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The Brief Reign of King Oliver

Courtesy Louis Armstrong House
If it had not been for Joe Oliver, jazz would not be what it is today.
Louis Armstrong
Jazz royalty was a contrivance from the genre's earliest days.

James Reese Europe
composer / conductor1881 - 1919

Buddy Bolden
cornet1877 - 1931

Paul Whiteman
composer / conductor1890 - 1967

Ella Fitzgerald
vocals1917 - 1996

Benny Goodman
clarinet1909 - 1986

King Oliver
trumpet1881 - 1938
The previous installment of Backstories looked at the legacy of

Lil Hardin Armstrong
piano1898 - 1971

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971
Oliver was born in Abend, Louisiana, on a sugar-cane plantation and moved to New Orleans early in life. He grew up in a musical environment and began playing the trombone but later switched to cornet, studying under celebrated musicians like Bolden and

Bunk Johnson
trumpet1889 - 1949
By the 1910s, Oliver was a leading figure in New Orleans' brass bands and dance ensembles. His first broad exposure came around 1912 when trombonist

Kid Ory
trombone1886 - 1973

Johnny Dodds
clarinet1892 - 1940

Jimmie Noone
clarinet1895 - 1944
In 1918, racial tensions and the closure of Storyville (New Orleans' red-light district) dealt a significant blow to that city's music and its musicians; many subsequently found opportunities playing in Mississippi riverboat orchestras. Ory went to Los Angeles and formed the Ory's Sunshine Orchestra with old and new members. Oliver and many other early jazz musicians relocated to Chicago, which quickly became the jazz capital of the United States. Oliver rapidly became a central figure in the city's burgeoning jazz scene.
Oliver's rise to prominence was firmly established with his Creole Jazz Band, which he formed in 1922 at Chicago's Lincoln Gardens. This band was among the pioneering Black jazz ensembles to record extensively, producing tracks for Gennett, Okeh, and Paramount. Their influential recordingsmost notably "Dippermouth Blues," featuring Oliver's signature muted solo, and "Canal Street Blues"demonstrated the distinctive New Orleans polyphonic ensemble style, with Oliver's cornet leading the way and Armstrong as second cornet. The clarinetist

Johnny Dodds
clarinet1892 - 1940
The fates aligned against Oliver quickly. In 1924, Armstrong's rising talent began to eclipse Oliver's, and Armstrong left to join

Fletcher Henderson
arranger1897 - 1952

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Gunther Schuller
composer / conductor1925 - 2015
Changing musical tastes further impacted Oliver. Before the age of "modern jazz" (roughly beginning in the 1980s), the style of popular music changed every ten years. The rise of big bands and swing music in the 1930s made Oliver's New Orleans-style jazz sound outdated. He failed to maintain relevance despite attempts to modernize his sound with a larger group. Oliver's later recordings for Victor and Vocalion in the late 1920s were poorly promoted, with minimal royalties. Many of his musicians, including clarinetist
Albert Nicholas
b.1900Following a transitory period with the Dave Peyton Orchestra, Oliver formed The Dixie Syncopators, playing at the Plantation Cafe in Chicago from 1925 to 1927. Oliver's recordings with the Syncopators in the early 1930s were largely forgettable. There are flashes of the pioneering innovator scattered about, but the music is mostly unremarkable. His playing is unassuming and austere, and progressively worsening health issues greatly diminished Oliver's performance. Nevertheless, he manages a few moments of brilliance through the considerable physical pain of playing.
Around 1935, Oliver relocated to Savannah, Georgia, hoping to find steady work in a smaller, less competitive market. According to jazz historian Walter C. Allen, Oliver could barely press his lips to the mouthpiece without pain (Allen, King Oliver: His Life and Times, 1955). Despite this, he occasionally played with local musicians in Savannah, though these gigs were sporadic and poorly paid. Having pawned his cornet, he worked odd jobs, ran a small fruit stand, and worked as a pool hall janitor. Trumpeter

Doc Cheatham
trumpet1905 - 1997
In 1937, he moved to New York City, hoping for a comeback, but found little work. Jazz writer Walter C. Allen noted that Oliver was so broke he sometimes slept in parks (Allen, King Oliver: His Life and Times, 1955). His final months were spent in a Harlem rooming house, suffering from arteriosclerosis and high blood pressure. On April 8, 1938, Oliver died of a cerebral hemorrhage at the age of 56. He was buried in Woodlawn Cemetery in the Bronx, but his grave remained unmarked until 1997, when a fundraiser led by jazz enthusiasts finally placed a headstone.
Oliver's influence reached far beyond his performances. The Creole Jazz Band's recordings helped commercialize New Orleans-style jazz beyond its origin, influencing future generations of musicians. His band became a model for other ensembles, and his innovative use of mutes and "talking" cornet improvisations inspired musicians across various genres, including rock guitarists who imitate his "wah-wah" effects. Despite facing health challenges and changes in musical trends, Oliver's contributions established a foundation for future developments in jazz.
References
- Schuller, Gunther. Early Jazz: Its Roots and Musical Development. Oxford University Press, 1968.
- Brothers, T. (2014). Louis Armstrong: Master of Modernism. W.W. Norton & Company.
- Giddins, G. (2001). Satchmo: The Genius of Louis Armstrong. Da Capo Press.
- Jazz Oral History Project, Smithsonian Institution (interviews with Albert Nicholas, 1975).
- The Brownsville Herald, July 24, 1936, guest columnist Paul Whiteman
- Kenney, William H. Chicago Jazz: A Cultural History, 19041930. Oxford UP, 1993.
- Lomax, Alan. Mister Jelly Roll. Duell, Sloan, and Pearce, 1950.
- Williams, Martin. King Oliver. A.S. Barnes, 1960
- Whyton, Tony. Jazz Icons: Heroes, Myths and Jazz Tradition. Cambridge UP, 2010.
- Allen, Walter C. King Oliver: His Life and Times. Jazz Monographs, 1955.
- Cheatham, Doc. Interview in Jazz Oral History Project, Smithsonian Institution, 1980.
- Bushell, Garvin. Jazz from the Beginning. University of Michigan Press, 1988.
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