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时间:2022-06-20 19:30
DOB 01/24/41 Aaron Joseph Neville
The third born of the Neville brothers, Aaron has one of the most striking and unique voices in music today. He has finally achieved the mainstream recognition that always seemed so far out of reach. Although his current solo material may not be the first choice of long-term fans of the Neville Brothers, he has earned the right to record what he prefers. No matter what the source of his songs may be, he makes them all sound superb. Quiet and soft spoken, Aaron keeps a book of his own poetry (that we all hope he will put to music some day). A nonsmoker and nondrinker, he has remained married to his high-school sweetheart, Joel, for over 35 years.
His early influences were gospel and do-wop music, singers Pookie Hudson and Sam Cooke, and cowboy yodelers like Gene Autry and Roy Rogers. He liked to hang out on the street corners singing with his friends. Aaron's voice must have been remarkable even at that point, because he could get in basketball games free just by singing for the guy at the door. In 1955, a teacher at school encouraged Aaron to join the Avalons, a local vocal group.
Aaron's days of innocent youth didn't last long. He started hanging around with the wrong crowd. When Aaron came home with a pirate's cutlass tattooed on his left cheek, his dad was furious and tried to scrub it off with steel wool. In 1958, older brother Art joined the Navy, and Aaron took his place as the lead singer for the New Orleans group the Hawketts. By the time Aaron turned 18 he was married and serving time in the parish prison for auto theft. In jail, there wasn't much to do except sing and fight. Aaron spent part of his six-month sentence writing songs - both Over You and Jailhouse were written then. His fellow inmates encouraged him to record the songs upon release.
Once back on the street, disc jockey Larry McKinley arranged for Aaron to audition for Allen Toussaint, who was looking for singers to record for the Minit record label. Between 1960 and 1961 Aaron recorded more than a dozen songs, almost all of them written by himself or Toussaint (using his "Namoi Neville" pen name). The combination of Aaron and Toussaint had terrific results. The Minit material like Wrong Number, Over You, Every Day, and I'm Waiting at the Station, firmly established Aaron as a serious vocalist. Although popular in New Orleans, the records made little impact on the national music scene. Aaron had to resort to menial jobs like dock worker and truck-driver to support his family.
In 1965, New Orleans musicians George Davis and Alvin "Red" Tyler, along with school teacher Warren Parker, started a record company called Parlo. They bought the rights to a song written by Lee Diamond, the former band leader for Little Richard. The song, Tell It Like It Is, took Diamond about 15 minutes to write. Parlo's owners, familiar with Aaron's vocal talent, asked him to record it. The song, which peaked at #2 on the national charts, was more than the local company could handle. Disputes developed between the owners, the song writer and Aaron. Lee Diamond as writer, received several thousand dollars, while Aaron received less. Parlo finally declared bankruptcy. Brother Art put together a backup band, and he and Aaron toured the country for almost a year on the strength of Tell It Like It Is. When they returned home, they added brother Cyril to the group and called themselves Art Neville and the Neville Sounds. They finally landed a six-night-a-week job in a Bourbon Street club. Because the stage was so small, Art had to rece the size of the group. Regretfully, he had to layoff Aaron and Cyril.
In 1968, New Orleans, procers Allen Toussaint and Marshall Sehorn started a recording company called Sansu Enterprises, and asked Aaron to record for them. As with the Minit releases in the early 60's, the combination of Aaron's voice and the song writing/proction talents of Toussaint worked magic. They re-recorded brother Art's 50's recording All These Things, and Aaron's previous hit Tell It Like It Is. The material included Struttin' On Sunday, Where Is My Baby, Cry Me a River and Mojo Hanna (which would later become a staple of the Neville Brothers' live shows). There are some who feel that Aaron was at his peak with songs such as the semi-autobiographical Hercules, that tells the story of a person needing the strength of the mythical hero, to avoid the urban hazards of crime and drugs. Unfortunately, Aaron couldn't resist the temptation and became addicted to heroin. Because Sansu leased the singles to other record companies for final release (Mercury, Bell, Island), the entire project had little impact on the national record charts or Aaron's wallet.
Deciding to try their luck elsewhere, Aaron and Cyril, formed the group Soul Machine and headed off to Nashville and New York. Teaming-up with brother Charles in New York, they started practicing some Mardi Gras Indian songs and chants they had learned from their uncle, Big Chief Jolly, chief of a Mardi Gras Indian tribe from their old Uptown neighborhood. They even started calling themselves the Wild Tchoupitoulas.
Back at home, brother Art had achieved some success with his group the Meters. They were asked by the Rolling Stones to open their 1974 tour of the US. Art felt he needed a front man for the group, called Cyril in New York, and invited him to join the Meters. Cyril and Aaron returned to New Orleans. Aaron played occasional dates at several area clubs, but had to go back to construction jobs to support his family.
In 1976, the Wild Tchoupitoulas project started, that led to the formation of the Neville Brothers as a group.
Since the Neville Brothers as a group began, Aaron has been the most active in solo endeavors. Since 1985, Aaron has released five solo albums, contributed songs to various compilation projects, provided backup on many recordings by others, and had all of his earlier work re-released (see the the Neville Brothers discography). He has sung the National Anthem at the Super Bowl, performed in front of the Nation's Capitol ring Fourth of July celebrations, performed for President Clinton, has had roles in movies and television (including his favorite show, All My Children), and received many awards including two Grammy awards. Remarkably, he still finds time to donate his services to an array of charitable projects. In Aaron's typically understated manner, he is glad that success came now instead of when he was younger and less able to handle it. A deeply religious person, he always gives thanks to Saint Jude, the patron saint of lost causes, who he feels rescued him when he was at his lowest point. It is a gold medallion of Saint Jude that he wears in his left ear.
http://www.yatcom.com/neworl/entertai/music/nevilles/aaron.html
Louis Armstrong was the greatest of all Jazz musicians. Armstrong defined what it was to play Jazz. His amazing technical abilities, the joy and spontaneity, and amazingly quick, inventive musical mind still dominate Jazz to this day. Only Charlie Parker comes close to having as much influence on the history of Jazz as Louis Armstrong did. Like almost all early Jazz musicians, Louis was from New Orleans. He was from a very poor family and was sent to reform school when he was twelve after firing a gun in the air on New Year's Eve. At the school he learned to play cornet. After being released at age fourteen, he worked selling papers, unloading boats, and selling coal from a cart. He didn't own an instrument at this time, but continued to listen to bands at clubs like the Funky Butt Hall. Joe "King" Oliver was his favorite and the older man acted as a father to Louis, even giving him his first real cornet, and instructing him on the instrument. By 1917 he played in an Oliver inspired group at dive bars in New Orleans' Storyville section. In 1919 he left New Orleans for the first time to join Fate Marable's band in St. Louis. Marable led a band that played on the Strekfus Mississsippi river boat lines. When the boats left from New Orleans Armstrong also played regular gigs in Kid Ory's band. Louis stayed with Marable until 1921 when he returned to New Orleans and played in Zutty Singleton's. He also played in parades with the Allen Brass Band, and on the bandstand with Papa Celestin's Tuxedo Orchestra , and the Silver Leaf Band. When King Oliver left the city in 1919 to go to Chicago, Louis took his place in Kid Ory's band from time to time. In 1922 Louis received a telegram from his mentor Joe Oliver, asking him to join his Creole Jazz Band at Lincoln Gardens (459 East 31st Street) in Chicago. This was a dream come true for Armstrong and his amazing playing in the band soon made him a sensation among other musicians in Chicago. The New Orleans style of music took the town by storm and soon many other bands from down south made their way north to Chicago. While playing in Oliver's Creole Jazz Band, Armstrong met Lillian Hardin, a piano player and arranger for the band. In February of 1924 they were married. Lil was a very intelligent and ambitious woman who felt that Louis was wasting himself playing in Oliver's band. By the end of 1924 she pressured Armstrong to reluctantly leave his mentor's band. He briefly worked with Ollie Powers' Harmony Syncopators before he moved to New York to play in Fletcher Henderson's Orchestra for 13 months. During that time he also did dozens of recording sessions with numerous Blues singers, including Bessie Smith's 1925 classic recording of "St. Louis Blues". He also recorded with Clarence Williams and the Red Onion Jazz Babies. In 1925 Armstrong moved back to Chicago and joined his wife's band at the Dreamland Cafe (3520 South State Street). He also played in Erskine Tate's Vendome Orchestra and then with Carrol Dickenson's Orchestra at the Sunset Cafe (313-17 East 35th Street at the corner of Calmet Street). Armstrong recorded his first Hot Five records that same year. This was the first time that Armstrong had made records under his own name. The records made by Louis Armstrong's Hot Five and Hot Seven are considered to be absolute jazz classics and speak of Armstrong's creative powers. The band never played live, but continued recording until 1928. While working at the Sunset, Louis met his future manager, Joe Glaser. Glaser managed the Sunset at that time. Armstrong continued to play in Carrol Dickenson's Orchestra until 1929. He also led his own band on the same venue under the name of Louis Armstrong and his Stompers. For the next two years Armstrong played with Carroll Dickerson's Savoy Orchestra and with Clarence Jones' Orchestra in Chicago. By 1929 Louis was becoming a very big star. He toured with the show "Hot Chocolates" and appeared occasionally with the Luis Russell Orchestra, with Dave Peyton, and with Fletcher Henderson. Armstrong moved to Los Angeles in 1930 where he fronted a band called Louis Armstrong and his Sebastian New Cotton Club Orchestra. In 1931 he returned to Chicago and assembled his own band for touring purposes. In June of that year he returned to New Orleans for the first time since he left in 1922 to join King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band. Armstrong was greeted as a hero, but racism marred his return when a White radio announcer refused to mention Armstrong on the air and a free concert that Louis was going to give to the cities' African-American population was cancelled at the last minute. Louis and Lil also separated in 1931. In 1932 he returned to California, before leaving for England where he was a great success. For the next three years Armstrong was almost always on the road. He crisscrossed the U.S. dozens of times and returned to Europe playing in Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Holland and England. In 1935 he returned to the U.S. and hired Joe Glaser to be his manager. He had known Glaser when he was the manager of the Sunset Cafe in Chicago in the 1920s. Glaser was allegedly connected to the Al Capone mob, but proved to be a great manager and friend for Louis. Glaser remained Armstrong's manager until his death in 1969. Glaser took care of the business end of things, leaving Armstrong free to concentrate on his music. He also hired the Luis Russell Orchestra as Louis' backup band with Russell as the musical director. This was like going home for Armstrong, because Russell's Orchestra was made up of predominantly New Orleans musicians, many of whom had also played with King Oliver. The band was renamed Louis Armstrong and his Orchestra and was one of the most popular acts of the Swing era. Glaser put the band to work and they toured constantly for the next ten years. During this period Armstrong became one of the most famous men in America. In 1938 Lil and Louis finally got a divorce. Louis then married Alpha, his third wife. The endless touring was hard on their marriage and they were divorced four years later, but Armstrong quickly remarried Lucille and they remained married for the rest of his life. For the next nine years the Louis Armstrong Orchestra continued to tour and release records, but as the 1940s drew to a close the public's taste in Jazz began to shift away from the commercial sounds of the Swing era and big band Jazz. The so-called Dixieland Jazz revival was just beginning and Be Bop was also starting to challenge the status quo in the Jazz world. The Louis Armstrong Orchestra was beginning to look tired and concert and record sales were declining. Critics complained that Armstrong was becoming too commercial. So, in 1947 Glaser fired the orchestra and replaced them with a small group that became one of the greatest and most popular bands in Jazz history. The group was called the Louis Armstrong Allstars and over the years featured exceptional musicians like Barney Bigard, Jack Teagarden, Sidney 态ig Sid?Catlett , vocalist Vilma Middleton, and Earl Hines. The band went through a number of personnel changes over the years but remained extremely popular worldwide. They toured extensively travelling to Africa, Asia, Europe and South America for the next twenty years until Louis' failing health caused them to disband. Armstrong became known as America's Ambassador. In 1963 Armstrong scored a huge international hit with his version of "Hello Dolly". This number one single even knocked the Beatles off the top of the charts. In 1968 he recorded another number one hit with the touchingly optimistic "What A Wonderful World". Armstrong's health began to fail him and he was hospitalized several times over the remaining three years of his life, but he continued playing and recording. On July 6th 1971 the world's greatest Jazz musician died in his sleep at his home in Queens, New York.
http://www.redhotjazz.com/louie.html
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时间:2022-06-20 19:31
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