George Lewis (clarinetist)

George Lewis

Photograph by Stanley Kubrick, published in "Look" magazine, June 6, 1950
Background information
Birth name Joseph Louis Francois Zenon
Born (1900-07-13)July 13, 1900
New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.
Died December 31, 1968(1968-12-31) (aged 68)
Genres Traditional jazz
Occupation(s) Musician
Instruments Clarinet
Years active 1917–68
Labels American Music, Decca, Victor, GHB

George Lewis (born Joseph Louis Francois Zenon, July 13, 1900 – December 31, 1968[1]) was an American jazz clarinetist who achieved his greatest fame and influence in the later decades of his life. He married Emma zeno and they had 4 kids together: Mildred Zeno-Major, Joseph Zeno, William (bill) Zeno and George (baby george) Zeno. Later George and Emma divorced.

Ancestry

Lewis was born in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana. Through his mother, Alice Zeno, his maternal great-great-grandmother was a Senegalese slave who was brought to Louisiana around 1803. Zeno's family retained some knowledge of Senegalese language and customs until Alice's generation.[2]

Musical career

Lewis was playing clarinet professionally by 1917, at the age of 17, working with Buddy Petit and Chris Kelly regularly as well as with the trombonist Kid Ory and other leaders. At this time, he seldom traveled far from the greater New Orleans area. During the Great Depression he took a job as a stevedore, continuing to take as many music jobs after hours as he could find, a schedule that often meant he got very little sleep.

In 1942, when a group of New Orleans jazz enthusiasts, including jazz historian Bill Russell, went to New Orleans to record the older trumpeter Bunk Johnson, Johnson chose Lewis as his clarinetist. Previously almost unknown outside of New Orleans, Lewis soon was asked to make his first recordings as a leader on American Music Records, a label created by Russell to document the music of older New Orleans jazz musicians and bands.

Although purists such as folklorist and musicologist Alan Lomax and others, touted Lewis as an exemplar of what jazz had been before it became overly commercialized by the popular swing bands of the late 1930s and early 1940s; in the words of Gary Giddins—Lewis was no "dinosaur". When Lomax brought Lewis on a Rudi Blesh radio show in 1942, he played the solo from clarinetist Woody Herman's then-recent hit, "Woodchopper's Ball", but his hosts had no idea that Lewis was applying his distinctive style to one of the latest hot tunes.[3]

In 1944 Lewis was injured seriously while working on the docks. A heavy container nearly crushed his chest, and for a time it was feared he would never play again. Against all odds, however, Lewis began practicing while convalescing in bed at his St. Phillips Street home in the French Quarter. His friends, banjo player Lawrence Marrero and string bass player Alcide "Slow Drag" Pavageau, brought their instruments to Lewis's bedside. Bill Russell brought his portable recorder, and they recorded, among other things, an improvised blues that was to become the Lewis signature piece that was later christened "Burgundy Street Blues" (because that sounded better than "St. Phillips Street Blues, and Lewis had lived on Burgundy before).[4] The performance interpolated a number of phrases and ideas that may be found in Louis Armstrong's playing, in particular, his Hot Five recording of the Kid Ory composition "Savoy Blues". These blues figurations were perhaps just "in the air" around New Orleans in the early days, but it also is true that Armstrong's records were popular in New Orleans—just as they were in the rest of the country.

As Russell recorded Lewis, he occasionally gave new titles to some of his distinctive interpretations of pop tunes, for example, "New Orleans Hula" for "Hula Lou". These changes sometimes may have been made for copyright reasons, but occasionally it was simply because the musicians reported the titles inaccurately to Russell.

Lewis stayed with Bunk Johnson's newly popular band through 1946. This included a trip to New York City, where they played for dancing at the Stuyvesant Casino on Second Avenue. At this time, the band members included Johnson, Lewis, Marrero, Pavageau, trombonist Jim Robinson, pianist Alton Purnell, and drummer Baby Dodds. While in New York, they recorded for the Decca and Victor labels.

After Bunk's retirement, Lewis took over leadership of the band, usually featuring Robinson, Pavageau, Marrero, Purnell, drummer Joe Watkins, and a succession of New Orleans trumpet players—including Elmer Talbert, Avery "Kid" Howard, and Percy Humphrey.

Starting in 1949 Lewis was a regular at the French Quarter's Bourbon Street entertainment clubs and had regular broadcasts over radio station WDSU. The Lewis band was featured in the June 6, 1950 issue of Look magazine, which was circulated internationally. The article was accompanied by photographs taken of the band by Stanley Kubrick.

National touring soon followed, and Lewis became a symbol of the New Orleans jazz tradition because of the central use of the clarinet in the tunes. Travelling ever more widely, he often told his audiences that his touring band was "the last of the real New Orleans jazz bands."

In the late 1940s and early 1950s his recordings reached the UK and strongly influenced clarinetists Monty Sunshine and Acker Bilk. They later became important contributors to the traditional jazz scene in the UK and accompanied Lewis when he later toured the country.

In 1952 Lewis took his band to San Francisco for a residency at the Hangover Club. That was followed by a tour around the United States. In the 1960s he repeatedly toured Europe and Japan and many young clarinetists around the world modelled their playing closely on his soulful style.

While in New Orleans, he played regularly at Preservation Hall from its opening in 1961 until shortly before his death late in 1968. Paintings of him performing were painted by New Orleans artists and, sitting portraits, notably those by Noel Rockmore, sold to collectors. Rockmore painted a long series of portraits of the musicians who played at the hall. Many adorned the hall, but jazz devotees who were art collectors, such as John M. van Beuren (who maintained a residence in the building that housed the hall on the first floor), purchased the siting portraits for other residences, often in other parts of the country. van Beuren had a grand home built by Ludwig Mies van der Rohe in Morristown, New Jersey that had a living room large enough in which to hold private concerts while the musicians stayed at van Beuren's home when playing gigs in Manhattan. Two large Rockmore paintings, of Louis Nelson and George Lewis, dominated one end of that huge living room.

A recording of Lewis's band by Atlantic Records, part of a series entitled "Jazz at Preservation Hall"—like the others in the series—apparently was not recorded at the Hall, but at Cosimo Matassa's recording studio on Governor Nichols Street.

Lewis's music was extremely influential on a whole generation of British New Orleans Jazz musicians, and many clarinettists based their style (at least initially) on Lewis's playing. He first visited Britain in 1957, playing throughout the country with Ken Colyer's Jazzmen. In 1959 he returned, this time with his full band, and received a warm response. British fans of the old New Orleans style were thrilled to see and hear some of the old masters from the Crescent City—in the flesh. In 1959 he visited Denmark and played a two-week stint opening Jazzhus Montmartre in Copenhagen. He also visited Odense and performed there.[5] In 1963, he led his band on a highly successful tour of Japan.

Among the many clarinetists who were influenced by his style are: Sammy Rimington, Tommy Sancton, Ryoichi Kawai, Woody Allen, Butch Thompson, Rudy Balliu, Acker Bilk, Jesper Capion Larsen.

The name of George Lewis appears in the Bob Dylan song "High Water" from the album "Love and Theft".

Jazz author and critic Gary Giddins has described Lewis as "an affecting musician with a fat-boned sound but limited technique".[3]

Discography

References

  1. Some sources give 1969 as the year of his death, but see the Lewis obituary in the New Orleans Times-Picayune, cited by Tom Bethell, George Lewis: A Jazzman from New Orleans, University of California Press, 1977, p. 277.
  2. Bethell (1977), p. 10-12
  3. 1 2 Gary Giddins, "How Come Jazz Isn't Dead", p. 39–55 in Eric Weisbard, ed., This is Pop, Harvard University Press, 2004. ISBN 0-674-01321-2 (cloth), ISBN 0-674-01344-1 (paper), p. 43.
  4. Bethell, Tom (1977). George Lewis: Jazzman From New Orleans. University of California Press. p. 161. OCLC 3519203.
  5. George Lewis in Denmark, 1959
  6. Atlantic Records discography

Bibliography

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