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Kansas City Jazz: A Little Evil Will Do You Good
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Thus, a leading jazz dictionary defines "stomp" as "A word with no technical significance; it does not, as some have suggested, denote a number played in fast time." The Dictionary of American Slang defines "stomp" as "A jazz composition or arrangement with a heavily accented rhythm, usually in a lively tempo and, during the swing era, repeated riffs." Jazz scholar

Gunther Schuller
composer / conductor1925 - 2015
Of fifty-two works attributed to

Jelly Roll Morton
piano1890 - 1941
According to Gunther Schuller, while "most of the better New Orleans musicians worked their way up to Chicago" after the Storyville red-light district in New Orleans was shut down in 1917, "New Orleans musicians had drifted through Kansas City and other Southwestern cities from time to time, and eventually jazz in its more advanced form began to take hold in the area." This was in part because Chicago's musicians' union protected the jobs of local jazzmen by denying residency to visiting bands, and thus some New Orleans musicians had to look elsewhere. Despite the difficulty of defining "stomp" precisely, the generation of jazz musicians who came after Morton continued to use it. One who picked it up in the Kansas City area was

Bennie Moten
composer / conductor1894 - 1935
However one defines "stomp," the term was associated with the music of Kansas City in the late 1920s when William "Count" Basie joined Moten's band. Basie began by working with guitarist/trombonist Eddie Durham on new arrangements to add to what he called the band's "original Kansas City stomp style. It had a special beat, and it really had something going." Basie, like others, was unable to put his finger on just what the word meant. "I don't really know how you would define stomp," he said. "But it was a real thing. If you were on the first floor, and the dance hall was upstairs, that was what you would hear, that steady rump, rump, rump, rump in that medium tempo. It was never fast. And you could also feel it." Before he joined Bennie Moten, Basie had played with Walter Page's Blue Devils, who he said "had a big reputation in [the Southwest]... Tulsa was a part of their stomping ground, and I do mean stomp." Stomp, Basie recalled, "was a very popular word in that part of the country in those days. A lot of tunes were called stomps, and a lot of bands were called stomp bands."
So "stomp" was a rhythmic transition between ragtime and jazz. As Blesh and Janis put it, "[s]tomp rags... are really ragtime jazz," with irregular syncopation and improvisation. As alto sax

Eddie Barefield
b.1909The transition from a two-beat ragtime tempo to a four-beat, blues-based scheme was facetiously commented on in the Moten band's "Get Low Down," recorded in 1928. The number opens with a fast two-beat piano introduction, which trumpeter Ed Lewis interrupts to say "Hey Bennie, stop that ragtime. Let's get real low down." The band then plays a blues with twelve four-beat bars at slightly half that tempo. Drummer Jo Jones described the transition: "Bennie Moten's band played one and three (first and third beats accented), but

Walter Page
bass, acoustic1900 - 1957
Walter Page is often credited with the development of the "walking" bass linea succession of consecutive quarter-notes on each beat of a four-beat measure to provide "a solid rhythmic and harmonic foundation" for other musicians in a jazz group. He probably would have disclaimed sole credit for what seems to have been an instance of simultaneous invention; in particular, he acknowledged his debt to

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
The earliest account of the shift from two to four beats in jazz, André Hodeir's Jazz: Its Evolution and Essence, states that this "profound revolution" was led first by "the drummers and then the bass players" who "got into the habit of beating four to the bar." In the chapter titled "The Evolution of Rhythmic Conceptions" Hodeir does not cite Page or any other bassist as responsible for this "completely different kind of swing, one that was at the same time lighter and more concentrated" than the "waddling character of the New Orleans rhythm" that preceded it, noting only that musicians "got better at turning out the beats; they became more relaxed." The two-beat rhythm that had evolved from marches was "inimical to a full expression of swing," and "the four-beat rhythm was better suited for dancing; it was the solution that allowed groups to "play together with... rhythmic excellence," and not just polyphonically. "Riffs became important. . .the riff became the ideal vehicle for jazz's new conceptions."
To novelist Ralph Ellisonwho was also a jazz musicianstomp was both the essence of swing, and a purer form of it, like a single malt scotch versus a blended one. "We didn't care about the big bands in the East because they didn't have that Southwestern swing, which we then called 'stomp music.' It was dance music first and foremost. The Southwestern musicians were from many different places, from the Southwest, from the Deep South. But wherever they came from, they all developed a way to lope through the rhythm. I remember hearing Fletcher Henderson when he came through Oklahoma City in the early thirties. He had Rex Stewart and he had the young Coleman Hawkins and they were all fine musiciansbut that band did not stomp." Ellison's comparison of Eastern versus Southwestern bands was seconded by a columnist for The Call, a Kansas City African-American newspaper, who said that Noble Sissle's orchestra was "too perfect" and "the wrong kind of band for the dancers" of Kansas City.
Ellison's analysis glosses over the musical miscegenation that occurred in the Southwest, where despite Jim Crow restrictions in some aspects of public life, Black bands played for white audiences and tailored their music to the tastes of their customers, in the time-honored tradition of "He who pays the piper, calls the tune." As trumpeter Bernard "Buddy" Anderson put it, in the Southwest "black musicians [even] played [Western swing music]," popularized by white "cowboy" bands such as Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys and the Light Crust Doughboys. "They had to play it, because that's the thing people wanted to hear."

Count Basie
piano1904 - 1984
The Blue Devils operated on a "commonwealth" basis, with all members sharing equally in revenue after expenses. "[W]hat usually happened was that Big 'Un [Walter Page] would get the money, and after we'd bought the gas and figured out expenses to get to the next town, we'd divide the rest among ourselves," Basie said. The competition between the Blue Devils and the Moten bandand the musical dominance of the former over the lattereventually persuaded Bennie Moten that if he couldn't beat the Blue Devils, he would acquire them. Eddie Durham was one of the first to defect to Moten, in 1929. "The money was light," for the Blue Devils, he said, while Moten was offering "big pay... That's how [Page's musicians] started drifting away." Buster Smith confirmed the hard times the Blue Devils endured. "Most of the time we lived out of a paper sack. You stayed out on the road all the time, and nobody never had enough money to amount to nothing. We just lived from hand to mouth." Smith recalled that Moten solicited "a lot of us" in the band; he had been trying to lure Basie away from the Blue Devils for some time, but according to Booker Washington, Basie remained with the group until the lure of better money proved irresistible: "Basie stayed down around [Oklahoma], did all the little shows, but when [Moten got] the big jobs" he relented. Moten persuaded "Hot Lips" Page and

Jimmy Rushing
vocals1903 - 1972
It took something more than a competing band to bring down Bennie Moten's musical empire. While his band was playing in Denver in April of 1935, he had stayed in Kansas City to plan for upcoming engagement in New York with a new line-up that would include a returning Count Basie and Jo Jones on drums. While Moten was thus idle, he decided to have his tonsils removed to alleviate throat infections he had suffered from; during the procedure an artery in Moten's throat was severed. Trumpeter Ed Lewis absolved the physician of blame, saying "it wasn't his fault. Bennie was a nervous type of person," and "wouldn't let them put him to sleep," allowing the surgeon to use only local anesthetic. Moten "got frightened when he felt the knife," Lewis said, "and jumped, severed an artery and bled to death."
Moten's funeral was, according to a local African-American newspaper, "the largest... Kansas City had witnessed in 20 years. Thousands of both races from all walks of life, filled every available space... and overflowed far out into the street." Moten's obituary in The Afro-American, a national newspaper that claimed to be the "Nation's Biggest Colored Weekly," described him as a "rotund band leader... famous for his 'stomp' rhythm that had wide appeal."
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