User:Bruce M. Tindall/Sandbox2: Difference between revisions

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<!-- NOTE: I omitted the list of names of famous musicians who would join the band later; they could be mentioned in a separate article on the band itself. Anyway, some of them are mentioned later in this article in other contexts. -->
<!-- NOTE: I omitted the list of names of famous musicians who would join the band later; they could be mentioned in a separate article on the band itself. Anyway, some of them are mentioned later in this article in other contexts. -->
<!-- NOTE: Because the encyclopedia is written for a general audience, and your article was aimed more specifically at knowledgeable jazz afficionadoes, I've added little bits of identifying information such as "trumpeter," in front of the names of some of the people you mention, who might not be known to non-experts. Also, CZ refers to people by their surname, rather than by first name which was more appropriate in your article written specifically by and for admirers who know or feel they know the subject personally. So it's "Colyer did this" rather than "Ken did this." -->


=First visit to New Orleans=
=First visit to New Orleans=
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<!-- NOTE: Although as the author of a CZ article, you should not put your own evaluation or opinion of the subject into the article, it's fine to quote other, preferably expert, sources as to their opinions, so it's OK to include Dick Allen's opinion of Colyer in the above paragraph. But a later sentence in your original article -- "To me, the Cranes and New Orleans recordings are the real McCoy -- should probably not be included here. -->
<!-- NOTE: Although as the author of a CZ article, you should not put your own evaluation or opinion of the subject into the article, it's fine to quote other, preferably expert, sources as to their opinions, so it's OK to include Dick Allen's opinion of Colyer in the above paragraph. But a later sentence in your original article -- "To me, the Cranes and New Orleans recordings are the real McCoy -- should probably not be included here. -->


Colyer recorded with two local bands including that of bassist [[Albert Glenny]], 90 years old and the last surviving musician who could remember legendary cornetist [[Charles 'Buddy' Bolden]], who had died in 1931. The liveliest of their numbers was ''Ciribiribin'', which Colyer had never played before, and during which he missed the key change.  
Colyer recorded with two local bands including that of bassist [[Albert Glenny]], 90 years old and the last surviving musician who could remember legendary cornetist [[Charles 'Buddy' Bolden]], who had died in 1931. The liveliest of their numbers was ''Ciribiribin'', which Colyer had never played before, and during which he missed the key change.  

Revision as of 11:14, 4 May 2011


Ken Colyer (1928-1988; nickname 'The Guv’nor') was a British jazz trumpeter and singer who took part in the revival of classic New Orleans-style jazz in the 1940s and 1950s.


Early career in England

Born in Great Yarmouth, England, Colyer first learned about jazz from phonograph records owned by his elder brother Bill. He had already learned to play a few tunes on the mouthorgan when, at the end of World War II, he joned the Merchant Navy, serving on a tanker, where he practiced trumpet and guitar in his free time. As a sailor he visited Philadelphia, Gibraltar, Italy, Aden, Oman, Haifa, and Copenhagen. He committed to memory a verse of Rudyard Kipling's poem 'The Long Trail' -- he was living its subject mater -- and later set it to music and recorded it with guitar accompaniment.

In 1949 Ken Colyer, and his brother Bill (playing the washboard), joined Ben Marshall's conceived Crane River Jazz Band -- practicing on the banks opposite the house of trumpeter Leo 'Sonny' Morris's father. Colyer and Morris played a two-horn lead based on King Oliver and Louis Armstrong's loose style, with horn playing variations to the lead. In the early days their sound was rough -- until trombonist and saxophonist John R.T. Davies pointed to the existence of musical keys -- and loud.


First visit to New Orleans

In 1952 Colyer signed up as a sailor again to get to New Orleans; now he was pleasing passengers and crew with his playing. Working as a waiter, he came to dislike and disdain the upper crust. He arrived in New York, then Mobile, Alabama, where he jumped ship and finally reached New Orleans with a trumpet mouthpiece. That night he heard and met the George Lewis band, and later in the week sat-in with them, learning all the time. They welcomed him with surprised pleasure: "Ain't that Bunk, George? That's Bunk, man," said pianist Alton Purnell, likening Colyer to the legendary trumpeter Willie 'Bunk' Johnson, as they played Sister Kate. The critic Dick Allen said Colyer was the only white man who contributed something to the band.


Colyer recorded with two local bands including that of bassist Albert Glenny, 90 years old and the last surviving musician who could remember legendary cornetist Charles 'Buddy' Bolden, who had died in 1931. The liveliest of their numbers was Ciribiribin, which Colyer had never played before, and during which he missed the key change.

Return to England

Because he had overstayed his 30-day visa -- and possibly also because he had fraternized with African-Americans -- he was jailed in New Orleans for five weeks. Bailed out (without the aid of the British diplomatic service), he returned home to join a band whose lead trumpeter, Pat Halcox, had dropped out to study. It included Monty Sunshine, the clarinetist from the Crane River band, and trombonist Chris Barber. The band recorded for only a year, but in that time saw one of its numbers, Isle of Capri, enter the Top 5, a first for any jazz record.