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Original Personnel:
Paul Mares – cornet Leon Roppolo – clarinet George Brunies – trombone Jack Pettis – saxophone Arnold Loyocano – string bass Lew Black – banjo Elmer Schoebel – piano Frank Snyder – drums
The New Orleans Rhythm Kings were one of the hottest jazz bands of the early
1920s, and a strong influence on many later musicians, including Bix
Beiderbecke, Muggsy Spanier, Mezz Mezzrow, and Benny Goodman. Best known for
their 1923 integrated recording session with Jelly Roll Morton, the NORK’s
smooth, swinging style signaled a departure from the raucous novelty sound of
the Original Dixieland Jazz Band and its imitators. Another hallmark of the band
was its emphasis on solo performances, while traditional New Orleans jazz was
still heavily dependent on ensemble playing. The solos of Leon Roppolo on
clarinet and George Brunies on trombone are still considered classic, and have
often been copied on other bands’ recordings.
Following the success of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band and Tom Brown’s
Band in New York and Chicago, savvy club owners were eager to get their own New
Orleans bands. Mike Fritzel, owner of the Friars Inn at 343 N. Wabash in
Chicago, was quick to capitalize on the new sound. In the fall of 1921, he
contacted a New Orleans cornetist named Paul Mares, who was living at the home
of a friend (Chicago police officer Tommy Harrison), and asked him to put
together a band to play at his club. Mares phoned New Orleans and got childhood
friend and trombonist George Brunies, who agreed to come to Chicago for the
price of his train fare (paid by Mares’ father) and the loan of an overcoat from
Mares’ brother.
Mares also offered a job to another friend, Leon Roppolo, who had been
playing clarinet in the band of vaudeville singer Bee Palmer, known as the
“Shimmie Queen.” Roppolo had left Palmer’s band in the spring of 1921 to play
with Carlisle Evans’ band, followed by a summer stint on the riverboat “S.S.
Capitol” on the upper Mississippi with legendary cornetist Emmett Hardy and
banjoist Lou Black. Mares, Brunies, and Roppolo were the core—and the stars—of
the band that would gain fame as the New Orleans Rhythm Kings, although the band
would go through several changes of personnel.
The backgrounds of these three men reflected the multi-ethnic composition of
New Orleans at the turn of the century. Paul Mares came from a French family who
owned a fur business. Roppolo’s parents were Sicilian immigrants; his father ran
a grocery store. George Brunies’ family was of German and Belgian stock; the
entire family was musical, and brothers Henry, Merritt, Richard, and Albert
(Abbie) were all successful musicians and composers.
Friars’ Inn was a basement cabaret at 343 Wabash, frequented by gangsters
like Dion “The Florist” O’Banion. Originally, the rhythm section would play for
the dinner crowd, then the rest of the band would show up around 10 PM for
dancing. Band members remember that they would play all night until the last
customer left; the “big money boys” who frequented the club would often throw
hundred-dollar bills to keep them playing. Roppolo’s volatile nature was evident
throughout the band’s engagement at Friars’ Inn; one witness reports that during
performances, Roppolo would sometimes throw his clarinet against the wall in a
fit of temper, then pick it up again when he had cooled off.
On April 28, 1922, the band went to the Gennett studio in Richmond, Indiana
to wax Livery Stable Blues under the name “New Orleans Rhythm Kings.” The record
was never released, and when they made their next recordings for Gennett on
August 24, 1922, they went under the name “Friars Society Orchestra, direction
Husk O’Hara [sic].” Husk O’Hare was a slick Chicago promoter who managed to get
his name on the record label, even though he was neither the director nor
manager of the band. He also promoted another group, “Husk O’Hare’s Super
Orchestra of Chicago,” whose rendition of San was on the flip side of the Friars
Society Orchestra’s first recorded side, Eccentric. Before the Friars Society
Orchestra made their third set of recordings, on March 12 and 13, 1923, they had
changed their name back to the New Orleans Rhythm Kings, a name originally given
to Roppolo’s former band under Bee Palmer.
The original members of the band were Mares, Roppolo, and Brunies, along with
another New Orleans musician, Arnold “Deacon” Loyocano on bass. Other band
members included saxophonist Jack Pettis, pianist Elmer Schoebel from Illinois,
Lou Black on banjo, and Frank Snyder on drums. Schoebel was nominally the leader
of the group, as he was the only one in the group at that time who could read
music. Loyocano didn’t last long with the band; the hours were too long for him,
and he was soon replaced by New Orleans bassist Steve Brown, who later joined
Jean Goldkette’s orchestra. Brown was noted for his “slap bass” technique, heard
at its best on the Goldkette recording of “Dinah.”
One of the four tunes recorded on the first day of the August session was
Farewell Blues, credited to Mares, Roppolo, and Schoebel. The band was
experimenting with harmonies and came up with something reminiscent of a train
whistle. Brunies remembers that the tune evolved something like this: “… we were
playing the ‘Weary Blues’ one night, so all of a sudden Rapp takes a chorus,
just playing to himself, man. He didn’t care nothing about the people, he’s
high. … So they made a number out of it, the Farewell Blues.” Included in this
session was Eccentric, a ragtime piece by ODJB pianist J. Russel Robinson, along
with Bugle Call Blues and Discontented Blues.
Six days later, the band recorded four more tunes, including Panama,
noteworthy for Roppolo’s low-register clarinet solo. They also recorded two
sides made popular by the Original Dixieland Jazz Band: Tiger Rag and Livery
Stable Blues. A fourth tune, Oriental (co-written by Schoebel), was less
memorable.
Shortly after these sides were released, problems arose between the Friars
Inn management and the musicians. Schoebel, Brown, and Snyder left the group to
play at the Midway Gardens, making records for Gennett under the names Original
Memphis Melody Boys and Midway Garden Orchestra. Ben Pollack replaced Snyder on
drums, and Mel Stitzel took Schoebel’s place on piano. Jack Pettis left and was
replaced by Volly DeFaut. In the fall of 1922, Roppolo was sent back to New
Orleans to find a few more musicians to augment the band. He came back with
bassist “Chink” Martin Abraham, reedman Nunzio Scaglione, violinist Oscar
Marcour, and cornetist Emmett Hardy. The New Orleans men didn’t stay long with
the band, partly due to some trouble they had getting union membership.
Scaglione was the only one who could read music; the others had to fake their
way through the union examination. After about six weeks, Hardy, Marcour, and
Scaglione went back to New Orleans. Hardy was ill with tuberculosis, and went
home to convalesce; he died of tubercular peritonitis on June 16, 1925, just a
few days after his 22nd birthday.
A smaller version of the Friars Inn band recorded for Gennett under the name
“New Orleans Rhythm Kings” on March 12 and 13, 1923. The front line of Mares,
Roppolo, and Brunies remained intact, with Pollack and Stitzel making up the
rhythm section. One of their most famous tunes, Tin Roof Blues, came out of this
session. Both Roppolo’s clarinet solo and Brunies’ trombone solo are considered
classics; Brunies’ was often copied verbatim on later bands’ recordings.
Shortly after this session, the Rhythm Kings broke up, lost without the
musical discipline imposed by Schoebel. As the only “reader” remaining in the
group, Schoebel not only taught each man his part, but also arranged the
harmonies. Mares and Roppolo headed to New York to perform with Al Siegel’s band
in Greenwich Village. Brunies and Pollack remained in Chicago, playing with
various bands.
After just a short stay in New York, Mares returned to Chicago, followed a
few weeks later by Roppolo. In July 1923, they went to Richmond for the last
time, to record with a much larger band, assembled specifically for that
purpose. Jack Pettis returned on C-melody sax, Glen Scoville and Don Murray
joined on reeds, and Kyle Pierce on piano. Chink Martin played bass, and Bob
Gillette (later, with the Wolverines), banjo. Bix Beiderbecke was also present,
but did not play on the recordings. This session featured Jelly Roll Morton,
also from New Orleans, and is said to be one of the first interracial recording
sessions in history. One version says that Morton went to Melrose Music to
discuss publication of some of his tunes, and Walter Melrose suggested that he
talk to Paul Mares about recording them. Two of Morton’s own compositions were
recorded during the July 17 and 18 sessions: Mr. Jelly Lord and London Blues.
Morton also wrote the introduction and verse to Milenberg Joys, which was
jointly credited to Morton, Mares, and Roppolo, with lyrics by Walter Melrose.
Afterward, Mares went back to New Orleans. Roppolo played with several other
bands, including Peck’s Bad Boys in Texas and Carlisle Evans’ band in
Minneapolis. Brunies took a job with Ted Lewis’ band. In the fall of 1924,
Roppolo became ill and had to return to New Orleans. At the end of January 1925,
Santo Pecora put together a band to record for Okeh, the company’s first field
recordings in that city. He got Roppolo and Mares, and several of his fellow
musicians from Abbie Brunies’ Halfway House Orchestra: Leo Adde on drums, Bill
Eastwood on banjo, Chink Martin on bass, Lea (Red) Long on piano, and Charlie
Cordilla on tenor sax. This group recorded under the name “Original New Orleans
Rhythm Kings,” but Mares and Roppolo were the only ones from the original band.
Just two months after this session, Victor decided to record the same
compositions with the same musicians. During a rehearsal at Mares’ house,
Roppolo stormed out in anger and was replaced by Charlie Cordilla on the
recordings. The cause of this incident was, depending on the narrator, either
that Roppolo picked a fight with Pecora, or that the recording engineer told him
to stop playing those “pea-whistle notes” in the altissimo register. Not long
after this session, Roppolo was committed to an insane asylum; his heavy
marijuana use and violent outbursts are usually cited as the reason. He played
saxophone in the hospital’s band, and was released briefly around 1940; he sat
in with Santo Pecora’s band on the S.S. Capitol for a few nights. Roppolo died
in 1943.
George Brunies was with Ted Lewis’s band for a number of years, then moved to
New York in 1935, where he played with Muggsy Spanier and Eddie Condon. Brunies
moved back to Chicago in 1949, where he formed his own band. On the advice of a
numerologist, he changed the spelling of his name to Georg Brunis. He died in
Chicago in 1974.
Paul Mares worked in the family fur business for a time, but missed the
musician’s life. He revived the band’s name again on some recordings in the
1930s, but he was the only one of the original Rhythm Kings in the group. He
opened the P&M barbecue restaurant in Chicago, which served as a hangout for
jazz musicians. During World War II, Mares took a job in a defense plant. He
died in 1949.
Author: Suzanne Fischer
Selected Bibliography
Havens, Dan and Richard Gilmore. “Conversations with George Brunis.” The
Mississippi Rag, Vol. XXV No. 11 (September 1998): 1-10.
Mares, Paul. “Leon Roppolo As I Knew Him.” Jazz Quarterly ii (1944), 3-6; 28.
Pollack, Ben. Interview, DownBeat, October 1936
Sudhalter, Richard M. Lost Chords: White Musicians and Their Contribution to
Jazz 1915-1945. New York: Oxford University Press, 1999.
Williams, Martin T. Jazz Masters of New Orleans. New York: The MacMillan
Company, 1967.
Discography
Friars Society Orchestra
8-24-22 (Gennett)
Paul Mares (c) George Brunies (tb) Leon Roppolo (cl) Jack Pettis (C-mel, ts)
Elmer Schoebel (p, ldr, a) Lou Black (bj) Steve Brown (sb) Frank Snyder (d)
Eccentric 11178 B
Farewell Blues
Discontented Blues
Bugle Call Blues
8-30-22 (Gennett)
Panama
Tiger Rag
Livery Stable Blues
Oriental
New Orleans Rhythm Kings
3-12-23 (Gennett)
Paul Mares (c) George Brunies (tb) Leon Roppolo (cl) Mel Stitzel (p) Ben Pollack
(d)
Sweet Lovin’ Man
That’s A-Plenty
Shim-Me-Sha-Wabble
Weary Blues
3-13-23 (Gennett)
That Da Da Strain
Wolverine Bl
Maple Leaf Rag
Tin Roof Blues 11359B
New Orleans Rhythm Kings and Jelly Roll Morton
7-17-23 (Gennett)
Paul Mares (c) George Brunies (tb) Leon Roppolo (cl) Jack Pettis (C-mel) Glen
Scoville (as, ts) Don Murray (cl, ts) Jelly Roll Morton (p) Kyle Pierce (p) Bob
Gillette (bj) Chink Martin (bb) Ben Pollack (d)
Sobbin’ Blues (p Morton)
Marguerite (p Pierce)
Angry (p Pierce)
Clarinet Marmalade (p Morton)
Mr. Jelly Lord (p Morton)
7-18-23 (Gennett)
London Blues (p Morton)
Milenberg Joys (x2) (p Morton)
Mad (Cause You Treat Me This Way) (p Pierce)
Original New Orleans Rhythm Kings
1-23-25 (OKeh) Paul Mares (c) Santo Pecora (tb) Leon Roppolo (cl) Charlie
Cordilla (ts) Lea “Red” Long (p) Bill Eastwood (bj) Chink Martin (bb) Leo Adde
(d)
Baby
I Never Knew What a Gal Could Do
She’s Crying for Me
Golden Leaf Strut
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