As an old trombonist who bought his first trombone in 1951 Jack was my first influence in playing jazz, never got to his excellence level but over the years have played some great stuff with various local groups, still play today so thank you Jack.
well, he didn't die alone..I was there..my old man, the clarinetist, the school principal, stepped into my history class to break the sad news to me, knowing it would be the first hero I would lose..long before Jimi or Janis, whose departures wrecked me again later like Jack's..who always inspires me to keep playing 60 years later... until I drop
My man has just passed away. He was a trombone player inspired by this man and j j Johnson. For him I play this letting a tear fall and remembering all the happy times together
The best St. James Infirmary rendition ever. Recorded live at the Roundtable in New York City, on July 1959. Don Ewell (p), Don Goldie (tr), Henry Cuesta (cl), Stan Puls (b) , Ronnie Greb (dr), and Big T...of course Thanks for sharing.
Jack Teagarden played at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester in the early 60s. I hitchhiker from the Midlands and I have never forgotten the experience. The memories!!
So nice for me, as a young trombonist having to come to the "Big Apple" from Omaha, Nebraska! What a great surprise to hear him at the famous Metropole Jazz Club on 7th Ave and 50th. He was incredible - played the "trick' with taking off the bell and playing in the water glass! Wow, it souinded wonderful. AND, at the break I got to talk with him - what a gentleman and he was genuine to me. I'll never forget it! A few months later, he passed - all I could think of was that the Lord had just picked up one of the greatest sidemen ever (and leader, artist, jazz performer, establisher of great trombone playing in America!)
I worked at YOUR FATHER"S MUSTACHE in New Orleans in the 70's .We had a plaque outside the door that stated Jack Teagarden played his Last Stand at our location on Bourbon St. After the fire in '75 to the building a NOLA resident named Ed Tobin removed the plaque til construction of the building was complete,upon which Ed took the plaque back ! Hopefully its there today !
After that, what words are necessary? A practically infinitely available source for jazz-blues improvisations and with those profound lyrics - also found in a huge variety of variations. "Without music, life would be a mistake." - Nietzsche, only slightly hyperbolic to hammer home his message with a hammer striking not like a sledge but like a tuning fork, he explained!
Thanks for uploading this. My mother was visiting and we were driving ourselves NUTS trying to figure out which version of this song was the one she loved as a child. We were on the edge of dragging my grandmother's 78s out of the sideboard and firing up the Victrola before we decided to check TH-cam. You are AWESOME.
This and "After You've Gone" are two of my favorite Jackson tracks. Lifelong relationship with other fabulous musicians just as Satchmo cemented his place in the trombone pantheon. We are lucky to have so many films and recordings of his extraordinary talent.
Hey Bix my childhood friend promotes Bix and plays just like him he is found on youtube! I remember days we would ride around in his black hearse through Atlantic City in the 70s with Bix lives stickers on his bumper blasting jazz on the 8 track tape deck at full volume. hehe Got some looks,, Look on TH-cam search Scott Black/Bix! Yes Big T was the father of Jazz trombone!
How come I haven't stumbled upon this genre earlier?! I mean of course i knew about blues and all but why didn't I like it so much back then ? Ahhh, it is so good to just sit and relax on this
my grand father was a master on trombone, well known in The toronto jazz scene and Jack Teagarden was his ultimate favorite. I have to agree on that he's unbeatable!
What brought me here? I watched an interview of a trumpet player named "Jerry Hey" (MJ, George Benson, everything Quincy) and he stated that his father used to love this guy and listened to him a lot.
I use to play trombone many years ago and have just started again and it is pleasure to hear cool jazz with some melody like Jack played. It is tragedy that he died as described above, in particular as it sounds he did not have proper medical care.
I heard a very sad inside story about his death not well known, not natural causes! Something to do with not playing a gig where the wise guys said they couldn't pay the band and Jack said he won't play unless his band gets paid! He paid the consequences.. I was very young and remember hearing the talk, but it is a little cloudy so many years ago now! I trust the people that told the story! Anyone ever hear of this! He was a very wonder warm man and a gift from God on the trombone like non other!
Paul Wand Yes brother I hear the press version also, Y'all know we can trust the press, not! I heard discussion from people that were very close to T and as I said I was just so young but remember bits and pieces of the conversation! I guess like the JFK assignation will be a mystery Paul what do you play?
Paul Wand Very good,, I play traps, and percussions congas, Timbales, Djembe, steel drums Recently bought a mallet Kat and Trap-Kat Dave Samuels plays on mallet kat with Andy Narrel steel drums! Fabulous! "Caribbean Jazz project" Smokin hot! I as a teen and young adult played the Jersey shore, Dixieland. Ended up in Hawaii and introduced steel drums to Hawaii! Never left haha!!! I as a kid was blessed with Barret Deems white pearl Premier drums, Jack was friends with my Mother and Aunt and heard me play and said the boy needs a real set of drums! He started teaching me T-bone and I felt dizzy and didn't like it.. Stupid kid right I should have continued.. But I just wanted drums then!
When I was 7 my family and I strolled around a county fair in Rantoul, Illinois. I heard music that intrigued me. I looked around and spotted a banner stretched out over the entrance to the grandstand, "Jack Teagarder and his orchestra". I asked my mother if we could go in. She replied that we would lose our souls if we did. I've never figured out what she had against Teagarden. Mama liked all sorts of jazz artists whose morals were suspect. even warned me against following their examples. "Don't drink yourself to death like Bix Beiderbeck" etc.
Maybe an apocryphal story but when it came to writing Jack's biography they couldn't find anyone who disliked him. He had faults but none that weren't at least forgivable.
Another tromBONst (my teacher was Neapolitan-Am, emphasized the 2nd syllable, I heard T in Holyoke MA in 62 or 63. Never got his fat sound, but I was blessed by Vic Dickinson, whose sound I was closer to--though of course, not his skill. I've composed a dozen jazz tunes on birdralk: one in memory of my Chennai mentor, on TH-cam: "Blues for AJ Take One." But if you've just heard Teagarden, delay an hour from the sublime to…
Louis Armstrong. Jack Teagarden and Armstrong recorded a lot of tracks together and performed together. And maybe some other Dixieland jazz players like Jelly Roll Morton, these days you can hear them live in New Orleans at the Preservation Hall.
your right about him and Louis working together, but they were never allowed to play in the Preservation Hall together, as Jack was a white boy and back then whites were not allowed there.
I am actually related to Jack Teagarden.. He definitely knew how to sing about the dark side.. My family is definitely considered as the Adam's family as you will.. We truly appreciate the dark arts..
Jack’s playing and singing are just irresistible. The best!
As an old trombonist who bought his first trombone in 1951 Jack was my first influence in playing jazz, never got to his excellence level but over the years have played some great stuff with various local groups, still play today so thank you Jack.
Thank you sir, and I love him too.
heard him on bourbin street about the same year, as a 17 year old. f.q. ruiened him, i guess, as so many others.
well, he didn't die alone..I was there..my old man, the clarinetist, the school principal, stepped into my history class to break the sad news to me, knowing it would be the first hero I would lose..long before Jimi or Janis, whose departures wrecked me again later like Jack's..who always inspires me to keep playing 60 years later... until I drop
Mr. Armstrong brings out the best him. There up in heaven trading solos and telling stories about New Orleans. R.i.p.
For me personaly, this is definitely best version of St. James out there. What a legends
My man has just passed away. He was a trombone player inspired by this man and j j Johnson. For him I play this letting a tear fall and remembering all the happy times together
My fondest hope is that these two greats are playing together forever. I loved hearing both of them play, together or solo. RIP
Playing this tune after Teagarden did it, is a high-risk business. He is just incomparable.
I love his singing, man. He knows Dixieland jazz and his vocal interpretation shows it.
The best St. James Infirmary rendition ever. Recorded live at the Roundtable in New York City, on July 1959.
Don Ewell (p), Don Goldie (tr), Henry Cuesta (cl), Stan Puls (b) , Ronnie Greb (dr), and Big T...of course
Thanks for sharing.
Too bad none of the Tubes are working, see your soul. nice
Catherine Hutton You mean not working on youtube? It's a pity, Big T is blowing loads of soul, I can tell you.
You ain't just whistlin' Dixie, John, but I bet Questa could on that licorice stick of his!
Thank you muchly for listing the other players!!!!!!
Hamed, muchas gracias por haber colocado la nómina de los músicos intervinientes. Cordialmente, Alejandro.
Jack Teagarden played at the Free Trade Hall in Manchester in the early 60s. I hitchhiker from the Midlands and I have never forgotten the experience. The memories!!
There's just one thing to say: that Jack T was, quite simply, the very best.
Great lineup! Every jazz trombonist owes most of his art to Big T.
Well, Jack...you will always be wonderful!! Good night, Jack...Thank you for being..
Some nice piano work on this as well as trombone.
The best trombonist ever!
So nice for me, as a young trombonist having to come to the "Big Apple" from Omaha, Nebraska! What a great surprise to hear him at the famous Metropole Jazz Club on 7th Ave and 50th. He was incredible - played the "trick' with taking off the bell and playing in the water glass! Wow, it souinded wonderful. AND, at the break I got to talk with him - what a gentleman and he was genuine to me. I'll never forget it! A few months later, he passed - all I could think of was that the Lord had just picked up one of the greatest sidemen ever (and leader, artist, jazz performer, establisher of great trombone playing in America!)
I worked at YOUR FATHER"S MUSTACHE in New Orleans in the 70's .We had a plaque outside the door that stated Jack Teagarden played his Last Stand at our location on Bourbon St. After the fire in '75 to the building a NOLA resident named Ed Tobin removed the plaque til construction of the building was complete,upon which Ed took the plaque back ! Hopefully its there today !
Played at that club in 69 for Mardi Gras and for a month after. Great bunch of musicians
The father of all jazz trombonist, the best...
Jean From france
Yes he was, no one ever came to his level! He developed his own style that no one has ever mastered!
After that, what words are necessary? A practically infinitely available source for jazz-blues improvisations and with those profound lyrics - also found in a huge variety of variations. "Without music, life would be a mistake." - Nietzsche, only slightly hyperbolic to hammer home his message with a hammer striking not like a sledge but like a tuning fork, he explained!
Thanks for uploading this. My mother was visiting and we were driving ourselves NUTS trying to figure out which version of this song was the one she loved as a child. We were on the edge of dragging my grandmother's 78s out of the sideboard and firing up the Victrola before we decided to check TH-cam. You are AWESOME.
@Nanette Small world! Hi!
This and "After You've Gone" are two of my favorite Jackson tracks. Lifelong relationship with other fabulous musicians just as Satchmo cemented his place in the trombone pantheon. We are lucky to have so many films and recordings of his extraordinary talent.
Simply the best. No more words. The best version I ever heard.
Hey Bix my childhood friend promotes Bix and plays just like him he is found on youtube! I remember days we would ride around in his black hearse through Atlantic City in the 70s with Bix lives stickers on his bumper blasting jazz on the 8 track tape deck at full volume. hehe Got some looks,, Look on TH-cam search Scott Black/Bix! Yes Big T was the father of Jazz trombone!
Carry me out on a stretcher! Great rendition!
Nobody performs this song better than Teagarden!
How come I haven't stumbled upon this genre earlier?! I mean of course i knew about blues and all but why didn't I like it so much back then ? Ahhh, it is so good to just sit and relax on this
Simply the Great...
This is just amazing! Big T is just killing it!
un blues qui vous arrache l 'ame.magnifique interprétation.
One of the most precious of the collection that the the X did whatever with.Thanks so much for posting.
my grand father was a master on trombone, well known in The toronto jazz scene and Jack Teagarden was his ultimate favorite. I have to agree on that he's unbeatable!
My grandfather was a jazz clarinetist in the Toronto jazz scene. I wonder if they ever played together!
What brought me here? I watched an interview of a trumpet player named "Jerry Hey" (MJ, George Benson, everything Quincy) and he stated that his father used to love this guy and listened to him a lot.
Beautiful ( for mr the best ) rendition !
A lot of thanks
Stunning version of a stunning tune! Thanks.
No one played trombone like the Big T
No one ever will!
Not even me. - But to get serious, also listen to these masterful solos by Goldie and Ewell.
I use to play trombone many years ago and have just started again and it is pleasure to hear cool jazz with some melody like Jack played. It is tragedy that he died as described above, in particular as it sounds he did not have proper medical care.
I heard a very sad inside story about his death not well known, not natural causes! Something to do with not playing a gig where the wise guys said they couldn't pay the band and Jack said he won't play unless his band gets paid!
He paid the consequences..
I was very young and remember hearing the talk, but it is a little cloudy so many years ago now! I trust the people that told the story! Anyone ever hear of this! He was a very wonder warm man and a gift from God on the trombone like non other!
I just read another post that he died of pneumonia alone in the hotel room in the French Quarter of New Orleans.
Paul Wand Yes brother I hear the press version also, Y'all know we can trust the press, not! I heard discussion from people that were very close to T and as I said I was just so young but remember bits and pieces of the conversation! I guess like the JFK assignation will be a mystery Paul what do you play?
valve trombone everyone else in my family played trumpet, I used to play baritone horn in school.
Paul Wand Very good,, I play traps, and percussions congas, Timbales, Djembe, steel drums Recently bought a mallet Kat and Trap-Kat
Dave Samuels plays on mallet kat with Andy Narrel steel drums! Fabulous! "Caribbean Jazz project" Smokin hot! I as a teen and young adult played the Jersey shore, Dixieland. Ended up in Hawaii and introduced steel drums to Hawaii! Never left haha!!!
I as a kid was blessed with Barret Deems white pearl Premier drums, Jack was friends with my Mother and Aunt and heard me play and said the boy needs a real set of drums!
He started teaching me T-bone and I felt dizzy and didn't like it.. Stupid kid right I should have continued.. But I just wanted drums then!
This is superior and superb; thank you incredibly for posting it.
Einer meiner Lieblingstitel gespielt auf meinem Lieblingsinstrument von einem der besten Musiker !
Danke für den Beitrag.
Hermann Nahrings tru
When I was 7 my family and I strolled around a county fair in Rantoul, Illinois. I heard music that intrigued me. I looked around and spotted a banner stretched out over the entrance to the grandstand, "Jack Teagarder and his orchestra". I asked my mother if we could go in. She replied that we would lose our souls if we did. I've never figured out what she had against Teagarden. Mama liked all sorts of jazz artists whose morals were suspect. even warned me against following their examples. "Don't drink yourself to death like Bix Beiderbeck" etc.
Beautiful..simply beautiful.
Jack Teagarden era um excelente trombonista, um jazzista muito bom, ouço o seu repertorio quase que todos os dias...
Awesome.. hearing him for the first time in 2018 and Gosh!!! he's so smooth!!!
this is effing beautiful
sublime thanks
Genial musicians, bravi 🍸👏👏👏👏
great
really cool stuff!!
Beautiful !
Thanks
Wonderful
This is wonderful!
Wow!
Thank you!!!
Maybe an apocryphal story but when it came to writing Jack's biography they couldn't find anyone who disliked him. He had faults but none that weren't at least forgivable.
always good to hear 'big-t'...have him doing 'ol' rockin' chair' with satchmo='jackson" to louis-2 great virtuoso's singing & playing...jazz giants!!!
How many trombonist today can sing and play like him?
I think none.
christopher crenshaw
Nlls landgren.
Different Style,but plays and sings really good.
Wycliff' Gordon!
Extraordanary good trombonist and Singer!
Magic
Este tema acompañando a un pseudo poeta melancólico del tercer mundo.
I have never heard Jack T. I want to thank you for introducing me,,This is Great!
凄い貫禄で大人だけど60年生きてないんだね~ 小生、古希近し ジャクティは中学のころからウィスキーなめなめ聞いてる もちろんサッチモも大好き
That "yeeeee" 03:31 ❤️
one of the best renditions of this track i have heard yet. anyone have any other jack teagarden recommendations as i have just been introduced to him
Obviously a legend. But I gotta say just how much I like Henry Cuesta's playing.
take the pain
Did he also do a version from the early 1930's ?
Das ist doch wohl eine Super-Version oder??
Another tromBONst (my teacher was Neapolitan-Am, emphasized the 2nd syllable, I heard T in Holyoke MA in 62 or 63. Never got his fat sound, but I was blessed by Vic Dickinson, whose sound I was closer to--though of course, not his skill. I've composed a dozen jazz tunes on birdralk: one in memory of my Chennai mentor, on TH-cam: "Blues for AJ Take One." But if you've just heard Teagarden, delay an hour from the sublime to…
Yea, he can make it sound like a trumpet.
Wow! This had not occurred to me!! But, BOY..so true!!
最高にイイな~♬ で、59で死んだのか… 若死にだったんだな、
Was there a trumpet in this piece, because I don't think trombones have that high of a pitch?
who plays with Big "T", please, and where?
Ruby Braff on cornet??
+MrJimmienoone don goldie on trumpet
Anyone watch Metropolis (anime) before? I think this song or one very similar is in it ;p
God
Didn’t realize jack white covered this
Is this version on a CD or vinyl release?
I have pretty much every album Jack made in my collection!
Louis Armstrong. Jack Teagarden and Armstrong recorded a lot of tracks together and performed together. And maybe some other Dixieland jazz players like Jelly Roll Morton, these days you can hear them live in New Orleans at the Preservation Hall.
your right about him and Louis working together, but they were never allowed to play in the Preservation Hall together, as Jack was a white boy and back then whites were not allowed there.
I am actually related to Jack Teagarden.. He definitely knew how to sing about the dark side..
My family is definitely considered as the Adam's family as you will..
We truly appreciate the dark arts..
Jack White did good cover.