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Pioneers of New Orleans Jazz: 1917-1923 15 Early Performances by Early Crescent City Jazz Musicians 1. “Can You Tell” - Ray Miller’s Black & White Melody Boys (ft. Tom Brown), Vocalion 1920 [0:00] 2. “Railroad Blues” - Yerkes Southern Five (ft. Alcide “Yellow” Nunez and Tom Brown), Columbia 1920 [3:07] 3. “Darktown Strutters’ Ball” - Original Dixieland Jass Band, Columbia 1917 [6:07] 4. “Shake Your Little Shoulder” - The Happy Six (ft. Alcide “Yellow” Nunez and Tom Brown), Columbia 1920 [9:03] 5. “Beale Street Blues” - Ray Miller’s Black & White Melody Boys (ft. Tom Brown), Okeh 1921 [11:51] 6. “Church Street Sobbin’ Blues” - Louisiana Five (ft. Alcide “Yellow” Nunez), Emerson 1919 [14:55] 7. “Indiana” - Original Dixieland Jass Band, Columbia 1922 [17:43] 8. “Slow and Easy (Intro: I'm Sorry I Ain't Got It You Could Have It If I Had It Blues)” - Louisiana Five (ft. Doc Berendsohn and Alcide “Yellow” Nunez), Columbia 1919 [21:07] 9. “Ja-Da (Intro: You’ll Find Old Dixieland in France)” - Original New Orleans Jazz Band (ft. Frank Christian, Achille Baquet, and Arnold Loyocano), Gennett 1919 [24:22] 10. “Jazbo Jazz” - Earl Fuller’s Famous Jazz Band (ft. Siegmund Berendsohn), Emerson 1918 [27:16] 11. “Why Cry Blues” - Jimmy Durante’s Jazz Band (ft. Alfred Laine, Joe Loyocano, Achille Baquet, and Arnold Loyocano), Gennett 1920 [30:03] 12. “Mystery” - The Happy Six with Jack* Kaufman (ft. Alcide “Yellow” Nunez and Tom Brown), Columbia 1920 [32:42] 13. “Wang-Wang Blues” - Paul Whiteman’s Ambassador Orchestra (ft. Gus Mueller), Victor 1920 [35:54] 14. “What More Do You Want?” - Dixie Daisies (ft. Doc Berendsohn) Cameo 1922 [39:20] 15. “Bugle Call Rag” - Lyman’s California Ambassador Orchestra (ft. Ray Lopez), Brunswick 1923 [42:18] While the Original Dixieland Jass Band was the first Jazz band from the Crescent City to record, a handful of other pioneering New Orleans Jazz musicians also made it into the studio in those early days. This set of 15 recordings highlights the activity of these New Orleans musicians in the studios. Artists include the legendary trombonist Tom “Red” Brown (brother of bassist Steve Brown), who brought the first white New Orleans band North to Chicago in the mid-1910s, before eventually finding his way to New York to join Harry Yerkes and Ray Miller. Brown’s pioneering band also featured cornetist Ray Lopez, multi-instrumentalist Arnold Loyocano, and at different times clarinetists Gus “Gussie” Mueller and Larry Shields - all featured in these recordings. Meanwhile the Original Dixieland Jass Band soon followed, featuring clarinetist Alcide “Yellow” Nunez, who was soon replaced by Shields from the Brown band. Nunez later played in the Louisiana Five which made dozens of sides, including some with New Orleans multi-instrumentalist Bernhard “Doc” Berendsohn. Doc's trombone-playing brother Siegmund soon followed, joining up briefly with Earl Fuller in 1918. Creole clarinetist Achille Baquet also came up North in 1the late 1910s to join Jimmy Durante’s group, which recorded as well. Trasferred with 3.0ML stylus in Audiotechnica VMN70SP cartridge via Audiotechnica AT-LP120 Turntable. Discs and Discographical Information from Colin Hancock Collection, and Brian Rust’s Jazz Records, Martin Bryan, and Brian Rust’s The American Dance Band Discography 1917-1942.