Category: Complete Morton Project
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Well it’s been a while with no posts but having recovered from the Complete Morton Project marathon, we’ve gone into the studio to record a new CD of 15 of our favorites that we discovered last year during the project. Here’s a video about the album: It’s out now on the amazing Lejazzetal label, which…
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It’s the penultimate week of the Complete Morton Project!! To start off, we have one more obscurity for you, “The Superior Rag.” This one was never recorded by Jelly but the sheet music was published in a rather obscure book, and also found by the enterprising Morten Gunnar Larsen from Norway in the Library of…
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We’re very near the end here, only a few more weeks to go! Today we have another from Morton’s late period big band compositions which were not recorded by him but have since been resurrected by several ensembles. We learned this one, “Stop and Go,” courtesy of Scottish drummer Ken Matheison. It’s not as unusual…
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This Tuesday we have an eccentric couple of Morton tunes for you, starting with “Crazy Chords,” one of Morton’s few forays into “Modern” harmony along with“Freakish” and “Pep”. This one features a similar descending chord progression but with the added diminished chord thrown in, rather than parallel descending 9th chords. Unfortunately this also comes from…
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Not to many weeks left now – but we’ve saved some great tunes for the end of the year period. Here’s another of Morton’s multi-part blues compositions, “London Blues.” Named after the London Cafe in Chicago, it was also recorded by King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band and others. Like “New Orleans Blues” it is just…
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We’re celebrating Jelly Roll Morton’s birthday this week (Oct 20, possibly 1885 or 1890, we aren’t entirely sure because he constantly lied to make himself seem older than he was), with his greatest composition “The Pearls.” It’s a masterful tune with multiple sections, textures, and melodies which he wrote in the teens at the Kansas…
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This week we present another interesting composition unrecorded by Morton and only found by accident! The great New York bandleader Vince Giordano was bidding on some vintage sheet music on eBay and came across this tune, “Croc-O-Dile Cradle,” written by Morton. Only the piano part and banjo part remained, but fortunately all the melodies were…
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Brief blog post this week as David and I are on tour with the Dime Notes in Ukraine! We kick off with the return of David’s 1924 bass clarinet for another of Morton’s blues tunes from the 1926 Red Hot Peppers sessions, “Cannon Ball Blues.” It’s a nice multi-key blues with some great double-time sections.…

