Jazzmusic

The Jazz Age

  • The Cotton Club

    The Cotton Club
    Famous jazz venue opened by the first African American world heavyweight champion Jack Johnson. Later bought out by Owney Madden who changed the name from Club De Luxe to The Cotton Club. The club featured some of America’s best jazz musicians and celebrities and socialites.
  • Period: to

    Early 20th Century Jazz Music

  • James P. Johnson The Harlem Strut and Carolina Shout

    James P. Johnson The Harlem Strut and Carolina Shout
    The Harlem Strut and Carolina Shout, by pianist James P. Johnson, are recorded in New York.
  • Norfolk Jazz Quartet

    Norfolk Jazz Quartet
    The Norfolk Jazz Quartet begins recording for OKeh, becoming one of the earliest and most popular group to emerge from the Tidewater area of Virginia, a fertile region for African-American singing quartets.
  • Louis Armstrong and the King Oliver's Band

    Louis Armstrong and the King Oliver's Band
    Louis Armstrong moves to Chicago to join King Oliver's Band.
  • William "Count" Basie

    William "Count" Basie
    Pianist William "Count" Basie makes his first recordings.
  • Kid Ory's band

    Kid Ory's band
    Trombonist Kid Ory's band, based in Los Angeles, makes the first recordings by a black ensemble playing in the New Orleans style.
  • Fletcher Henderson Orchestra

    Fletcher Henderson Orchestra
    Pianist and arranger Fletcher Henderson forms the Fletcher Henderson Orchestra and begins performing at Club Alabama in New York.
  • Washingtonians and Duke Ellington

    Washingtonians and Duke Ellington
    Bandleader Elmer Snowden's Washingtonians performs in New York with Duke Ellington on piano.
  • Bessie Smith 'Downhearted Blues'

    Bessie Smith 'Downhearted Blues'
    Duke Ellington and dancers at the Cotton Club. Ellington led a jazz band at the club from 1927 to 1930.
    This was Bessie Smith’s first recorded single and it sold 780,000 records in the first six months and eventually went on to sell 2 million copies.
  • Cornetist Bix Beiderbecke and The Wolverines

    Cornetist Bix Beiderbecke and The Wolverines
    The Wolverines with Beiderbecke at Doyle's Academy of Music in Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1924
  • Rhapsody in Blue

    Rhapsody in Blue
    George Gershwin debuts Rhapsody in Blue along with Paul Whiteman's band.
  • Ma Rainey

    Ma Rainey
    Ma Rainey becomes a wildly popular blues singer across the country, with her band the Jazz Wild Cats.
  • Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five

    Louis Armstrong and his Hot Five
    The Hot Five was Louis Armstrong's first jazz recording band led under his own name. It was a typical New Orleans jazz band in instrumentation, consisting of trumpet, clarinet, and trombone backed by a rhythm section.
  • Fletcher Henderson's group and Coleman Hawkins

    Fletcher Henderson's group and Coleman Hawkins
    Bandleader Fletcher Henderson's group records with saxophonist Coleman Hawkins.
  • Erskine Tate's Vendome Orchestra

    Erskine Tate's Vendome Orchestra
    Erskine Tate's Vendome Orchestra was organized by Erskine Tate who was an American jazz violinist and a bandleader. He was an early figure in the Chicago Jazz scene and played with his band, Vendome Orchestra at the Vendome Theater. The band played during silent films and amongst its members were Louis Armstrong, Freddie Keppard and Ed Atkins.
  • Duke Ellington Band and Dancers

    Duke Ellington Band and Dancers
    Duke Ellington and dancers at the Cotton Club. Ellington led a jazz band at the club from 1927 to 1930.
  • Paul Whiteman's band

    Paul Whiteman's band
    Cornetist Bix Beiderbecke joins Paul Whiteman's band.
  • Benny Goodman

    Benny Goodman
    Clarinetist Benny Goodman makes his first recordings.
  • Body and Soul

    Body and Soul
    Trumpeter Louis Armstrong records Body and Soul.
  • Cab Calloway

    Cab Calloway
    Bandleader Cab Calloway becomes a regular at the Cotton Club.