NRR Project: The
Jelly Roll Morton interviews
Recorded by Alan
Lomax
Recorded 1938
9 hours
Jelly Roll Morton (1884?-1941,
originally Ferdinand LeMothe) was jazz’s first great composer and arranger. In
fact, he claimed to have invented jazz.
He got his start playing
piano in the whorehouses of New Orleans, where he developed his style, which
moved from the ragtime of the day into something we identify now as early jazz.
After that, he toured the country, played in vaudeville, made some recordings,
and published many song and instrumental pieces. His career faded in the early
1930s, and he moved from gig to gig, scraping by.
In 1938, the great musical
anthropologist Alan Lomax heard him play at a Washington D.C. area bar, and convinced
him to sit down with him in the Library of Congress and be recorded. What
followed is the remarkable self-portrait of a man in words, extending for nine
solid hours of recording time.
In these interviews,
Jelly Roll sits at the piano, convulsively vamping as her tells stories of his
early life in New Orleans, his claims of originating jazz music, and giving us
a portrait of a night-life society he inhabited, full of bad, bad men and loose
women. He gives us a remarkable portrait of a time and place that, full of
untruths or not, give the listener a unique and concrete sense of the music’s
origins. (Please note: some of Jelly Roll's memories are quite obscene and are studded with profanity.)
If you listen to all
nine hours, you will hear these stories, and many great musical numbers (and
their variants). Morton plays brilliantly, with all his fire. He sings, he
scats with ease. It’s as if he’s providing his last will and testament in
music, setting things straight for the record. He plays the “Tiger Rag,” the “Kansa
City Stomp,” “Lay Me a Pallet on the Floor,” “Wolverine Blues,” “The Pearls,”
and more.
Morton is an
engaging speaker, full of himself and always ready to toot his own horn. He
could be termed a braggart if not for the genuine genius in his playing. We
have very few witnesses from that time that got to make their say. Jelly Roll
got his chance, and he makes brilliant use of it.
The recordings are a
priceless piece of history, essential listening for anyone who loves jazz.
The National Recording
Registry Project tracks one writer’s expedition through all the recordings in
the National Recording Registry in chronological order. Nest time: Bruno Walter conducts Mahler.