@@patoni860 who’s the smart one? 😂 “Growing up in New Orleans, he was frequently referred to as "Little Louis," but when both Louis and Lil Hardin Armstrong used that phrase in interviews, they said it as "Little Louie." Lil calls him "Louie" throughout all of her recorded interviews. Joe Glaser called him "Louie." Almost every musician who played with him--off the top of my head, I'm thinking of interviews with Charlie Holmes, Trummy Young, Danny Barcelona, Joe Muranyi, dozens more--all called him "Louie." Lucille Armstrong, who might have made those aforementioned arguments, almost 100% of the time called him "Louie." Not just "all white people" but the black press often called him "Louie" during the Swing Era, something that surprised me when I started researching my second book. Here's a Pittsburgh Courier page from 1935…:”
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Great lesson! Subbed! Please share more!!!
Amazing instruction! Thanks for sharing your knowledge. Beautiful tone 🎺
Awesome analysis!
Very nice explanation, very clear and easy to understand.
your descriptions of technical details are excellent!
Great video! I will be shedding all of these, thank you very much!
Great instructional video. Looks like you are using a Yamaha mouthpiece. I am not into jazz , but i learned something regardless.
Excellent!
Great video
All instruments have been portrayed so far, but not the flute. I wonder when Jazz Lesson Videos will post something about Jazz flute.
Michael Jackson owns all the recordings of okeh records, they came along with his deal when he bought the Beatles records
And I'm 64 years old I started playing the trumpet when I was a kid in 1972... And I never heard no black people call him Louie
How did they call him?
@da11king Louis
Lol what is this guy talking about 😂
@youngmonkreturns5973 you can't understand what I'm talking about because you ain't that smart
@@patoni860 who’s the smart one? 😂 “Growing up in New Orleans, he was frequently referred to as "Little Louis," but when both Louis and Lil Hardin Armstrong used that phrase in interviews, they said it as "Little Louie." Lil calls him "Louie" throughout all of her recorded interviews. Joe Glaser called him "Louie." Almost every musician who played with him--off the top of my head, I'm thinking of interviews with Charlie Holmes, Trummy Young, Danny Barcelona, Joe Muranyi, dozens more--all called him "Louie." Lucille Armstrong, who might have made those aforementioned arguments, almost 100% of the time called him "Louie."
Not just "all white people" but the black press often called him "Louie" during the Swing Era, something that surprised me when I started researching my second book. Here's a Pittsburgh Courier page from 1935…:”