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EARLY JAZZ HISTORY

BUNK JOHNSON
Adapted from the Red Hot Jazz Archives Red Hot Musicians

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Bunk JohnsonBunk Johnson confused Jazz historians for years by lying about almost everything, but he certainly was an early Jazz pioneer who apparently played in bands lead by Buddy Bolden. He definitely played in Frankie Dusen's Eagle Band, The Superior Orchestra, and with Clarence Williams. He left New Orleans in 1915 and played in minstrel shows, theatre orchestras and circus bands, and with the Black Eagle Band. While playing with the Black Eagles in 1930 the band's other trumpet player Evan Thomas was stabbed to death on the bandstand. A fight broke out and Bunk's trumpet was damaged. After this incident Bunk continued to play a from time to time, using a borrowed trumpet, but his heart was not in it any longer. His teeth were also starting to give him troubles and in 1931 he had pretty much retired from music.

In 1938 Bill Russell and Fredric Ramsey started to write their book, "Jazzmen". After interviewing several Jazz musicians, including Louis Armstrong, Bunk's name kept coming up as one of the early influential jazz musicans in New Orleans. They managed to track Bunk down in New Iberia, Louisiana where he was living, and interviewed him for the book. Bunk lied about a great many things, including his birth date, so that it would look like he had been one of the first Jazz musicans. It took years until other historians figured out that he was shall we say, "full of bunk" . Despite all that, his colorful stories contributed to the success of the book, and the authors took up a collection among musicians and record collectors to fix Bunk's teeth and buy him a new horn. He made his first recordings in 1942, and became a popular fixture of the Dixieland revial of the 1940's.

From;
Bunk Johnson by Christopher Hillman, Universe Books, 1988
Jazzmen by Bill Russell and Fredric Ramsey, Harcout, Brace, 1938

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