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King Bolden

KING BOLDEN AND THE EARLIEST KNOWN AFRICAN-AMERICAN GUITARISTS

Buddy Bolden band c. 1903. 
Jefferson Mumford’s on guitar.

BY PAUL MERRY | JUL 20, 2013 | UNCATEGORIZED | 1 COMMENT

BLUESMUSE29.

Until the 1890s, when mail order catalogues made them more affordable and improved roads and rail links made musical instruments more accessible, guitars were mainly a preserve of the American middle classes.

Most were much smaller than the guitars we know today, probably because they were mostly played by women. Perhaps that’s why they were (and still are) known as parlor or parlour guitars, because women
played them to entertain guests, usually in the parlour. Even so, parlour guitars were also the guitars most early African-American players used in the days before their folk music became known as blues.

But, as mentioned, very few African Americans could afford such instruments. Two exceptions could be found on the streets of New Orleans in the 1880s. Both were working barbers, the fall-back career of so many musicians in those early days. The ground-breaking guitar pair was Charlie Galloway, born in New Orleans around 1863, and Jefferson Mumford, born in 1870. What style of music they played around 1885 is debatable but, by the 1890s, both were known to be working in New Orleans playing ragtime, blues’ direct forerunner. Charlie Galloway, the elder of of the pair, was leading an African-American string band around 1895 when he decided to spice things up by adding a line of brass – an innovative step that inadvertently helped give birth to jazz. One of his new black recruits was a 19-year fellow Charlie, and yet another barber, a cornet player called Charlie Bolden. Young ‘Kid’ Bolden, nicknamed Buddy, proved so innovative and inspirational, he soon took over leadership of Galloway’s band. After changing its name to the Buddy Bolden band, it became the hottest outfit in New Orleans. Not that guitarist Charlie Galloway was forced out. He still had an important part to play.With guitar amplifiers not invented until the 1930s, it was then impossible for acoustic guitars to be heard over the rest of the band. What acoustic guitars could do, however, was lay down a solid rhythmic foundation over which the horns could improvise. And so, the chord-strumming rhythm guitarist was born, a feature still with us today. Explained, author Harry O. Brun in his 1960 book, The Story of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band.

“It was he (the guitarist) who would shout out the chord changes on
unfamiliar melodies or on modulations to a different key. It was through this
frequent ‘calling out’ of chords by the guitarist that many New Orleans
musicians of that day, otherwise totally ignorant of written music, came to
recognize their chords by letter and number; and though they could not read
music, they always knew the key in which they were playing.”

Charlie Galloway would eventually be replaced by that other guitarist from the 1880s, Jefferson Mumford, who was with Bolden during the glory years from 1897 to about 1905 when Kid Bolden got upgraded to King Bolden.

As students of jazz and blues will know, Buddy Bolden was the rock star of his day, one of the first known to overindulge on booze, women, sex and drugs; and also the first musician known to go into a trance when playing. Aged just 29, he was committed to an insane asylum in 1907 where he died in
1931, unheralded and unrecorded.

On a more academic note, Wikipedia reports that Bolden is also credited with discovering or even inventing the so-called ‘Big Four’, a key rhythmic innovation on the marching band beat, which gave embryonic blues and jazz musicians much more room for individual improvisation. As the renowned New Orleans trumpeter, Wynton Marsalis, explains, “the Big Four was the first syncopated bass drum pattern to deviate from the standard on-the-beat march. The second half of the Big Four is the pattern commonly known as the habanera rhythm, one of the most basic rhythmic cells in Afro-Latin and sub-Saharan African music”. 
Remembered Duke Ellington in the 1950s, “Buddy Bolden was a suave, handsome and a debonair cat who the ladies loved. He had the biggest, fattest trumpet sound in town. He bent notes to the nth degree. He used to tune up in New Orleans and break glasses in Algiers.”

The Buzz

Sometimes in the middle of night I wake with a start and wonder if any guitar-based contemporary instrumental music would ever have been created if George Benson, Wes Montgomery and Joe Pass had never been born. After hearing the first few seconds of Ronny Smith’s “Bossa Awhile,” which leads off his sparkling new CD, you’ll note the influences from this troika of geniuses and know that their legacies are in good hands. -Brian Soergel

This CD, as his previous ones, has been a growing process for this talented guitarist. And this continuous quest for the best guitar sound results in a highly recommendable CD, which gets him closer to greatest jazz guitarists such as Wes Montgomery and George Benson. – by Akbar Nour

Smith is a master at creating atmospheres that make people eager to bury themselves in, and happy to stay submerged in for long lengths of time. Smith straddles the line of escapist music and compositions that touch human sentiment. He cites Wes Montgomery, Joe Pass, George Benson, and Roy Clark as his musical influences, and though his image of smooth jazz is arced by their impact on him, he also shows signs of moving past them, having tapped into his own ideas and developing a trademark sound that fits him totally

Not only does he play guitar, keys and bass throughout he also arranges, produces and programs all ten tunes. Eight of these are original compositions cleverly complemented by the addition of two immaculately crafted covers.

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