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Edmond Hall

Edmond Hall (May 15, 1901 – February 11, 1967)[1] was an American jazz clarinetist and bandleader. Over his career, Hall worked extensively with many leading performers as both a sideman and bandleader and is possibly best known for the 1941 chamber jazz song "Profoundly Blue".

Edmond Hall
Background information
Born(1901-05-15)May 15, 1901
Reserve, Louisiana, U.S.
DiedFebruary 11, 1967(1967-02-11) (aged 65)
Boston, Massachusetts
GenresSwing, Dixieland
Occupation(s)Musician
Instrument(s)Clarinet, alto saxophone, baritone saxophone

Biography

Early life

Born in Reserve, Louisiana, United States, about 40 miles west of New Orleans on the Mississippi River, Hall and his siblings were born into a musical family. His father, Edward Blainey Hall, and mother, Caroline Duhe, had eight children, Priscilla (1893), Moretta (1895), Viola (1897), Robert (1899), Edmond (1901), Clarence (1903), Edward (1905) and Herbert (1907).[1]

His father, Edward, played the clarinet in the Onward Brass Band,[1] joined by Edmond's maternal uncles, Jules Duhe on trombone, Lawrence Duhe on clarinet, and Edmond Duhe on guitar. The Hall brothers, Robert, Edmond, and Herbert, all became clarinetists,[1] but Edmond was first taught guitar by his uncle Edmond. When Hall picked up the clarinet, "he could play it within a week. He started Monday and played it Saturday," his brother Herb recalled in an interview with Manfred Selchow, who wrote a biography of Hall titled Profoundly Blue (1988).[2]

Hall worked as a farmhand, but by 1919 he had become tired of the hard work, and despite his parents' worries of him finding a decent job as a musician, he left for New Orleans. The first New Orleans band he played with was that of Bud Rousell (Bud Russell). He also played with Jack Carey (trombone) and blues cornetist Chris Kelley.

Music career

In 1920, he went to a dance at Economy Hall in New Orleans where Buddy Petit was playing. Petit needed a replacement on clarinet, and he hired Hall.[1] After two years, he moved to Pensacola, Florida, and joined Lee Collins's band, followed by Mack Thomas, and the Pensacola Jazzers.[1] He met trumpeter Cootie Williams and, with Williams, he joined the Alonzo Ross DeLuxe Syncopators.[3]

Hall moved to New York City in 1928, and was a member of the Claude Hopkins orchestra until 1935.[4] Hall had been featured on alto and baritone saxophone since 1922. When he joined Billy Hicks's band, the Sizzling Six, he had a position as a full-time clarinetist. On June 15, 1937, he had his first recording session with Billie Holiday, accompanied by Lester Young on tenor saxophone.

 
At the Café Society, from left: Joe Williams, Andy Kirk, Edmond Hall, and John Hammond

In 1940, Henry "Red" Allen arrived at the Café Society, and Hall became the band's clarinetist.[4] Hall spent nine years at the Café Society, playing and recording in between jobs with many of his contemporaries, such as Sid Catlett, Charlie Christian, Ida Cox, Wild Bill Davison, Sidney De Paris, Vic Dickenson, Roy Eldridge, Bud Freeman, Coleman Hawkins, Eddie Heywood, J. C. Higginbotham, Meade Lux Lewis, Lucky Millinder, Hot Lips Page, Zutty Singleton, Joe Sullivan, Art Tatum, Jack Teagarden, Big Joe Turner, Helen Ward, and Josh White. He recorded for the first time as a leader in February 1941.

Late in 1941, Hall left Allen to join Teddy Wilson, who also played at the Café Society.[1] Around this time Hall's style changed. His admiration for Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw caused him to work on his technique. Hall tried a Boehm system clarinet, but that attempt was short-lived. He soon went back to his beloved Albert System clarinet, which he played until he died.

During this period, he made many recordings as Edmond Hall's Blue Note Jazzmen, the Edmond Hall Sextet, the Edmond Hall Celeste Quartet, Edmond Hall's Star Quintet, Ed Hall and the Big City Jazzmen, and Edmond Hall's Swingtet. The recording sessions always took place between the work hours of the Café Society and included many of the musicians who performed there. Hall was frequently invited to the Town Hall concerts led by Eddie Condon.[1]

In 1944, Teddy Wilson formed a trio, while the other band members remained at Café Society. Hall became a bandleader after being asked by Barney Josephson, owner of Café Society. He recorded for Blue Note and Commodore. In an Esquire magazine poll, he was voted the second-best clarinet player, behind the clarinetist he admired most, Benny Goodman.

With Louis Armstrong

In the mid-1940s, Barney Josephson sought new musicians to play Café Society. In June 1947, Hall left the club. Early in 1947 Louis Armstrong's appearance at Carnegie Hall was announced. Hall and his small combo were picked to accompany Armstrong during half of the program. As a result of this concert, Armstrong would abandon his big band and switch a small combo, the All Stars.

In September 1947, Hall joined the All-Star Stompers with Wild Bill Davison, Ralph Sutton and Baby Dodds. Meanwhile, Barney Josephson again asked Hall to return to Uptown Café Society with a new band. Business worsened, however, and Josephson closed Uptown in December 1947. Hall took his men back to Downtown Café Society but, in June 1948, Hall's band was replaced with the Dave Martin Trio.

In late 1948, Hall took a job at Boston's Savoy Cafe, playing with members of Bob Wilber's band. He also promoted a concert with George Wein. Steve Connolly of the Savoy Cafe asked Hall to bring his own band and replace Bob Wilber. Hall's band, the Edmond Hall All-Stars, began playing the Savoy on April 4, 1949.

Hall left the Savoy in early March 1950 to return to New York. He played clubs and festivals, including one job in San Francisco. Eddie Condon called Hall in San Francisco, asking him to join his band at Eddie Condon's.[1] Hall stayed with Condon, playing other jobs as well, mostly with members from Condon's band. An example was the Annual Steamboat Ball in June 1951 and the frequent sessions for the Dr. Jazz broadcasts during 1952. Condon's band recorded many sessions during Hall's engagement.

In November 1952, Hall participated in a special concert, "Hot Versus Cool," which pitted New Orleans-style jazz against bop. The New Orleans-style musicians were Hall, Dick Cary, Vic Dickenson, Jack Lesberg, Jimmy McPartland, and George Wettling. On the opposite side were Ray Abrams, Don Elliott, Dizzy Gillespie, Al McKibbon, and Max Roach. The album received a top rating of five stars in DownBeat magazine. During 1954, Hall played with Ralph Sutton, Mel Powell, and Jack Teagarden.

At the end of 1955, Hall left Condon to appear as a guest musician on the Teddy Wilson show. He then replaced Barney Bigard in the Louis Armstrong band, which toured Europe and Sweden. Felix Blair of The New York Times wrote, "America's secret weapon is a blue note in a minor key. Right now its most effective ambassador is Louis Satchmo Armstrong."[citation needed] The quotation was used for the album Ambassador Satch.

 
Hall on a beach in Ghana, 1950

The band moved to Los Angeles to participate in the filming of High Society (1956) starring Grace Kelly and Bing Crosby. After tours in Australia and England, the band visited Ghana, Africa, where it played for its largest audience, 11,000 at the first concert.[citation needed] Back in the U.S., there was a performance with the New York Philharmonic under Leonard Bernstein. The evening's grand finale was Bernstein conducting the stadium symphony orchestra in an Alfredo Antonini arrangement of "Saint Louis Blues". The event was held at Lewisohn Stadium in New York, which drew a crowd of 21,000 people. The event was filmed as part of the documentary Satchmo the Great, produced and narrated by Edward R. Murrow, with film clips of the tours in Europe and Ghana.

The All Stars appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show before leaving for the midwest to play the Ravinia Festival near Chicago. They participated in a Norman Granz Benefit at Hollywood Bowl. In December 1956, they recorded the album Satchmo – A Musical Autobiography and supported it with a tour in the U.S. and South America. Hall became an honorary member of the Hot Club De Buenos Aires.

Tired of touring, Hall left the All-Stars and took a vacation in California. After his vacation, he performed with old friends Eddie Condon, Ralph Sutton, Teddy Wilson, Red Allen, and J. C. Higginbotham. Hall was invited to play with bands in Toronto, then returned to Chicago for an engagement at the Jazz, Ltd. club. At the end of 1958, he entered the studio to record Petit Fleur with his sextet, including friends from Cafe Society such as Vic Dickenson.

Hall returned to Ghana, having been impressed with its beauty, friendliness, and lack of racial prejudice. His goal was to settle there and start a music school. Hall and Winnie left New York for an exploratory trip, and when they returned they had decided to move to Ghana. Before moving, Hall was invited to the South Shore Jazz Festival in Milton, Massachusetts. He recorded Rumpus on Rampart Street with his orchestra, then left for Ghana. But his attempt at a music school failed. He was unable to get students to practice, and their lack of discipline and interest motivated his return to the U.S.

Hall flew to Copenhagen in 1961 to perform as a guest with Papa Bue's Viking Jazz Band. Returning home, he assembled the Hall American Jazz Stars and played at Condon's in New York City. During the early 1960s, he worked often, touring with Yves Montand and Chris Barber, and recording with Leonard Gaskin, Marlowe Morris, and the Dukes of Dixieland. In 1964, Hall and his wife settled in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Last years

 
Hall in Czechoslovakia, 1962

George Wein assembled a package of bands, and Hall was the featured star with the Dukes of Dixieland, who toured Japan in July 1964. He played at the Carnegie Hall Salute to Eddie Condon and appeared at jazz festivals, often with his friend Vic Dickenson.

For a few months, he played regularly at the Monticello restaurant, often in front of little or no audience as jazz was less popular. Hall would have played for as little as $50, but his wife did not let him unless the offer was at least $70–$75. By then Hall was semi-retired and would show up unexpectedly at a nearby pub where the local band, Tomasso and His Jewels of Dixieland, would play. According to Tomasso, they never knew when Hall would show up. Hall did that for an about six months for free, without any contract, for the pleasure of playing.

A break came in November 1966, when plans for a European tour were made. Hall was to play with Alan Elsdon's band during the tour, which began in England and extended to Germany, Denmark, and Sweden. Hall returned to Denmark to record for Storyville at the Rosenberg Studio in Copenhangen.

Hall was back home for Christmas. In January 1967, there was another important engagement, John Hammond's 30th Anniversary Concert – Spirituals to Swing at Carnegie Hall in New York. Hall was invited as he belonged the Café Society Band, which was featured at the concert. The next important concert was the Second Annual Boston Globe Jazz Festival on January 21, 1967. On February 3, 1967, Hall played at the Governor Dummer Academy with George Poor's band as a featured performer with Bobby Hackett. This was his last recording (JCD-233).

Hall died on February 12, 1967, at the age of 65.[5]

Private life

 
Hall with his wife, Winnie, 1965

In April 1922, while playing in Buddy Petit's Band, Hall married 17-year-old girl Octavia Stewart. The marriage was prompted by the imminent arrival of their son, Elton Edmond Hall, who was born on July 20, 1922, but died as a child on December 3, 1934.

On May 12, 1938, he married his second wife, Winnifred Henry from Cambridge Massachusetts. He met her while he was a member of the Hopkins Band three years earlier at Ruggles Hall in Boston. The couple had no children. Hall was constantly practicing his clarinet even on his days off. Winnie sometimes was part of his travels. They had friends in England whom they visited frequently.

Throughout his career into the mid-1950s, Hall was confronted with race discrimination. In 1951, while playing at Condon's a film crew came in and wanted Hall to play the background track, but he was replaced with Pee Wee Russell for the actual shooting. Hall refused and called his union. Condon and the other musicians supported him. Losing a large audience in the south, if displaying a black man in the band was the company's reasoning. They did make two versions but in the end, the version with Hall was the only one released. Hall also recalled being talked to by police frequently, about the way he had parked his car, while others in the group were not bothered. On one occasion he and his wife were refused a hotel room and were forced to spend the night in their car.

In 1952, Hall, Buzzy Drootin and Ralph Sutton appeared as the Ralph Sutton Trio in Saint Louis, where they played the "Encore Lounge" for several weeks. They were the first mixed trio there.

Awards and honors

  • Silver Award for clarinet, Esquire magazine, 1945[citation needed]
  • Certificate of nomination, one of outstanding jazz artists, Playboy magazine, 1961
  • Best Clarinetist, Melody Maker magazine, 1961

Discography

As leader

  • Jamming in Jazz (Blue Note, 1951)
  • Jazz at the Savoy Cafe (Savoy, 1954)
  • Petite Fleur (United Artists, 1959)
  • Rumpus On Rampart St. (Mount Vernon Music, 1959)
  • Swing Session (Commodore, 1959)
  • Celestial Express (Blue Note, 1969)
  • 1937–1944 (Classics, 1995)
  • 1944–1945 (Classics, 1996)
  • Edmond Hall with Alan Elsdon's Band (Jazzology, 1995)[6]
  • Edmond Hall's Last Concert (Jazzology, 1996)
  • Profoundly Blue (Blue Note, 1998)

As sideman

  • Louis Armstrong, European Concert by Ambassador Satch (Columbia, 1955)
  • Louis Armstrong & Eddie Condon, At Newport (Columbia, 1956)
  • Louis Armstrong, Louis and the Good Book (Decca, 1958)
  • Chris Barber, Chris Barber's American Jazz Band (Laurie, 1959)
  • Eddie Condon, Bixieland (Columbia, 1955)
  • Eddie Condon, Jammin' at Condon's (Columbia, 1955)
  • Wild Bill Davison, Ringside at Condon's Featuring Wild Bill Davison (Savoy, 1956)
  • Vic Dickenson, The Vic Dickenson Showcase (Vanguard, 1953)
  • Vic Dickenson & Urbie Green, Slidin' Swing (Jazztone, 1957)
  • Bud Freeman, Midnight at Eddie Condon's (Emarcy, 1955)
  • Leonard Gaskin, At the Jazz Band Ball (Prestige Swingville, 1962)
  • Marlowe Morris, Play the Thing (Columbia, 1962)
  • Jack Teagarden, Jazz Great (Bethlehem, 1956)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Colin Larkin, ed. (1992). The Guinness Who's Who of Jazz (First ed.). Guinness Publishing. p. 181. ISBN 0-85112-580-8.
  2. ^ Selchow, Manfred (1988). Profoundly Blue: A Bio-discographical Scrapbook on Edmond Hall. M. Selchow. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
  3. ^ "Ross Deluxe Syncopators". Red Hot Jazz Archive. 25 October 2020. Retrieved 25 October 2020.
  4. ^ a b Yanow, Scott. "Edmond Hall". AllMusic. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  5. ^ Edmond Hall Dies; Jazz Clarinetist in The Connecticut Post, February 13, 1967.
  6. ^ "Edmond Hall". AllMusic. Retrieved 2 November 2017.
  • Manfred Selchow, Profoundly Blue, 1988
  • Dick M. Bakker, Billie Holiday and Teddy Wilson 1932–1934, Alphen aan de Rijn, Netherlands 1975
  • Alan Barrell, Four Brothers - Halls of Fame, Vol. X - No. 6 1979
  • Alan Barrell, About Lee Collins, Vol. V - No. 4, 1974
  • Walter Bruyninckx, 60 Years of Recorded Jazz 1917–1977, Mechelen Belgium
  • Brian Case/Stan Britt, The illustrated Encyclopedia of Jazz, Salamander Books London 1978
  • Samuel B. Charters, Jazz New Orleans 1885–1963
  • John Chilton, Who's Who of Jazz, Chilton Book Company, Philadelphia, New York, London 1970
  • John Chilton, Blues, Blues; quartet books, London 1977
  • Mary Collins, John W. Miner, Jazz: From Lee Collins' Story, Evergreen Review 35, March 1965
  • Stanley Dance, The World of Swing, New York 1974
  • Stanley Dance, Jazz Era - The Forties, Jazz Book Club, London 1962
  • Jempi de Donder, My Buddy, Vol. XIV, No. 3, February/March 1983
  • Jorgen Grunnet Jepsen, Jazz Records 1942–1962, Emil Knudsen, Holte Denmark
  • Max Jones, The Edmond Hall Story (3 parts), Melody Maker, April 1956
  • Orrin Keepnews/Bill Grauer Jr., Pictorial History of Jazz, revised edition, Spring Books, The Hamlyn
  • Publishing Group Ltd., Feltham Middlesex, England, 1968
  • Horst H. Lange, Die Deutsche 78er Discographie der Hot-Dance und Jazz-Musik 1903–1958, 2. erweiterte Auflage, Kolloquium Verlag, Berlin, Germany, 1978
  • Peter Kunst, Edmond Hall, Jazz Podium 5/Vl, Germany 1957
  • Berry McRae, Edmond Hall, Jazz Journal Vol. XXIII/No. 12, December 1970
  • Herman Rosenberg/Eugene Williams, New Orleans Clarinets 2, Edmond Hall, Jazz Information, No. 2, August 9, 1940
  • Interviews with Edmond Hall by William Russell and Richard B. Allen, April 11, 1957, and July 18, 1958; Courtesy R. B. Allen - Curator of William Ransom Hogan Jazz Archive, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA
  • Interviews with Kid Thomas Valentine by William Russell and Richard B. Allen, 1957,1962; Courtesy R. B. Allen - Curator of William Ransom Hogan Jazz Archive, Tulane University, New Orleans, LA
  • Brian Rust, Jazz Records 1897–1942, 4th edition, Arlington House Publishers, New York 1978
  • James D. Shacter, Piano Man, Jaynar Press, Chicago 1975
  • Nat Shapiro/Nat Hentoff, Hear Me Talkin' to Ya, Dover Publications, New York 1995
  • Charles E. Smith, Ed Hall - Gentleman Traveler, Downbeat, 11, 24, 1960
  • Anton Trular, New Orleans Musiker in Europa: Edmond Hall, Jazz Podium No. 9/lX - 1960
  • C.K. "Bozy" White, The Eddie Condon Town Hall Broadcasts 1944–1955, Shoestring Records, Oakland, CA, 1980
  • Felix Blair, New York Times, 1955
  • P. Scott of Globe and Mail, 5/5/1962
  • Leonard Feather, New Yorker Post 8/2/1964

External links

  • All Music
  • Interview with Edmond Hall, undated. University of Texas at San Antonio: Institute of Texan Cultures: Oral History Collection, UA 15.01, University of Texas at San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.

edmond, hall, those, similar, name, edmund, hall, disambiguation, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verificat. For those of a similar name see Edmund Hall disambiguation This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Edmond Hall news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations June 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Edmond Hall May 15 1901 February 11 1967 1 was an American jazz clarinetist and bandleader Over his career Hall worked extensively with many leading performers as both a sideman and bandleader and is possibly best known for the 1941 chamber jazz song Profoundly Blue Edmond HallBackground informationBorn 1901 05 15 May 15 1901Reserve Louisiana U S DiedFebruary 11 1967 1967 02 11 aged 65 Boston MassachusettsGenresSwing DixielandOccupation s MusicianInstrument s Clarinet alto saxophone baritone saxophone Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Music career 1 3 With Louis Armstrong 1 4 Last years 1 5 Private life 2 Awards and honors 3 Discography 3 1 As leader 3 2 As sideman 4 References 5 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Born in Reserve Louisiana United States about 40 miles west of New Orleans on the Mississippi River Hall and his siblings were born into a musical family His father Edward Blainey Hall and mother Caroline Duhe had eight children Priscilla 1893 Moretta 1895 Viola 1897 Robert 1899 Edmond 1901 Clarence 1903 Edward 1905 and Herbert 1907 1 His father Edward played the clarinet in the Onward Brass Band 1 joined by Edmond s maternal uncles Jules Duhe on trombone Lawrence Duhe on clarinet and Edmond Duhe on guitar The Hall brothers Robert Edmond and Herbert all became clarinetists 1 but Edmond was first taught guitar by his uncle Edmond When Hall picked up the clarinet he could play it within a week He started Monday and played it Saturday his brother Herb recalled in an interview with Manfred Selchow who wrote a biography of Hall titled Profoundly Blue 1988 2 Hall worked as a farmhand but by 1919 he had become tired of the hard work and despite his parents worries of him finding a decent job as a musician he left for New Orleans The first New Orleans band he played with was that of Bud Rousell Bud Russell He also played with Jack Carey trombone and blues cornetist Chris Kelley Music career Edit In 1920 he went to a dance at Economy Hall in New Orleans where Buddy Petit was playing Petit needed a replacement on clarinet and he hired Hall 1 After two years he moved to Pensacola Florida and joined Lee Collins s band followed by Mack Thomas and the Pensacola Jazzers 1 He met trumpeter Cootie Williams and with Williams he joined the Alonzo Ross DeLuxe Syncopators 3 Hall moved to New York City in 1928 and was a member of the Claude Hopkins orchestra until 1935 4 Hall had been featured on alto and baritone saxophone since 1922 When he joined Billy Hicks s band the Sizzling Six he had a position as a full time clarinetist On June 15 1937 he had his first recording session with Billie Holiday accompanied by Lester Young on tenor saxophone At the Cafe Society from left Joe Williams Andy Kirk Edmond Hall and John Hammond In 1940 Henry Red Allen arrived at the Cafe Society and Hall became the band s clarinetist 4 Hall spent nine years at the Cafe Society playing and recording in between jobs with many of his contemporaries such as Sid Catlett Charlie Christian Ida Cox Wild Bill Davison Sidney De Paris Vic Dickenson Roy Eldridge Bud Freeman Coleman Hawkins Eddie Heywood J C Higginbotham Meade Lux Lewis Lucky Millinder Hot Lips Page Zutty Singleton Joe Sullivan Art Tatum Jack Teagarden Big Joe Turner Helen Ward and Josh White He recorded for the first time as a leader in February 1941 Late in 1941 Hall left Allen to join Teddy Wilson who also played at the Cafe Society 1 Around this time Hall s style changed His admiration for Benny Goodman and Artie Shaw caused him to work on his technique Hall tried a Boehm system clarinet but that attempt was short lived He soon went back to his beloved Albert System clarinet which he played until he died During this period he made many recordings as Edmond Hall s Blue Note Jazzmen the Edmond Hall Sextet the Edmond Hall Celeste Quartet Edmond Hall s Star Quintet Ed Hall and the Big City Jazzmen and Edmond Hall s Swingtet The recording sessions always took place between the work hours of the Cafe Society and included many of the musicians who performed there Hall was frequently invited to the Town Hall concerts led by Eddie Condon 1 In 1944 Teddy Wilson formed a trio while the other band members remained at Cafe Society Hall became a bandleader after being asked by Barney Josephson owner of Cafe Society He recorded for Blue Note and Commodore In an Esquire magazine poll he was voted the second best clarinet player behind the clarinetist he admired most Benny Goodman With Louis Armstrong Edit In the mid 1940s Barney Josephson sought new musicians to play Cafe Society In June 1947 Hall left the club Early in 1947 Louis Armstrong s appearance at Carnegie Hall was announced Hall and his small combo were picked to accompany Armstrong during half of the program As a result of this concert Armstrong would abandon his big band and switch a small combo the All Stars In September 1947 Hall joined the All Star Stompers with Wild Bill Davison Ralph Sutton and Baby Dodds Meanwhile Barney Josephson again asked Hall to return to Uptown Cafe Society with a new band Business worsened however and Josephson closed Uptown in December 1947 Hall took his men back to Downtown Cafe Society but in June 1948 Hall s band was replaced with the Dave Martin Trio In late 1948 Hall took a job at Boston s Savoy Cafe playing with members of Bob Wilber s band He also promoted a concert with George Wein Steve Connolly of the Savoy Cafe asked Hall to bring his own band and replace Bob Wilber Hall s band the Edmond Hall All Stars began playing the Savoy on April 4 1949 Hall left the Savoy in early March 1950 to return to New York He played clubs and festivals including one job in San Francisco Eddie Condon called Hall in San Francisco asking him to join his band at Eddie Condon s 1 Hall stayed with Condon playing other jobs as well mostly with members from Condon s band An example was the Annual Steamboat Ball in June 1951 and the frequent sessions for the Dr Jazz broadcasts during 1952 Condon s band recorded many sessions during Hall s engagement In November 1952 Hall participated in a special concert Hot Versus Cool which pitted New Orleans style jazz against bop The New Orleans style musicians were Hall Dick Cary Vic Dickenson Jack Lesberg Jimmy McPartland and George Wettling On the opposite side were Ray Abrams Don Elliott Dizzy Gillespie Al McKibbon and Max Roach The album received a top rating of five stars in DownBeat magazine During 1954 Hall played with Ralph Sutton Mel Powell and Jack Teagarden At the end of 1955 Hall left Condon to appear as a guest musician on the Teddy Wilson show He then replaced Barney Bigard in the Louis Armstrong band which toured Europe and Sweden Felix Blair of The New York Times wrote America s secret weapon is a blue note in a minor key Right now its most effective ambassador is Louis Satchmo Armstrong citation needed The quotation was used for the album Ambassador Satch Hall on a beach in Ghana 1950 The band moved to Los Angeles to participate in the filming of High Society 1956 starring Grace Kelly and Bing Crosby After tours in Australia and England the band visited Ghana Africa where it played for its largest audience 11 000 at the first concert citation needed Back in the U S there was a performance with the New York Philharmonic under Leonard Bernstein The evening s grand finale was Bernstein conducting the stadium symphony orchestra in an Alfredo Antonini arrangement of Saint Louis Blues The event was held at Lewisohn Stadium in New York which drew a crowd of 21 000 people The event was filmed as part of the documentary Satchmo the Great produced and narrated by Edward R Murrow with film clips of the tours in Europe and Ghana The All Stars appeared on The Ed Sullivan Show before leaving for the midwest to play the Ravinia Festival near Chicago They participated in a Norman Granz Benefit at Hollywood Bowl In December 1956 they recorded the album Satchmo A Musical Autobiography and supported it with a tour in the U S and South America Hall became an honorary member of the Hot Club De Buenos Aires Tired of touring Hall left the All Stars and took a vacation in California After his vacation he performed with old friends Eddie Condon Ralph Sutton Teddy Wilson Red Allen and J C Higginbotham Hall was invited to play with bands in Toronto then returned to Chicago for an engagement at the Jazz Ltd club At the end of 1958 he entered the studio to record Petit Fleur with his sextet including friends from Cafe Society such as Vic Dickenson Hall returned to Ghana having been impressed with its beauty friendliness and lack of racial prejudice His goal was to settle there and start a music school Hall and Winnie left New York for an exploratory trip and when they returned they had decided to move to Ghana Before moving Hall was invited to the South Shore Jazz Festival in Milton Massachusetts He recorded Rumpus on Rampart Street with his orchestra then left for Ghana But his attempt at a music school failed He was unable to get students to practice and their lack of discipline and interest motivated his return to the U S Hall flew to Copenhagen in 1961 to perform as a guest with Papa Bue s Viking Jazz Band Returning home he assembled the Hall American Jazz Stars and played at Condon s in New York City During the early 1960s he worked often touring with Yves Montand and Chris Barber and recording with Leonard Gaskin Marlowe Morris and the Dukes of Dixieland In 1964 Hall and his wife settled in Cambridge Massachusetts Last years Edit Hall in Czechoslovakia 1962 George Wein assembled a package of bands and Hall was the featured star with the Dukes of Dixieland who toured Japan in July 1964 He played at the Carnegie Hall Salute to Eddie Condon and appeared at jazz festivals often with his friend Vic Dickenson For a few months he played regularly at the Monticello restaurant often in front of little or no audience as jazz was less popular Hall would have played for as little as 50 but his wife did not let him unless the offer was at least 70 75 By then Hall was semi retired and would show up unexpectedly at a nearby pub where the local band Tomasso and His Jewels of Dixieland would play According to Tomasso they never knew when Hall would show up Hall did that for an about six months for free without any contract for the pleasure of playing A break came in November 1966 when plans for a European tour were made Hall was to play with Alan Elsdon s band during the tour which began in England and extended to Germany Denmark and Sweden Hall returned to Denmark to record for Storyville at the Rosenberg Studio in Copenhangen Hall was back home for Christmas In January 1967 there was another important engagement John Hammond s 30th Anniversary Concert Spirituals to Swing at Carnegie Hall in New York Hall was invited as he belonged the Cafe Society Band which was featured at the concert The next important concert was the Second Annual Boston Globe Jazz Festival on January 21 1967 On February 3 1967 Hall played at the Governor Dummer Academy with George Poor s band as a featured performer with Bobby Hackett This was his last recording JCD 233 Hall died on February 12 1967 at the age of 65 5 Private life Edit Hall with his wife Winnie 1965 In April 1922 while playing in Buddy Petit s Band Hall married 17 year old girl Octavia Stewart The marriage was prompted by the imminent arrival of their son Elton Edmond Hall who was born on July 20 1922 but died as a child on December 3 1934 On May 12 1938 he married his second wife Winnifred Henry from Cambridge Massachusetts He met her while he was a member of the Hopkins Band three years earlier at Ruggles Hall in Boston The couple had no children Hall was constantly practicing his clarinet even on his days off Winnie sometimes was part of his travels They had friends in England whom they visited frequently Throughout his career into the mid 1950s Hall was confronted with race discrimination In 1951 while playing at Condon s a film crew came in and wanted Hall to play the background track but he was replaced with Pee Wee Russell for the actual shooting Hall refused and called his union Condon and the other musicians supported him Losing a large audience in the south if displaying a black man in the band was the company s reasoning They did make two versions but in the end the version with Hall was the only one released Hall also recalled being talked to by police frequently about the way he had parked his car while others in the group were not bothered On one occasion he and his wife were refused a hotel room and were forced to spend the night in their car In 1952 Hall Buzzy Drootin and Ralph Sutton appeared as the Ralph Sutton Trio in Saint Louis where they played the Encore Lounge for several weeks They were the first mixed trio there Awards and honors EditSilver Award for clarinet Esquire magazine 1945 citation needed Certificate of nomination one of outstanding jazz artists Playboy magazine 1961 Best Clarinetist Melody Maker magazine 1961Discography EditAs leader Edit Jamming in Jazz Blue Note 1951 Jazz at the Savoy Cafe Savoy 1954 Petite Fleur United Artists 1959 Rumpus On Rampart St Mount Vernon Music 1959 Swing Session Commodore 1959 Celestial Express Blue Note 1969 1937 1944 Classics 1995 1944 1945 Classics 1996 Edmond Hall with Alan Elsdon s Band Jazzology 1995 6 Edmond Hall s Last Concert Jazzology 1996 Profoundly Blue Blue Note 1998 As sideman Edit Louis Armstrong European Concert by Ambassador Satch Columbia 1955 Louis Armstrong amp Eddie Condon At Newport Columbia 1956 Louis Armstrong Louis and the Good Book Decca 1958 Chris Barber Chris Barber s American Jazz Band Laurie 1959 Eddie Condon Bixieland Columbia 1955 Eddie Condon Jammin at Condon s Columbia 1955 Wild Bill Davison Ringside at Condon s Featuring Wild Bill Davison Savoy 1956 Vic Dickenson The Vic Dickenson Showcase Vanguard 1953 Vic Dickenson amp Urbie Green Slidin Swing Jazztone 1957 Bud Freeman Midnight at Eddie Condon s Emarcy 1955 Leonard Gaskin At the Jazz Band Ball Prestige Swingville 1962 Marlowe Morris Play the Thing Columbia 1962 Jack Teagarden Jazz Great Bethlehem 1956 References Edit a b c d e f g h i Colin Larkin ed 1992 The Guinness Who s Who of Jazz First ed Guinness Publishing p 181 ISBN 0 85112 580 8 Selchow Manfred 1988 Profoundly Blue A Bio discographical Scrapbook on Edmond Hall M Selchow Retrieved 1 November 2017 Ross Deluxe Syncopators Red Hot Jazz Archive 25 October 2020 Retrieved 25 October 2020 a b Yanow Scott Edmond Hall AllMusic Retrieved 2 November 2017 Edmond Hall Dies Jazz Clarinetist in The Connecticut Post February 13 1967 Edmond Hall AllMusic Retrieved 2 November 2017 Manfred Selchow Profoundly Blue 1988 Dick M Bakker Billie Holiday and Teddy Wilson 1932 1934 Alphen aan de Rijn Netherlands 1975 Alan Barrell Four Brothers Halls of Fame Vol X No 6 1979 Alan Barrell About Lee Collins Vol V No 4 1974 Walter Bruyninckx 60 Years of Recorded Jazz 1917 1977 Mechelen Belgium Brian Case Stan Britt The illustrated Encyclopedia of Jazz Salamander Books London 1978 Samuel B Charters Jazz New Orleans 1885 1963 John Chilton Who s Who of Jazz Chilton Book Company Philadelphia New York London 1970 John Chilton Blues Blues quartet books London 1977 Mary Collins John W Miner Jazz From Lee Collins Story Evergreen Review 35 March 1965 Stanley Dance The World of Swing New York 1974 Stanley Dance Jazz Era The Forties Jazz Book Club London 1962 Jempi de Donder My Buddy Vol XIV No 3 February March 1983 Jorgen Grunnet Jepsen Jazz Records 1942 1962 Emil Knudsen Holte Denmark Max Jones The Edmond Hall Story 3 parts Melody Maker April 1956 Orrin Keepnews Bill Grauer Jr Pictorial History of Jazz revised edition Spring Books The Hamlyn Publishing Group Ltd Feltham Middlesex England 1968 Horst H Lange Die Deutsche 78er Discographie der Hot Dance und Jazz Musik 1903 1958 2 erweiterte Auflage Kolloquium Verlag Berlin Germany 1978 Peter Kunst Edmond Hall Jazz Podium 5 Vl Germany 1957 Berry McRae Edmond Hall Jazz Journal Vol XXIII No 12 December 1970 Herman Rosenberg Eugene Williams New Orleans Clarinets 2 Edmond Hall Jazz Information No 2 August 9 1940 Interviews with Edmond Hall by William Russell and Richard B Allen April 11 1957 and July 18 1958 Courtesy R B Allen Curator of William Ransom Hogan Jazz Archive Tulane University New Orleans LA Interviews with Kid Thomas Valentine by William Russell and Richard B Allen 1957 1962 Courtesy R B Allen Curator of William Ransom Hogan Jazz Archive Tulane University New Orleans LA Brian Rust Jazz Records 1897 1942 4th edition Arlington House Publishers New York 1978 James D Shacter Piano Man Jaynar Press Chicago 1975 Nat Shapiro Nat Hentoff Hear Me Talkin to Ya Dover Publications New York 1995 Charles E Smith Ed Hall Gentleman Traveler Downbeat 11 24 1960 Anton Trular New Orleans Musiker in Europa Edmond Hall Jazz Podium No 9 lX 1960 C K Bozy White The Eddie Condon Town Hall Broadcasts 1944 1955 Shoestring Records Oakland CA 1980 Felix Blair New York Times 1955 P Scott of Globe and Mail 5 5 1962 Leonard Feather New Yorker Post 8 2 1964External links EditAll Music Interview with Edmond Hall undated University of Texas at San Antonio Institute of Texan Cultures Oral History Collection UA 15 01 University of Texas at San Antonio Libraries Special Collections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Edmond Hall amp oldid 1142611114, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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