Morton, Jelly Roll 1885(?)–1941
Jelly Roll Morton 1885(?)–1941
Jazz composer, musician
Learned Several Instruments at Early Age
Discovered Jazz
Success in the 1920s
Depression Took Its Toil
Morton’s Legacy
Sources
Musical pioneer Jelly Roll Morton was America’s first great jazz composer. Although an important and respected innovator in the transitional period from early to orchestral jazz, Morton had a predilection for embellishing the truth about himself. Because of this, the validity of his claim that he invented the term “jazz” is uncertain. With a penchant for the ostentatious, Morton was known for his colorful clothing and the diamond in his front tooth. Morton’s vast output of work was recorded in 1938 at the Library of Congress during a series of several interviews. The resulting eight hours have been called by the Biographical Dictionary of Afro-American and African Musicians, “perhaps the most important oral history of jazz ever issued.”
Much of the information about Morton’s early life is uncertain, due in no small measure to his tendency to invent facts about himself. One of his inventions was his nickname, which is a slang reference to sexual intercourse. He was born Ferdinand Joseph La Menthe, on either September 20, 1885, or October 20, 1890, and probably in Gulfport, Mississippi. Morton’s creole father, E.P. Le Menthe (or LaMothe), was a carpenter. La Menthe was also a classically-schooled trombonist and took young Morton to the French Opera House in New Orleans. But La Menthe abandoned the family when Morton was very young. Afer Morton’s mother married Willie Morton, the boy spent several years in Biloxi and Meridian, Mississippi, and then in New Orleans, mostly under the care of his aunt and godmother, Eulalie—or “Lallie”—Echo.
Morton’s Aunt Lallie took him everywhere, including saloons and even jail. But it was in jail, when he heard the inmates singing, that Morton found his first musical inspiration. His first musical instrument, though made of a tin pan and two chair legs, sounded to him like a symphony. Soon Morton learned to play other, more traditional instruments. By age five he could play the harmonica and at age six he had mastered the jews’-harp. Morton was an accomplished guitarist by age seven. He studied the guitar with a Spaniard and was soon playing in street bands. He then learned the trombone, which he played in the houses of the red light district in New Orleans known as Storyville. By the time he was a teenager, he also played the piano, which he learned after hearing a concert at the opera house.
At a Glance…
Born Ferdinand Joseph La Men the on September 20, 1885 or October 20, 1890, in Guifport, MS; died on June 11, 1941, in Los Angeles CA.
Career: First composition, “Jelly Roll Blues” 1915; “King Porter Stomp,’ 1916; Melrose Publishing House, staff arranger, 1923-28; recorded on Victor label; formed Red Hot Peppers, 1926-30; 8 hours of his music recorded for Library of Congress, 1938.
His aunt sent him to study for a time with a black university professor of music named Nickerson.
Morton’s mother died when he was 14 or 15, but his aunt was by far the greatest influence in his life. A firm believer in voodoo, his aunt kept glasses of water around the house from which Morton believed he heard voices echoing in the night. Morton also heard chains rattling and the sewing machine running. He would forever be influenced by voodoo and always kept holy water near his bed.
Morton began to earn money—$20 in tips on his first night—as a pianist and gambler in the red light district of New Orleans. Morton’s family had great respect for opera, but any other type of music was considered inappropriate, so when his aunt found out where the money for Morton’s new clothes was coming from, she threw him out of the house so he would not corrupt his younger sisters.
In 1902, Morton met famous ragtime pianist and composer Tony Jackson. Morton began meeting with Jackson and other musicians in back rooms after all the nightclubs closed, playing until the afternoon. Morton claimed that jazz was born there, and that the word was his invention. About this time, he wrote “New Orleans Blues” and “King Porter Stomp,” among other early tunes.
When he left his aunt’s house, Morton also left New Orleans, never to return. He wandered the country, spending time in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Chicago in 1904, and in Mobile, Alabama in 1905. He found work as a musician, a pool shark, and a gambler. Morton even worked as a vaudeville comedian in Memphis, Tennessee in 1908, and three years later he toured with McCabe’s Minstrel Troubadours in St. Louis and Kansas City.
In 1911, Morton arrived in New York City sporting a diamond in his front tooth. It was there that he first played “Jelly Roll Blues,” which was published for orchestra in Chicago in 1915, making it perhaps the first jazz orchestration ever published. Several more Morton orchestrations would follow.
The 1920s were Morton’s most productive years. He was offered a job in Los Angeles in 1917, where he worked as a bandleader and in other entertainment areas. He also traveled a great deal, performing anywhere from Alaska to Tijuana, Mexico. While in Los Angeles, he began a relationship with Anita Johnson (or Gonzales), a girlfriend from New Orleans. Johnson had owned a saloon in Las Vegas but moved to Los Angeles and bought a small hotel. Morton often referred to her as his wife, although there is no record of their marriage. Johnson was musically inclined herself, and she wrote the lyrics for Morton’s “Dead Man Blues.” Johnson had a good singing voice, as well, but Morton never allowed her to perform. She also traveled with him when he went on tour, mainly because Morton was intensely jealous of her and did not want her out of his sight.
By this time, Morton owned several small businesses. He was making money and establishing a name for himself. Morton was not above being ostentatious and boastful. He sometimes showed friends a trunk full of money, and his diamond-studded apparel and teeth were well known. Yet, there was no denying his distinctive personality. He was part showman and part sideshow barker. In an age when musicians all wore tuxedos, Morton preferred white trousers and shoes, a wine-colored jacket, and diamonds on his tie and his socks. But he was a dedicated composer, often waking up at night to scribble ideas and later demanding that the band musicians followed his compositions to the note.
In 1922 or 1923, Morton left Johnson and Los Angeles, returning to Chicago. For the next five years, he was the staff arranger for the Melrose Publishing House. A great number of his compositions were recorded during this period, including influential pieces on the Gennett label. He recorded “London Blues,” “Grandpa’s Spell,” and “The Pearls.” He also spent some time with a group of white musicians known as the New Orleans Rhythm Kings. Morton was one of the first blacks to play in a mixed band.
Morton reached the height of his popularity between 1926 and 1930. He formed a band called the Red Hot Peppers produced several classic recordings for the Victor label, both in Chicago and New York. The classics “Kansas City Stomp,” “Sidewalk Blues,” The Chant Mournful Serenade, “and “Ponchatrain Blues” were released during this period. Morton’s Chicago recordings also featured some of the best sidemen from New Orleans, such as Kid Ory on the trombone and
Baby Dodds on the drums. He also found time to tour with W.C. Handy and played piano with Henry Crow-der’s band.
While at the Plantation Club in Chicago in 1927, Morton first met Mabel Bertrand, a creole dancer who had been raised in a convent after her parents died and who had entertained in Europe. They were married in 1928, and traveled together in Morton’s Lincoln, while the rest of the band rode in a colorful bus proclaiming, “Jelly Roll Morton and His Red Hot Peppers.”
By this time, the Depression was taking its toll the recording industry. Big bands with such colorful figures as Louis Armstrong were coming into fashion, and Morton did not adapt to this new style. Due to his failure to adapt, Morton’s success and prestige were dwindling. His fall in popularity as a bandleader had also nearly collapsed his financial empire when he moved to Washington, D.C. in 1935 for a long engagement at a the Jungle Club.
One night at the club in 1939, Morton admonished and then slapped a rowdy club patron. The man attacked Morton with a knife, slicing Morton in the head and chest. He never fully recovered from the incident, which only aggravated other existing health problems. In order to survive, Morton began accepting small weekly checks from Catholic Charities.
For a short time in 1938, Morton established a music publishing company in New York. With his recordings, he took advantage of public interest once again focused on the New Orleans jazz style. But his health was failing. Morton returned to Los Angeles in 1940, leaving his wife behind, although he kept in touch with her. While in Los Angeles, he renewed his relationship with Anita Johnson. Hoping that the California climate would restore his health, Morton formed a new band. Before long, his failing strength made it impossible to work.
In May of 1941, Morton checked into Los Angeles County General Hospital, On June 10th, at the age of fifty, Morton died in Johnson’s arms. The cause of death was heart failure resulting from chronic high blood pressure. Johnson later said that Morton had to die when he did because his Aunt Lallie, a voodoo practitioner, had already died. Since, Johnson said, his aunt had sold Morton’s soul to the devil when he was boy, the devil called in his claim after Eulalie Echo’s death.
A high mass was sung for Jelly Roll Morton in St. Patrick’s Cathedral in New York City. His pallbearers included Kid Ory and other members of his band. Morton’s will did not mention his wife. Whatever he had of value, including royalties, was bequeathed to Anita Johnson.
George C. Wolfe’s 1992 Broadway musical, Jelly’s Last Jam, was loosely based on Morton’s life. Recognized as the first great composer of jazz, he was an excellent pianist and an intelligent innovator who changed the early ragtime style into a new form. According to the Dictionary of Negro Biography, Morton felt that “if music was loud and blatant..and if it was going to lack contrast and variety,” it was “simply bad music and poor jazz no matter how advanced in style.”
Morton’s early works have become collector’s items. Perhaps no jazz musician from the early days is now so completely recorded on disc. His discography totals 22 pages. Morton’s great legacy is found in the eight hours of recordings and interviews collected together by Alan Lomax in 1938 and released to the public ten years later. A hotel owner, a pool shark, and a consummate showman, Morton was an important historical figure in the history of music in America.
Books
Logan, Rayford W., and Michael R. Winston, eds. Dictionary of American Negro Biography. Norton, 1982.
Online
http://www.redhotjazz.com
—Corinne J. Naden and Jennifer M. York
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