Tag: Satchmo

  • Louis Armstrong’s Real Birthday Surprise!

    Louis Armstrong’s Real Birthday Surprise!

    It’s not everyone who can choose the time and circumstances of their birth.

    One of the most important figures in American music really had no idea when he was born. So he and his manager settled on July 4. What could be more American than that? Furthermore, 1900 signified the start of a new century, the beginning of a new era. Thus it was that Louis Armstrong was “born” in New Orleans on July 4, 1900.

    It wasn’t until the 1980s, well after Armstrong’s death in 1971, that a researcher discovered Armstrong’s baptismal records and it was established that his actual birthdate was August 4, 1901. So Armstrong would have been 120 years-old today. He died fifty years ago, on July 6.

    Here is a special document, indeed. Armstrong and his All-Stars perform “St. Louis Blues,” with the New York Philharmonic conducted by Leonard Bernstein (Bernstein’s name mispronounced by Edward R. Murrow!) at Lewisohn Stadium on July 14, 1956. The composer, W.C. Handy, is in attendance.

    Happy birthday, Satchmo!

  • Remembering

    Remembering

    It’s a fairly well-known fact that my birthday is July 4. Or at any rate, once somebody learns it, they’re not likely to forget.

    For years, I thought I shared the date with Louis Armstrong. But it turns out Armstrong had no idea when he was born. It wasn’t until the 1980s that a researcher discovered Armstrong’s baptismal records and confirmed his official birthday was August 4, 1901.

    Oh well, at least I’ve still got Stephen Foster (born July 4, 1826).

    Armstrong, one of the most important figures in American jazz, as well as one of the most beloved musicians of the 20th century, died 50 years ago today.

    That’s right, the world lost Satchmo and Stravinsky in the same year.


    With Velma Middleton, singing (and playing) “All That Meat and No Potatoes”

    With uncanny Danny, namedropping the masters, in “The Five Pennies”

    With the Duke on Ed Sullivan


    PHOTO: Playing with Grace, on the set of “High Society”

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