A braggart, a piano player for bordellos, and a legendary character, Jelly Roll Morton was the type of person who makes the study of jazz so fascinating. He was an important early innovator, both with his piano technique and with his composing/arranging skills. Absolutely the Best collects many of his early instrumentals, recorded solo on the piano in the mid-'20s. For those new to Morton, it will be easy to recognize the influence of ragtime in his music. "King Porter Stomp" and "Jelly Roll Blues," like ragtime, are bouncy ...
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A braggart, a piano player for bordellos, and a legendary character, Jelly Roll Morton was the type of person who makes the study of jazz so fascinating. He was an important early innovator, both with his piano technique and with his composing/arranging skills. Absolutely the Best collects many of his early instrumentals, recorded solo on the piano in the mid-'20s. For those new to Morton, it will be easy to recognize the influence of ragtime in his music. "King Porter Stomp" and "Jelly Roll Blues," like ragtime, are bouncy and happy tunes. But unlike ragtime, a musical form that never varied from the sheet music, a new complexity slips into Morton's music. "Wolverine Blues" offers frills and fills, with piano runs and plenty of rhythm. While the melody is ever present, Morton is continually dressing it up, throwing in little stylistic variations. He alludes to Chopin's "Funeral March" at the beginning and end of "Dead Man Blues." It's a rather humorous reference in a piece that would work perfectly for a New Orleans funeral march, and one might believe that Chopin, if he could have been whisked from the netherworld to the 1920s, would've approve. The fidelity of these early recording sessions is what one might expect from music committed to wax some 75 years ago: it isn't great, but the music is clearly discernible. For the music fan wanting to know more about the early history of jazz, Morton's Absolutely the Best would be a good place to start. ~ Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr., Rovi
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