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  1. Am 5. April 1923 nimmt King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band die wichtigsten bis dahin entstandenen Platten des Jazz auf. Auf einer spielt sein Schützling Louis Armstrong sein erstes Solo, im "Chimes ...

  2. Joe Oliver (December 19, 1881 – April 10, 1938) is one of the most important figures in early Jazz. (The 1881 birthdate is taken from his 1918 draft registration. Other public records indicate 1884 and 1885.) When we use the phrase Hot Jazz, we are really referring to his style of collective improvisation (rather than solos).

  3. Er übernahm 1920 die Band von Lawrence Dewey und nannte sie K. O.'s Creole Jazz Band. Sie war sein erfolgreichstes Ensemble. Er bildete den jungen Louis Armstrong aus, der 1922 in seiner Creole Jazz Band den Start zu seiner Karriere fand. Gary Oldman Laurence Olivier. Name:Joe "King" Oliver. Geboren am:11.05.1885. SternzeichenStier 21.04 - 21.05.

  4. 3. Aug. 2023 · Joe “King” Oliver was one of the New Orleans trumpet and cornet kings who took the instrument to a whole new level. His skills as a musician, composer, and bandleader altered the course of jazz and showcased the genre’s excellence. “New Orleans Stomp: The Centennial of King Oliver’s Groundbreaking 1923 Recordings” celebrates the 100th anniversary of the Creole Jazz Band recordings ...

  5. www.radioswissjazz.ch › en › music-databaseHome - Radio Swiss Jazz

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  6. King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band debuted on June 17, 1922 at the Lincoln Gardens Café in Chicago 6. Following the debut, the band steadily gained notoriety and recognition from locals, however more firepower was needed. Shortly after the band’s debut, Oliver wired New Orleans requesting a second cornetist— Oliver’s former apprentice, Louis Armstrong. In 1923, the band made history by ...

  7. 5. Apr. 2023 · So once again, in between all the praise for Oliver, there’s the regret about the lack of lead playing on the Oliver recordings, and a slightly rueful, “Because you couldn’t tell Joe what to do. He was the boss.” But on one of his earliest private tapes from 1951, Armstrong sought out to rectify this issue.