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Topic: Buddie Petit


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In the News (Wed 23 Dec 09)

  
  Buddie Petit   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
By the early 1910s he was one of the top horn players in the new style of music not yet generally known as "jazz".
Buddie Petit was known as a hard-drinking, fun loving man who played cornet with great virtuosity and inventiveness.
He was briefly lured to Los Angeles, California by Jelly Roll Morton and Bill Johnson in 1917, but objected to being told to dress and behave differently than he was accustomed to back home, and promptly returned to New Orleans.
bopedia.com /en/wikipedia/b/bu/buddie_petit.html   (314 words)

  
 Buddie Petit   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Buddie Petit was, at the height of his powers, considered one of the greatest of the New Orleans cornet players.
By age 20, Petit’s reputation as a solid player was firmly established and in 1917 Petit and trombonist Frankie Dusen headed west for Los Angeles to join Jelly Roll Morton’s band.
Louis Armstrong was one of the pall-bearers at Petit’s funeral.
www.redhotjazz.com /petit.html   (319 words)

  
 I buddie   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Buddie is rather strange, she decides when she wants attention, and if you try to pet her any other time she will run away, if she comes to you eveythings fine.
Buddie Petit was, at the height of his powers, considered one of the greatest of...
Buddie Butterfield is the founder of Buddie's Buddies.
notebookreview.mewsnotebook.info /ibuddie   (877 words)

  
 George Lewis (clarinetist)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
He was born in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana.
He played with Buddie Petit, Chris Kelly regularly, and sometimes with Kid Ory and many other band leaders, seldom traveling far the greater New Orleans area.
During the Great Depression he took a day job as a stevedore, continuing to take such music jobs after hours as he could find.
bopedia.com /en/wikipedia/g/ge/george_lewis__clarinetist_.html   (476 words)

  
 The Eagle Band
When Buddy Bolden went insane in 1907, Frankie Dusen took over Buddy Bolden's Band and renamed it the Eagle Band after the Eagle Saloon at Perdido and South Rampart Street in the Storyville district of New Orleans.
The band was very popular in New Orleans between 1907 and 1917 and reportedly continued to play much of the same repertoire as when Bolden was the leader of the group.
The band made no recordings, but the Eagle Band was the link between the dawn of Jazz as represented by Buddy Bolden and the cultural phenomenon that jazz would become during the 1920s.
www.redhotjazz.com /eagleband.html   (188 words)

  
 Royalty Contract -- Recommendations and Resources   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
The practice goes back to New Orleans at the start of the 20th century, back before the music was commonly known as "jazz".
Armstrong had a powerful rival in Buddie Petit, who many ranked higher than young Armstrong in the 1919-1922 period.
Oliver was known as "King Oliver" in Chicago, and still regarded as the jazz king as late as 1925, when Louis Armstrong returned to Chicago from New York City.
www.becomingapediatrician.com /health/127/royalty-contract.html   (791 words)

  
 Buddie Petit   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Buddy Petit was born Joseph Crawford, in 1895 in White Castle, a small town about one hundred miles west of New Orleans.
By age 20, Petit’s reputation as a solid player was firmly established and in 1917 he and trombonist Frankie Dusen headed west for Los Angeles to join Jelly Roll Morton’s band.
Lee Collins did recall that during funeral processions on the way back from the cemetery Petit would take solos.
atj.8k.com /noartist/atjpetit.html   (355 words)

  
 Dixieland Jazz Overview - Band Biographies Page - Page 1/4
Here's a photograph of a young Buddie Petit, holding his prized Cornet.
Returning to New Orleans, Buddie led his own band called 'The Young Olympians', and then formed another band called 'The Black and Tan Orchestra' which not only played in New Orleans, but also toured Texas and worked on Mississippi excursion riverboats.
Robichaux was already playing in various bands by 1893, while a young Buddy Bolden was still learning how to play the cornet.
nfo.net /usa/JO1.html   (4472 words)

  
 Buddy Petit - AOL Music
Born: 1897 Died: Jul 04, 1931 Buddy Petit Genre: Jazz Instrument: Trumpet Biography One of the great unrecorded New Orleans legends (along with Buddy.
The biggest names in music, including Mary J. Blige, Katharine McPhee, John Legend and more perform for the kids to benefit the JCPenney Afterschool Fund.
Download, listen and watch Buddy Petit music, mp3's, song lyrics, music videos, Internet radio, live performances, concerts, and more on AOL Music.
music.aol.com /artist/buddy-petit/366019/main   (135 words)

  
 I buddie - balebuddieaz.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
EliteGroup i-Buddie XP Profile, from which you can reach professional reviews, user reviews, previews, cheats, guides, help and other resources.
Buddie’s Buddies is a non-profit charitable organization [501(c)(3)] whose purpose Buddie’s Buddies depends on fundraising activities, gifts, donations,
Making the switch the networked telephony: Buddie Ceronie, Area Sales Director for 3Com, asks why we are seeing an increase in the number of companies
interinformation.com /?q=i-buddie   (166 words)

  
 Dance Spirit Magazine - Music For Dance's Sake   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
In the early days, swing allowed for “breakaways” so dancers could part and dance alone for a few bars, trying to delight onlookers by translating the music into personal movement.
Buddie Petit’s New Orleans Jazz Band, circa 1910s
Back from service in 1945, Manning booked his dance team on a tour with the great Dizzy Gillespie band.
www.dancespirit.com /backissues/dec01/intheswing.shtml   (711 words)

  
 Buddie Petit Brass Band   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-13)
Buddie Petit, Lee Collins, Louis Armstrong, Punch Miller, Chris Kelly, Mutt Carey
One of Louis Armstrong earliest band experience was playing in Buddie Petit´s marching band.
If you have supplementary information about this song, please let us know.
www.hurricanebrassband.nl /buddie_petit_brass_band.htm   (70 words)

  
 JELLY ROLL MORTON - WASHINGTON D.C.
This man also wrote a blues that lived a very long time (thought I heard Buddie Bolden say, “-------, -------, take it away.”) This tune was copyrighted by someone else under the name of St.
Buddie was older than I. I wrote a blues in 1907 entitled Alabama Bound.
Duke Ellington claimed the title of “Jungle Music,” which is no more than a flutter tongue on a trumpet or trombone, to any denomination of chord, which was done by Keppard, King Oliver, Buddie Petit and many more, including myself when I played trombone, no doubt before he knew what music was.
www.doctorjazz.co.uk /page10bc.html   (13197 words)

  
 JELLY ROLL MORTON - POSTHUMOUS ARTICLES
An experimental sip of the beer disclosed that it was not cold enough — probably the result of its recent juxtapositional arrangement on her tray!
He was always talking about New Orleans; about Buddy Bolden, Frankie Dusen, Buddy Petit, Tony Jackson — he could take off their mannerisms on a job and he was always a comedian It was hard to keep up with him — he could talk 24 hours in a row.
I recall evenings with mixed groups (that were permissible in so few places in Washington), a bunch of us gathered about the spinet-piano, Jelly tossing off blues verses and goading Sterling Brown of Howard University into singing a few.
www.doctorjazz.co.uk /posth.html   (16793 words)

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