King Oliver
Wikimp3 information about the music of King Oliver. On our website we have 70 albums and 24 collections of artist King Oliver. You can find useful information and download songs of this artist. We also know that King Oliver represents Jazz genres.
Biography
[Edit]Joe "King" Oliver was one of the great New Orleans legends, an early giant whose legacy is only partly on records. In 1923, he led one of the classic New Orleans jazz bands, the last significant group to emphasize collective improvisation over solos, but ironically his second cornetist (Louis Armstrong) would soon permanently change jazz. And while Armstrong never tired of praising his idol, he actually sounded very little like Oliver; the King's influence was more deeply felt by Muggsy Spanier and Tommy Ladnier.
Although originally a trombonist, by 1905 Oliver was playing cornet regularly with various New Orleans bands. Gradually he rose to the top of the crowded local scene, and in 1917 he was being billed "King" by bandleader Kid Ory. A master of mutes, Oliver was able to get a wide variety of sounds out of his horn; Bubber Miley would later on be inspired by Oliver's expertise. In 1919, Oliver left New Orleans to join Bill Johnson's band at the Dreamland Ballroom in Chicago. By 1920, he was a leader himself and, after an unsuccessful year in California, King Oliver started playing regularly with his Creole Jazz Band at the Lincoln Gardens in Chicago. He soon sent for his protégé Louis Armstrong, and with clarinetist Johnny Dodds, trombonist Honore Dutrey, pianist Lil Harden, and drummer Baby Dodds as a core, Oliver had a remarkable band whose brilliance was only hinted at on records. As it is, the group's 1923 sessions far exceeded any jazz previously recorded; Oliver's three chorus solo on "Dippermouth Blues" has since been memorized by virtually every Dixieland trumpeter.
Unfortunately, the Creole Jazz Band gradually broke up in 1924. Oliver recorded a pair of duets with pianist Jelly Roll Morton but otherwise was off records that year. He took over Dave Peyton's band in 1925 and renamed it the Dixie Syncopators; Barney Bigard and Albert Nicholas were among the members. New recordings resulted (including "Snag It," which has a famous eight-bar passage by Oliver) but when the cornetist moved to New York in 1927, his music was behind the times and he made some bad business decisions (including turning down a chance to play regularly at the Cotton Club). Worse yet, his dental problems (caused partly by an early liking of sugar sandwiches) made playing cornet increasingly painful and, on many of his later recordings, Oliver is barely present (although he did a heroic job on 1929's "Too Late"). Pianist Luis Russell took over the Dixie Syncopators in 1929 and, although Oliver's last recordings (from 1931) are superior examples of hot dance music, he was quickly becoming a forgotten name. Unsuccessful tours in the South eventually left Oliver stranded there, working as a manager of a poolhall before his death at age 52.
Title: King Oliver And His Orchestra 1929-1930
Artist: King Oliver, Charles Pierce And His Orchestra
Genre: Jazz
Title: King Oliver's Dixie Syncopators, Vol. 2
Artist: King Oliver, His Dixie Syncopators
Genre: Jazz
Collections
Title: The Ultimate Jazz Archive, Set 1
Genre: Jazz
Title: Blue Jasmine (Original Soundtrack)
Genre: Theatre/Soundtrack
Title: Jazz 100 (CD2)
Genre: Jazz
Title: Jazz Cats - Felix And Other Cats
Genre: Jazz
Title: Classic Jazz - From New Orleans To Harlem, Volume 34
Genre: Jazz
Title: Classic Jazz - From New Orleans To Harlem, Volume 4
Genre: Jazz
Title: New Orleans Blues 1923-1940
Title: I’m Feelin’ Blue
Title: 100 Greatest Swing Era Songs 2021 (CD2)
Genre: Gypsy Jazz, Rockabilly, Classical, Bop, Musical, Easy Listening
Title: Rough Guide To The Roots Of Jazz 2021
Genre: Jazz
Title: I'm Feelin' Blue
Genre: Blues
Title: A Taste Of 1931
Genre: Jazz
Title: A Taste Of 1930
Genre: Jazz
Title: A Taste Of 1929
Genre: Jazz
Title: Saga Jazz: Jazz Cats (Felix And Other Cats)
Genre: Jazz
Featuring albums
Title: Miss Fisher's Murder Mysteries - Music from the Second Series
Artist: Various Artists
Genre: Theatre/Soundtrack
Title: Slidin' On The Frets: The Hawaiian Steel Guitar Phenomenon
Artist: Slidin' On The Frets-Hawaii
Genre: