Louis Armstrong and His Hot Seven
{{short description|Band that plays jazz}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=April 2025}}
Louis Armstrong and His Hot Seven was a jazz studio group organized to make a series of recordings for Okeh Records in Chicago, Illinois, in May 1927.{{cite book |title=Continuum Encyclopedia of Popular Music of the World Part 1 Media, Industry, Society |publisher=Bloomsbury Publishing p. 746 |year=2003 |isbn=978-1-8471-4473-7}} Some of the personnel also recorded with Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five, including Johnny Dodds (clarinet), Lil Armstrong (piano), and Johnny St. Cyr (banjo and guitar). These musicians were augmented by Dodds' brother, Baby Dodds (drums), Pete Briggs (tuba), and John Thomas (trombone, replacing Armstrong's usual trombonist, Kid Ory, who was then touring with King Oliver). Briggs and Thomas were at the time working with Armstrong's performing group, the Sunset Cafe Stompers.
In five sessions between May 7 and May 14, 1927, the group recorded at least 12 sides, including "Willie the Weeper," "Wild Man Blues", "Twelfth Street Rag" and "Potato Head Blues" (celebrated for Louis Armstrong's stop-time solo and triumphant ride-out final chorus). Thomas Brothers cites "Wild Man Blues" as a "breathtaking breakthrough" for Armstrong's solo style because of its "effortless flow between melody, embellishment, fill-ins, and breaks."{{Cite book|last=Brothers|first=Thomas|title=Louis Armstrong: Master of Modernism|publisher=W.W. Norton & Company|year=2014|isbn=978-0-393-06582-4|location=New York, NY|pages=257}}
In these records, Armstrong continued and further developed his mastery of the jazz solo, almost completely dominating some of the numbers and further breaking down the New Orleans jazz style of collective improvisation into a vehicle for the soloist. In addition to his continued personal development, the Hot Seven sides feature Armstrong's new inclination towards worked-out and rehearsed arrangements, which can be heard in "Chicago Breakdown" and "Willie the Weeper."{{Cite book|last=Brothers|first=Thomas|title=Louis Armstrong: Master of Modernism|publisher=W.W. Norton & Company|year=2014|isbn=978-0-393-06582-4|location=New York, NY|pages=260–63}}
The Hot Seven song "Melancholy Blues" is included on the Voyager Golden Record, attached to the Voyager spacecraft.{{cite news |last=Meier |first=Allison |url= https://hyperallergic.com/325811/reissuing-the-voyager-golden-record-nasas-quixotic-message-to-the-stars/ |title=Reissuing the Voyager Golden Record, NASA's Quixotic Message to the Stars |work=Hyperallergic |date=September 29, 2016 |access-date=March 26, 2019}}
See also
References
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External links
{{Louis Armstrong}}
{{Voyager Golden Record}}
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Category:Musical groups established in 1927
Category:Musical groups from New Orleans
Category:Jazz ensembles from Illinois
{{US-jazz-band-stub}}