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Tiger Rag

"Tiger Rag" is a jazz standard that was recorded and copyrighted by the Original Dixieland Jass Band in 1917. It is one of the most recorded jazz compositions. In 2003, the 1918 recording of "Tiger Rag" was entered into the U.S. Library of Congress National Recording Registry.[1][2]

"Tiger Rag"
Sheet music for "Tiger Rag" as recorded by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band (1918)
Instrumental by The Original Dixieland Jazz Band
Released1917 (1917)
Recorded1917
GenreDixieland
LabelAeolian-Vocalion
Composer(s)Eddie Edwards, Nick LaRocca, Henry Ragas, Tony Sbarbaro, Larry Shields
Lyricist(s)Harry DeCosta
Recording
Performed by the Dixie Players of the United States Air Force Heritage of America Band

Background edit

The song was first recorded on August 17, 1917 by the Original Dixieland Jass Band for Aeolian-Vocalion Records. The band did not use the "Jazz" spelling in its name until 1917.[3] The Aeolian-Vocalion sides did not sell well because they were recorded in a vertical-cut format which could not be played successfully on most contemporary phonographs.

 
The first release of "Tiger Rag" on Aeolian Vocalion in 1917

But the second recording on March 25, 1918 for Victor, made by the more common lateral-cut recording method, was a hit and established the song as a jazz standard.[4] The song was copyrighted, published, and credited to band members Eddie Edwards, Nick LaRocca, Henry Ragas, Tony Sbarbaro, and Larry Shields in 1917.[5]

Authorship edit

"Tiger Rag" was first copyrighted in 1917 with music composed by Nick LaRocca. In subsequent releases, the ODJB members received authorship credit. This authorship has never been challenged legally. According to author Frank Tirro,

But even before the first recording, several musicians had achieved prominence as leading jazz performers, and several numbers of what was to become the standard repertoire had already been developed. "Tiger Rag" and "Oh, Didn't He Ramble" were played long before the first jazz recording, and the names of Buddy Bolden, Jelly Roll Morton, Bunk Johnson, Papa Celestin, Sidney Bechet, King Oliver, Freddie Keppard, Kid Ory, and Papa Laine were already well known to the jazz community.[6]

Other New Orleans musicians claimed that the song, or at least portions of it, had been a standard in the city before it was recorded. Others copyrighted the melody or close variations of it, including Ray Lopez under the title "Weary Weasel" and Johnny De Droit under the title "Number Two Blues". Members of Papa Jack Laine's band said song was known in New Orleans as "Number Two" before the Dixieland Jass Band copyrighted it. In one interview, Laine said that the composer was Achille Baquet.

In his book Jazz: A History, Frank Tirro states, "Morton claims credit for transforming a French quadrille that was performed in different meters into ‘Tiger Rag’".[7]

The Italian musicologist Vincenzo Caporaletti has shown how the authorial self-attributions of Jelly Roll Morton are not reliable, by means of an analysis conducted on the first complete transcription in musical notation of Morton's Library of Congress performances (1938) with conclusions defined by Bruce Boyd Raeburn "justifiably compelling" on a scientific level.[8] Furthermore, Caporaletti has accurately identified the "floating folk strains" that Nick La Rocca assembled to create "Tiger Rag".[9]

According to writer Samuel Charters, "Tiger Rag" was worked out by the Jack Carey Band, the group which developed many of the standard tunes that were recorded by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band.[10][11]

According to Tirro, the song was known as "Jack Carey" by the black musicians of the city. "It was compiled when Jack's brother Thomas, 'Papa Mutt', pulled the first strain from a book of quadrilles. The band evolved the second and third strains in order to show off the clarinetist, George Boyd, and the final strain ('Hold that tiger' section) was worked out by Jack, a trombonist, and the cornet player, Punch Miller."[6]: 170 

Other recordings edit

 
Nick LaRocca's house in Uptown New Orleans has the opening notes of "Tiger Rag" in the door screen.

After the success of the Original Dixieland Jass Band recordings, the song gained national popularity. Dance band and march orchestrations were published. Hundreds of recordings appeared in the late 1910s and through the 1920s. These include the New Orleans Rhythm Kings version with a clarinet solo by Leon Roppolo. Archaeologist Sylvanus Morley played it repeatedly on his wind up phonograph while exploring the ruins of Chichen Itza in the 1920s. With the arrival of sound films, it appeared on soundtracks to movies and cartoons when energetic music was needed.

"Tiger Rag" had over 136 versions by 1942.[12] Musicians who played it included Art Tatum, Benny Goodman, Frank Sinatra (in a version with lyrics), Duke Ellington, Bix Beiderbecke, and Louis Armstrong, who released the song at least three times as a 78 single, twice for Okeh in 1930 [13] and 1932,[13] and for the French arm of Brunswick in 1934.[14] A Japanese version was recorded in 1935 by Nakano Tadaharu and the Columbia Rhythm Boys.

The Mills Brothers became a national sensation with their million-selling version in 1931.[15] In the same year the Washboard Rhythm Kings released a version that was cited as an influence on rock and roll. During the early 1930s "Tiger Rag" became a standard show-off piece for big band arrangers and soloists in the UK, where Bert Ambrose, Jack Hylton, Lew Stone, Billy Cotton, Jack Payne, and Ray Noble recorded it. But the song declined in popularity during the swing era, as it had become something of a cliché. Les Paul and Mary Ford had a hit version in 1952. Charlie Parker recorded a bebop version in 1954, the same year it appeared in the MGM cartoon Dixieland Droopy. In 2002, it was entered into the National Recording Registry at the U.S. Library of Congress.

It is the 32nd most recorded song from 1890 to 1954 based on Joel Whitburn's research for Billboard.[16]

A variant of the song is used by the Royal Thai Armed Forces as a "running march" during its military parades.[17]

A fight song in sports edit

"Tiger Rag" is often used as a fight song by American high school and college teams which have a tiger for a mascot. "Tiger Rag" is LSU's pregame song, which was first introduced in 1926. The Louisiana State University Tiger Marching Band performs it on the field before every home game and after the Tigers score a touchdown.

The Auburn University Marching Band also plays "Tiger Rag" as part of its pre-game performance before all home football games. The smaller pep band that plays for basketball games plays it just before the start of each half, timed so that the final note of the song is played as the horn sounds when the "game clock" counts down to triple-zeroes before each half.

The University of Texas at Dallas adopted "Tiger Rag" as its first official fight song in 2008.[18]

The Massillon Tiger Swing Band of Massillon, Ohio began playing "Tiger Rag" at Massillon Washington High School Tigers football games in 1938 when the team was coached by Paul Brown. It has been a Tiger tradition in Massillon ever since.[19]

The Cuyahoga Falls Tiger Marching Band plays Tiger Rag after the team scores the extra-point, as well as during their famous "Double Tiger Lines" drill, started in 1968.

"Tiger Rag – The Song That Shakes the Southland" is Clemson University's familiar fight song since 1942 and is performed at Tiger sporting events, pep rallies, and parades. A version has been arranged for the carillon on Clemson's campus.

It also has been played by Dixieland bands at Detroit Tigers home games and was popular during the 1934 and 1935 World Series.

Cover versions edit

In popular culture edit

A version of "Tiger Rag" can be heard in the Betty Boop cartoon Betty Boop and Grampy (1935). This particular version was later used in a brief scene in the Ren & Stimpy "Adult Party Cartoon" episode "Fire Dogs 2" (2003).[23] That version of the song was also used in a commercial for Xbox 360 during its launch in 2005.[24] The song is often heard in the "Ma and Pa Kettle" movie series.

The song is mentioned in David Bowie's song "Watch That Man" (1973).[25]

References edit

  1. ^ "Tiger rag". Loc.gov. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  2. ^ ""Tiger Rag" - The Original Dixieland Jazz Band (1918)" (PDF). Loc.gov. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  3. ^ Brunn, H. O. (1977). The Story of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band. Da Capo Press. ISBN 0-306-70892-2.
  4. ^ Jack, Stewart (2005). The Original Dixieland Jazz Band's Place in the Development of Jazz. New Orleans International Music Colloquium. New Orleans.
  5. ^ "Original Dixieland Jass Band". Red Hot Jazz Archive. 26 April 2020.
  6. ^ a b Tirro, Frank (1977). Jazz: A History. New York City: W. W. Norton. p. 157. ISBN 0-393-09078-7.
  7. ^ Blesh, Rudi (1958). Shining Trumpets: A History of Jazz (2 ed.). New York City: Knopf. p. 191.
  8. ^ Caporaletti, Vincenzo (2011). Jelly Roll Morton, the Old Quadrille and Tiger Rag. A Historiographic Revision. Lucca: Libreria Musicale Italiana. p. 49.
  9. ^ Caporaletti, Vincenzo (2018). ""Tiger Rag" and its Sources: New Interpretative Perspectives". Revue d'Études du Jazz et des Musiques Audiotactiles (1): 1–34. ISSN 2609-1690. Retrieved 4 July 2021.
  10. ^ Charters, Samuel B. (1963). Jazz: New Orleans, 1885–1963 (Revised ed.). New York: Oak Publications. p. 24.
  11. ^ "Jack Carey (1889-1934)". Red Hot Jazz Archive. 26 April 2020.
  12. ^ "Jazz Standards Songs and Instrumentals (Tiger Rag)". Jazzstandards.com.
  13. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 2011-08-22. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  14. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-11-07. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Gioia, Ted (2012). The Jazz Standards: A Guide to the Repertoire. New York City: Oxford University Press. pp. 434–436. ISBN 978-0-19-993739-4.
  16. ^ . Archived from the original on 2022-01-06. Retrieved 2022-01-06.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  17. ^ "โน้ตเพลงวงโยธวาทิต (Military Band) โน้ตเพลงสำหรับวงโยธวาทิต เพื่อใช้บรรเลงในงานราชพิธี งานพิธีการทั่วไป และ งานบรรเลงเดินแถวสวนสนาม".
  18. ^ "Worth Singing About: Comets Get a Fight Song". UT Dallas News Center. 2008-09-29. Retrieved 2021-09-21.
  19. ^ Wenzel, Robert (10 June 2004). . Archived from the original on 2004-06-10. Retrieved 5 November 2018.
  20. ^ "Original versions of Tiger Rag written by Nick LaRocca, Eddie Edwards, Henry Ragas, Tony Sbarbaro, Larry Shields". Secondhand Songs.
  21. ^ "Get Back/Let It Be sessions: complete song list". beatlesbible.com. 5 February 2011.
  22. ^ "Asleep at the Wheel - Tiger Rag (with Old Crow Medicine Show)". Retrieved 6 January 2022 – via YouTube.
  23. ^ "Max Fleischer". Lambiek.net. Retrieved 6 January 2022.
  24. ^ "Xbox 360 Jump in Commercial - Standoff". YouTube.
  25. ^ O'Connell, John (2019). Bowie's Bookshelf The Hundred Books that Changed David Bowie's Life. Gallery Books. p. 72.

External links edit

  • Online version of the 1918 recording by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band at the U.S. Library of Congress National Jukebox
  • Original Dixieland Jass Band Red Hot Jazz Archive
  • "Tiger Rag" at Second Hand Songs

tiger, hold, that, tiger, redirects, here, sonic, youth, album, hold, that, tiger, album, this, article, about, song, flag, named, battle, jazz, standard, that, recorded, copyrighted, original, dixieland, jass, band, 1917, most, recorded, jazz, compositions, 2. Hold That Tiger redirects here For the Sonic Youth album see Hold That Tiger album This article is about the song For the flag named Tiger Rag see Battle for the Rag Tiger Rag is a jazz standard that was recorded and copyrighted by the Original Dixieland Jass Band in 1917 It is one of the most recorded jazz compositions In 2003 the 1918 recording of Tiger Rag was entered into the U S Library of Congress National Recording Registry 1 2 Tiger Rag Sheet music for Tiger Rag as recorded by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band 1918 Instrumental by The Original Dixieland Jazz BandReleased1917 1917 Recorded1917GenreDixielandLabelAeolian VocalionComposer s Eddie Edwards Nick LaRocca Henry Ragas Tony Sbarbaro Larry ShieldsLyricist s Harry DeCostaRecording source source Performed by the Dixie Players of the United States Air Force Heritage of America Bandfilehelp Contents 1 Background 2 Authorship 3 Other recordings 4 A fight song in sports 5 Cover versions 6 In popular culture 7 References 8 External linksBackground edit nbsp Tiger Rag 1918 source source The Original Dixieland Jass Band s seminal 1918 recording of Tiger Rag Problems playing this file See media help The song was first recorded on August 17 1917 by the Original Dixieland Jass Band for Aeolian Vocalion Records The band did not use the Jazz spelling in its name until 1917 3 The Aeolian Vocalion sides did not sell well because they were recorded in a vertical cut format which could not be played successfully on most contemporary phonographs nbsp The first release of Tiger Rag on Aeolian Vocalion in 1917But the second recording on March 25 1918 for Victor made by the more common lateral cut recording method was a hit and established the song as a jazz standard 4 The song was copyrighted published and credited to band members Eddie Edwards Nick LaRocca Henry Ragas Tony Sbarbaro and Larry Shields in 1917 5 Authorship edit Tiger Rag was first copyrighted in 1917 with music composed by Nick LaRocca In subsequent releases the ODJB members received authorship credit This authorship has never been challenged legally According to author Frank Tirro But even before the first recording several musicians had achieved prominence as leading jazz performers and several numbers of what was to become the standard repertoire had already been developed Tiger Rag and Oh Didn t He Ramble were played long before the first jazz recording and the names of Buddy Bolden Jelly Roll Morton Bunk Johnson Papa Celestin Sidney Bechet King Oliver Freddie Keppard Kid Ory and Papa Laine were already well known to the jazz community 6 Other New Orleans musicians claimed that the song or at least portions of it had been a standard in the city before it was recorded Others copyrighted the melody or close variations of it including Ray Lopez under the title Weary Weasel and Johnny De Droit under the title Number Two Blues Members of Papa Jack Laine s band said song was known in New Orleans as Number Two before the Dixieland Jass Band copyrighted it In one interview Laine said that the composer was Achille Baquet In his book Jazz A History Frank Tirro states Morton claims credit for transforming a French quadrille that was performed in different meters into Tiger Rag 7 The Italian musicologist Vincenzo Caporaletti has shown how the authorial self attributions of Jelly Roll Morton are not reliable by means of an analysis conducted on the first complete transcription in musical notation of Morton s Library of Congress performances 1938 with conclusions defined by Bruce Boyd Raeburn justifiably compelling on a scientific level 8 Furthermore Caporaletti has accurately identified the floating folk strains that Nick La Rocca assembled to create Tiger Rag 9 According to writer Samuel Charters Tiger Rag was worked out by the Jack Carey Band the group which developed many of the standard tunes that were recorded by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band 10 11 According to Tirro the song was known as Jack Carey by the black musicians of the city It was compiled when Jack s brother Thomas Papa Mutt pulled the first strain from a book of quadrilles The band evolved the second and third strains in order to show off the clarinetist George Boyd and the final strain Hold that tiger section was worked out by Jack a trombonist and the cornet player Punch Miller 6 170 Other recordings edit nbsp Nick LaRocca s house in Uptown New Orleans has the opening notes of Tiger Rag in the door screen After the success of the Original Dixieland Jass Band recordings the song gained national popularity Dance band and march orchestrations were published Hundreds of recordings appeared in the late 1910s and through the 1920s These include the New Orleans Rhythm Kings version with a clarinet solo by Leon Roppolo Archaeologist Sylvanus Morley played it repeatedly on his wind up phonograph while exploring the ruins of Chichen Itza in the 1920s With the arrival of sound films it appeared on soundtracks to movies and cartoons when energetic music was needed Tiger Rag had over 136 versions by 1942 12 Musicians who played it included Art Tatum Benny Goodman Frank Sinatra in a version with lyrics Duke Ellington Bix Beiderbecke and Louis Armstrong who released the song at least three times as a 78 single twice for Okeh in 1930 13 and 1932 13 and for the French arm of Brunswick in 1934 14 A Japanese version was recorded in 1935 by Nakano Tadaharu and the Columbia Rhythm Boys The Mills Brothers became a national sensation with their million selling version in 1931 15 In the same year the Washboard Rhythm Kings released a version that was cited as an influence on rock and roll During the early 1930s Tiger Rag became a standard show off piece for big band arrangers and soloists in the UK where Bert Ambrose Jack Hylton Lew Stone Billy Cotton Jack Payne and Ray Noble recorded it But the song declined in popularity during the swing era as it had become something of a cliche Les Paul and Mary Ford had a hit version in 1952 Charlie Parker recorded a bebop version in 1954 the same year it appeared in the MGM cartoon Dixieland Droopy In 2002 it was entered into the National Recording Registry at the U S Library of Congress It is the 32nd most recorded song from 1890 to 1954 based on Joel Whitburn s research for Billboard 16 A variant of the song is used by the Royal Thai Armed Forces as a running march during its military parades 17 A fight song in sports edit Tiger Rag is often used as a fight song by American high school and college teams which have a tiger for a mascot Tiger Rag is LSU s pregame song which was first introduced in 1926 The Louisiana State University Tiger Marching Band performs it on the field before every home game and after the Tigers score a touchdown The Auburn University Marching Band also plays Tiger Rag as part of its pre game performance before all home football games The smaller pep band that plays for basketball games plays it just before the start of each half timed so that the final note of the song is played as the horn sounds when the game clock counts down to triple zeroes before each half The University of Texas at Dallas adopted Tiger Rag as its first official fight song in 2008 18 The Massillon Tiger Swing Band of Massillon Ohio began playing Tiger Rag at Massillon Washington High School Tigers football games in 1938 when the team was coached by Paul Brown It has been a Tiger tradition in Massillon ever since 19 The Cuyahoga Falls Tiger Marching Band plays Tiger Rag after the team scores the extra point as well as during their famous Double Tiger Lines drill started in 1968 Tiger Rag The Song That Shakes the Southland is Clemson University s familiar fight song since 1942 and is performed at Tiger sporting events pep rallies and parades A version has been arranged for the carillon on Clemson s campus It also has been played by Dixieland bands at Detroit Tigers home games and was popular during the 1934 and 1935 World Series Cover versions editThe ODJB s 1917 composition Tiger Rag became a jazz standard that was covered by Louis Armstrong Duke Ellington Charlie Parker Ted Lewis Joe Jackson and the Mills Brothers 20 Louis Armstrong Louis Armstrong in Scandinavia Vol 4 Stockholm January 16 1959 15 Louis Armstrong New York May 4 1930 15 The Beatles Get Back Let It Be sessions 1969 21 Bix Beiderbecke Richmond Indiana June 20 1924 15 Duke Ellington New York January 8 1929 15 Benny Goodman with Mel Powell New York August 29 1945 15 Andre Kostelanetz 15 Liberace 15 Glenn Miller 15 The Mills Brothers New York October 3 1931 15 Ray Noble 15 Mark O Connor with Wynton Marsalis In Full Swing New York August 26 30 2002 15 Original Dixieland Jazz Band New York March 25 1918 15 Charlie Parker Dizzy Gillespie and Lennie Tristano Bands for Bonds radio broadcast New York September 20 1947 15 Les Paul and Mary Ford Oakland New Jersey c 1951 15 Nicholas Payton Dear Louis New York September October 2000 15 Raymond Scott At Home with Dorothy and Raymond New York November 3 1956 15 Art Tatum New York March 21 1933 15 Paul Whiteman The New Tiger Rag New York July 25 1930 15 Asleep At The Wheel with Old Crow Medicine Show 2015 22 In popular culture editA version of Tiger Rag can be heard in the Betty Boop cartoon Betty Boop and Grampy 1935 This particular version was later used in a brief scene in the Ren amp Stimpy Adult Party Cartoon episode Fire Dogs 2 2003 23 That version of the song was also used in a commercial for Xbox 360 during its launch in 2005 24 The song is often heard in the Ma and Pa Kettle movie series The song is mentioned in David Bowie s song Watch That Man 1973 25 References edit Tiger rag Loc gov Retrieved 6 January 2022 Tiger Rag The Original Dixieland Jazz Band 1918 PDF Loc gov Retrieved 6 January 2022 Brunn H O 1977 The Story of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band Da Capo Press ISBN 0 306 70892 2 Jack Stewart 2005 The Original Dixieland Jazz Band s Place in the Development of Jazz New Orleans International Music Colloquium New Orleans Original Dixieland Jass Band Red Hot Jazz Archive 26 April 2020 a b Tirro Frank 1977 Jazz A History New York City W W Norton p 157 ISBN 0 393 09078 7 Blesh Rudi 1958 Shining Trumpets A History of Jazz 2 ed New York City Knopf p 191 Caporaletti Vincenzo 2011 Jelly Roll Morton the Old Quadrille and Tiger Rag A Historiographic Revision Lucca Libreria Musicale Italiana p 49 Caporaletti Vincenzo 2018 Tiger Rag and its Sources New Interpretative Perspectives Revue d Etudes du Jazz et des Musiques Audiotactiles 1 1 34 ISSN 2609 1690 Retrieved 4 July 2021 Charters Samuel B 1963 Jazz New Orleans 1885 1963 Revised ed New York Oak Publications p 24 Jack Carey 1889 1934 Red Hot Jazz Archive 26 April 2020 Jazz Standards Songs and Instrumentals Tiger Rag Jazzstandards com a b Stardom Louis Armstrong On His Own 1929 1932 Archived from the original on 2011 08 22 Retrieved 6 January 2022 Swinging In the Thirties 1932 1942 Archived from the original on 2013 11 07 Retrieved 6 January 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Gioia Ted 2012 The Jazz Standards A Guide to the Repertoire New York City Oxford University Press pp 434 436 ISBN 978 0 19 993739 4 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2022 01 06 Retrieved 2022 01 06 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link ontephlngwngoythwathit Military Band ontephlngsahrbwngoythwathit ephuxichbrrelnginnganrachphithi nganphithikarthwip aela nganbrrelngedinaethwswnsnam Worth Singing About Comets Get a Fight Song UT Dallas News Center 2008 09 29 Retrieved 2021 09 21 Wenzel Robert 10 June 2004 History of the Tiger Swing Band Archived from the original on 2004 06 10 Retrieved 5 November 2018 Original versions of Tiger Rag written by Nick LaRocca Eddie Edwards Henry Ragas Tony Sbarbaro Larry Shields Secondhand Songs Get Back Let It Be sessions complete song list beatlesbible com 5 February 2011 Asleep at the Wheel Tiger Rag with Old Crow Medicine Show Retrieved 6 January 2022 via YouTube Max Fleischer Lambiek net Retrieved 6 January 2022 Xbox 360 Jump in Commercial Standoff YouTube O Connell John 2019 Bowie s Bookshelf The Hundred Books that Changed David Bowie s Life Gallery Books p 72 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tiger Rag Online version of the 1918 recording by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band at the U S Library of Congress National Jukebox Original Dixieland Jass Band Red Hot Jazz Archive Tiger Rag at Second Hand Songs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tiger Rag amp oldid 1181120149, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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