New Orleans trombonist Kid Ory had already been tagged with jazz immortality before jazz was out of its infancy -- he was a key sideman on most of the
important jazz recordings of the 1920s. King Oliver, Jelly Roll Morton, Louis Armstrong and clarinetist Johnny Dodds all considered Ory essential to
the ensemble sound of classic New Orleans jazz. And though other Crescent City musicians courted Chicago or New York when they left home, Ory flirted
periodically with Los Angeles, and it was there he recorded "Ory's Creole Trombone" with his own band in 1921 on the Sunshine/Nordskog label, a recording
which deserves to be universally accepted as the first REAL jazzband record. (Boosters of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band: throw brickbats now!)
During the depression, Ory spent many years sorting mail and wrangling chickens, so he was quick to respond when Orson Welles needed a New Orleans
jazz band for a radio show. That break put Ory back in business, as part of a world-wide New Orleans jazz revival, and the band he led then, Ory's
Creole Jazz Band, with the rejuvenated Ory roaring away in ensembles and on solos was probably his finest band ever. The records he made in those
years especially those on Jazz Man are now considered to be some of the most important and influential in the genre. Ory moved to Hawaii in 1961,
and died there in 1973.
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