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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
National
Mark Guarino | WBEZ

How Chicago put Louis Armstrong on a path to jazz greatness 100 years ago

Louis Armstrong (right) autographs a group picture at the Blue Note nightclub during a jazz concert for teenagers in Chicago on April 1, 1948. At left: Paul Meyer, 16, and Tom Koch, 17, of Milwaukee, who hitchhiked to Chicago to attend the concert. (AP file)
In 1967, Louis Armstrong recorded “What a Wonderful World,” a song that’s known around the globe more than five decades later. That world, for Armstrong, started in Chicago.

Considered one of the most revered musical icons of all time, the trumpeter, singer and composer has inspired a yearlong celebration in Chicago that peaks this fall and winter.

Performances at multiple venues will mark the 100th anniversary of Armstrong’s arrival in Chicago from New Orleans, where he was born, and feature some of Chicago’s most celebrated modern trumpeters.

Like his improvised vocals on early recordings, Armstrong’s trumpet playing was lively and loud — and continues to resonate with Chicago’s current jazz standouts.

“In the end, the trumpet is about the amplification of the voice,” says Marques Carroll, a trumpeter, educator and co-founder of the Chicago Soul Jazz Collective. “With Armstrong, from the top of the register all the way down, it’s got personality, it’s got blues, it tells a story, and it captures you. No matter how old it gets, you can still turn it on, and it’s relevant.”

Orbert Davis, the artistic director of the Chicago Jazz Philharmonic, compares Armstrong’s fundamental contribution to jazz in Chicago to Michael Jordan’s reign over the Bulls and the United Center.

“Michael hasn’t played for years, yet he built that house,” Davis says. “When you think Chicago and jazz, it is Louis Armstrong who built that house.”

Armstrong’s dream came true in Chicago

Armstrong stepped off the train at Illinois Central Station on Aug. 8, 1922. He was 21.

He’d grown up impoverished in a vice district of New Orleans, where he dropped out of school early and learned trumpet at a home for juvenile delinquents, Armstrong heard the early sounds of jazz in brothels and riverboats.

But Chicago promised him the same things it did other Black Southerners who migrated to the city between 1910 and 1930: prosperity, sophistication and transformation.

Joe Oliver, his mentor in New Orleans, had rechristened himself King Oliver and become de facto royalty at South Side jazz clubs. As a bandleader, Oliver led concerts at clubs with such opulent names as the Deluxe Café, Dreamland Café, the Sunset and the Elite Café. King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band dominated Lincoln Gardens, the biggest dance hall on the South Side, at 31st Street and Cottage Grove Avenue.

Armstrong, on his first night in Chicago, headed there in a cab to hear the group play.

In his 1954 autobiography, he described his first night playing with Oliver’s band as transformative.

“Let the youngster blow!” someone yelled.

“My boyhood dream had come true at last,” he wrote.

An advertisement for the old Sunset Café, a former jazz club in Bronzeville where Louis Armstrong played in Carroll Dickerson’s Sunset Cabaret orchestra in the 1920s, billed as the “World’s Greatest Trumpeter.” (Al Podgorski / Sun-Times)

Armstrong wrote that Chicago offered “plenty of work, lots of dough flying around, all kinds of beautiful women at your service. A musician in Chicago in the early ‘20s was treated and respected just like some kind of God.”

Among his peers in Chicago were clarinetist-composer Sidney Bechet and pianist-composer Jelly Roll Morton, both former New Orleanians who, like Armstrong, pushed the limits of the music.

Though he started out as a sideman in Oliver’s band, Armstrong’s playing — bright and buoyant — put him front and center. His soloing helped move jazz from a rough-and-tumble form of dance music to an art form that was more sophisticated and expressive.

“Louis had a way of swinging all the notes,” Carroll says. “It’s so melodic. He would play the melody, but then he would have this virtuosity that wasn’t like classical music, but it would have that same high level of brilliance to it.”

In Chicago, Armstrong met his future wife Lil Hardin, and they lived in a two-story greystone at 421 E. 44th St. in Bronzeville that remains a private residence.

Louis Armstrong bought a home at 421 E. 44th St. in Bronzeville after getting married. (Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times)

She was a composer and pianist who had moved to Chicago in 1918 from Memphis. Many of her early songs were recorded by others, including Ray Charles and Ringo Starr, and she remained a presence on the Chicago music scene throughout her life after she and Armstrong divorced in 1938.

It was Hardin who encouraged him to step out on his own.

Before he did, Armstrong and the band traveled to Richmond, Ind., to record for Gennett Records in April 1923. Electrical recording hadn’t yet been invented, so the entire band had to huddle around a giant horn that captured the vibrations of their instruments.

But Armstrong’s playing dominated, and he was told to perform from the corner of the room.

Louis Armstrong in a 1932 photo that was shot in Chicago to promote his first European tour. (AP)

Jazz great’s lasting influence on Chicago

Armstrong moved to New York the next year but returned to Chicago in 1925 to record the first of his Hot Five and Hot Seven sessions for Chicago’s OKeh Records, a label that recorded early jazz and later specialized in R&B after it was sold to Columbia Records in 1926. The sessions took place over three years and featured the introduction of scat singing and the invention of fully improvised soloing.

Some of Armstrong’s most famous compositions — including “Potato Head Blues,” “Big Butter and Egg Man” and “Heebie Jeebies” — were recorded during those sessions. The recordings, 89 in all, are considered the foundation of modern jazz and burnished Armstrong as a household name and the most famous trumpeter in the world.

Touring then took him all over the globe. A Hollywood film career followed.

“He was the first American pop star,” Carroll says.

On Nov. 4 and Nov. 5, Fulton Street Collective will host an art exhibition and concerts honoring Louis Armstrong. One of the featured art works is Arthur Wright’s “See Me Roar, The Voice of Louis Armstrong.” | Fulton Street Collective (Fulton Street Collective)

A half-century after his death, Armstrong still has influence in Chicago. At the Chicago Jesuit Academy, where Carroll teaches jazz to children in third through eighth grades, he makes it a point to introduce them to Armstrong’s style of playing that is, for beginners, deceptively simple.

“He is not complicated, but it’s not easy to play that,” Carroll says. “It’s easy to play fast and high but not to play fast and high the way he played. He would trill on a high note and then play all over the melody with arpeggios — he had endurance.”

Armstrong’s stardom came not only from his musicianship but also from his image: the handkerchief, the gravelly singing voice and the wide smile seen in every photograph, movie still and record cover even in the civil rights era.

“He gets a lot of criticism for smiling: How could he clown all the time when the world was falling apart?” Davis says. “I think it was survival.

“And the message is: We gotta go on. He knew he wasn’t just representing his people but representing the world. And, with that, you gotta smile.”

Back in Chicago in 1959, Louis Armstrong poses for a photo from the barber chair at the Sutherland Hotel at 4659 S. Drexel Blvd. (John Puslis / Sun-Times)
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