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February 1, 2007 -
Dancehalls, Dives and Bordellos: Where New Orleans Jazz was Born

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Lulu_white_parlor_bordellosMyth has it that jazz was born in the brothels of New Orleans’ famous Red Light District, Storyville. In fact, much of the music in 'the District’s' high-class bordellos sounded more like ‘parlor music’ than jazz. On the streets, in dance halls, and in Storyville cabarets like The Big 25 and Pete Lala’s, Freddy Keppard and King Oliver experimented with music so new, it didn’t even have a name.

Frank Walker, the pioneering A & R man who signed Bessie Smith to Columbia Records, remembered the 1918 jazz scene in New Orleans as, “…The University of Jazz (where)…a certain combination of hot weather, dumps and dives and people that only New Orleans could provide,” created fertile ground for a vibrant new music.
 

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Storyville covered sixteen square blocks from Iberville to St. Louis, and Robertson to Basin Streets. Every nightspot had its own brand of music. The Tuxedo Dance Hall was known for ragtime, Pete Lala’s had its trumpet kings, and bordellos had their “professors” of the piano. What all nightspots in the District had in common was: Liquor, prostitution, music and gambling.  And it was legal—most of it, anyway. 

Basin Street was the center of the action for bordellos catering to white clientele. At Number 235 Basin, you’d find Lulu White’s Mahogany Hall, the most famous bordello in town. Down the block, The Countess Willie Piazza held her nightly salon in a sumptuous Italian-style villa, where Jelly Roll Morton played ragtime dances on her white grand piano.

marguerite_bordellosAt Gypsy’s on Villere Street, Tony Jackson (left) would pull out one of his fast tempo pieces when a ‘naked dance’ was called, and a beautiful young woman danced nude on a small table top, spinning faster and faster to the music. Jelly Roll once explained, “In New Orleans, the naked dance was art.”

In “black Storyville” the action centered around South Rampart and Perdido Streets where bluesman Buddy Bolden blew down all competitors with his hot trumpet licks in the Funky Butt Dance Hall until he retired to the state asylum for the insane.

This week on Riverwalk Jazz, New Orleans natives Vernel Bagneris and Topsy Chapman join The Jim Cullum Jazz Band on stage at The Landing to visit turn-of-the-century New Orleans—where strains of early jazz were heard.

Additional funding for this special broadcast provided by The Tobin Endowment, The Brown Foundation and Riverwalk Special Friends of Jazz.


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Guest Profiles

Vernel Bagneris
Topsy Chapman

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CDs                                    

Bessie and the Blues, The Jim Cullum Jazz Band and Topsy Chapman

Chasin' the Blues, The Jim Cullum Jazz Band and guests

Fine and Mellow, Topsy Chapman with Magnolia Jazz Band

Video

  • Jelly Roll, 1996 original off-Broadway cast starring Vernel Bagneris
Books

On the Web

Streaming Audio

Text based on Riverwalk Jazz script © Margaret Moos Pick

Photos from Storyville, New Orleans, Al Rose

1. The parlor of Lulu White's Mahogany Hall. 2. The Tom Anderson Annex in "The District." 3. Marguerite Griffin, an attraction at Minnie White's place at 221 North Basin Street.

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