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  1. Edward „Kid“ Ory. 25. Dezember 1886 La Place, Louisiana bis 23. Januar 1973 Honolulu, Hawaii. In einigen Wochen jährt sich der 125. Todestag eines großen Jazzpioniers, einer Schlüsselfigur des traditionellen Jazz. Der Posaunist, der als kraftvoller, urwüchsiger Solist vorbildlich für den New Orleans Jazz war, und zugleich ein begehrter ...

  2. 64parishes.org › entry › kid-oryKid Ory | 64 Parishes

    25. Nov. 2022 · Kid Ory. Edward "Kid" Ory. Trombonist and bandleader Kid Ory, a pioneer of the traditional New Orleans jazz style, played a key role in the New Orleans Revival of the 1940s. He is credited as the leader of the first Black New Orleans jazz band to make a recording, and Ory’s recording of “Creole Song” in 1944 is the first documented ...

  3. www.radioswissjazz.ch › de › musikdatenbankRadio Swiss Jazz

    Hier sollte eine Beschreibung angezeigt werden, diese Seite lässt dies jedoch nicht zu.

  4. Kid Ory was the greatest trombone player in the early years of Jazz. He originally played banjo, but then switched to trombone. Perhaps his banjo playing helped shape the “tailgate” style of playing he later developed on the trombone. In the “tailgate” style, the trombone plays a rhythmic line underneath the trumpets and cornets.

  5. Kid Ory’s band would cut all of the bands during his tailgate advertising,” Louis Armstrong marveled in a 1970 interview. The origins of jazz have always been murky.

  6. 24. Feb. 2019 · Ory’s unpublished autobiography cuts out in 1933 when Ory leaves music for a period and works as a janitor in the offices of the Santa Fe Railroad. This biography told, “in his voice”, also leaves things off there. The last 40 years of his life, including a second successful music career in the revival period, are given only five pages. But that period is covered in the guided ...

  7. 1. Feb. 2000 · Kid Ory died in Hawaii on Jan. 23, 1973. In 1986 he was inducted into the Jazz and Big Band Hall of Fame. Kid Ory was a pioneering figure in the propagation and promotion of early jazz. His move to California was significant as soon after he was followed by others from New Orleans, and then it was on to Chicago for the historic sessions there.