Dr. Michael White | |
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Dr. Michael White at the 2007 Satchmofest |
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Background information | |
Birth name | Michael White |
Born | November 29, 1954 |
Origin | New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S. |
Genres | Jazz Dixieland |
Occupations | Clarinetist Educator Bandleader Composer Jazz historian |
Instruments | Clarinet |
Labels | Basin Street Records Antilles Records 504 Records |
Associated acts | Preservation Hall Jazz Band Chester Zardis Lucien Barbarin Wynton Marsalis Young Tuxedo Brass Band |
Michael White (born 29 November 1954 in New Orleans, Louisiana) is a jazz clarinetist, bandleader, composer, jazz historian and musical educator. Scott Yanow, a jazz critic, said in a review that Michael "displays the feel and spirit of the best New Orleans clarinetists."[1]
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White is a classically trained musician who began his jazz musical career as a teenager playing for Doc Paulin's Brass Band in New Orleans. He was a member of an incarnation of the Fairview Baptist Church Marching Band, established by banjoist Danny Barker. He was discovered by Kid Sheik Colar, who heard him onstage performing in Jackson Square in the French Quarter. He began working with the musician regularly following the encounter. A staunch jazz tradionalist, White can be heard on the 1989 album "The Majesty of the Blues" by Wynton Marsalis.[2] Wynton also appears on White's 1990 album titled "Crescent City Serenade", along with musicians Wendell Brunious and Walter Payton.
Dr. White has led several bands in the New Orleans area, and has accompanied various artists on other recording projects. Since 1979 he has played in the Young Tuxedo Brass Band, founded by clarinetist John Casimir sometime in the 1940s.[3] During the 1980s he also led a band called The New Orleans Hot Seven. Performing "A Tribute to Jelly Roll Morton" in concert with them at the Lincoln Center in New York City in 1989 led to a favorable review by Jon Pareles in the New York Times shortly after. On May 25, 2004, a selection from White's album "Dancing in the Sky" ("Algiers Hoodoo Woman") was broadcast on NPR's All Songs Considered.[4][5] The "Dancing in the Sky" album is mostly original compositions by White.
In 1981, White founded The Original Liberty Jazz Band with the express intent of preserving the musical heritage of New Orleans. The group has performed an end-of-year concert at the Village Vanguard every year since the early 1990s.[6] On May 13, 2006 White performed "Just a Closer Walk With Thee" at the Tulane University commencement ceremony. Former Presidents George H. W. Bush and Bill Clinton were in attendance at the ceremony. Mr. Clinton was moved to make a remark about the performance during his speech.[7]
"It was played the way Dixieland bands have always done it. At first low, weeping, sorrowful."
— former U.S. President Bill Clinton[8]
Jazz festivals White has performed at:
White is also a college professor who formerly taught Spanish, now teaching African-American Music at Xavier University of Louisiana,[9] a member of Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU). At the university, he holds the Rosa and Charles Keller Endowed Chair in the Humanities of New Orleans Music and Culture. He has also served as guest director at several Jazz at Lincoln Center concerts relating to traditional New Orleans jazz, often working with Wynton Marsalis. White has also served as a commissioner for the New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park.[10]
Dr. Michael White was living in a one story home in the Gentilly district of New Orleans, near the London Avenue Canal, before the catastrophic flooding of most of New Orleans due to the Federal levee failures during Hurricane Katrina in 2005. White was a substantial collector of jazz artifacts and history in New Orleans for 30 years, but lost nearly everything in the flooding. He had owned the original sheet music of Dead Man Blues by Jelly Roll Morton, a clarinet mouthpiece by Sidney Bechet, and had a collection of an estimated 5,000 records and LPs. He lost it all in the flooding.[11] White feels that jazz music in New Orleans will become strengthened by the experience of Katrina, that a sense of fervor has and will rise out of the catastrophe.[12] White is related to early jazz notables Papa John Joseph and "Kaiser" Willie Joseph, among others. [1]
Year | Album | Notes | Label |
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2005 | "Our New Orleans: A Benefit Album for the Gulf Coast" | - | Nonesuch Records |
2005 | "Songs of New Orleans: Preservation Hall Jazz Band" | Preservation Hall album | Preservation Hall Records |
2004 | "Dancing in the Sky" | Basin Street Records | |
2002 | "Jazz From the Soul of New Orleans" | - | Basin Street Records |
2000 | "A Song For George Lewis" | - | Basin Street Records |
2000 | "A Tribute to Johnny Dodds" | - | Jazz Crusade Records |
2000 | "Dance @ the Dew Drop" | - | GHB Records |
2000 | "Shake It and Break It (expanded reissue)" | - | 504 Records |
1992 | "New Year's Eve Live at the Village Vanguard" | - | Antilles Records |
1990 | "Crescent City Serenade" | - | Antilles Records |
1989 | "The Majesty of the Blues" | - | Columbia Records |
1987 | "Shake It and Break It" | - | 504 Records |
1984 | "T'Ain't Nobody's Business" | - | 504 Records |
1983 | Jazz Continues: Young Tuxedo Brass Band | - | 504 Records |
The discography used allmusicguide.com as one guide.
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