearing at The Riverboat Club in Disneyland until he retired to Hawaii at nearly at age 80 in 1966 . Ory's last live performance was a 1971 slot at the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival. His tombstone in Culver City CA reads "Father of Dixieland Jazz." Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.