America’s Musical Ambassador

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The people Look for some people. Write it down. By the water
Advertisements

John Lennon. Born during the Second World War Born to Julia Lennon in His father was a sailor and away at sea. He went to live with his Auntie Mimi.
A.
What is JAZZ? 4 th Grade Music. What is Jazz?? Improvisation is important in Jazz Jazz uses “bent” music notes Jazz expresses many emotions Jazz uses.
Notes Based on Chapter 6 LOUIS ARMSTRONG AND THE FIRST GREAT SOLOISTS.
The Famous People of the Roaring 20’s The student will describe the cultural developments and individual contributions in the 1920’s of Louis Armstrong,
Harlem Renaissance Candace New Courtney Gordon Marquaja Harris Beginning of Jazz Beginning of Jazz.
From 1964 to 1970, the Beatles were the world’s most popular musical group. The Beatles were four musicians from Liverpool, England. They were John Lennon,
Elvis Aaron Presley King of Rock & Roll. Previous Knowledge What do we already know about Elvis Presley? When did he live? What kinds of music did he.
He played for the royalty and for the common people and by the end of his fifty-year career, he had played over 20,000 performances worldwide. He was.
Louis Armstrong A man who defined Jazz Louis Armstrong Louis Armstrong was the greatest of all Jazz musicians. He was born in a poor section of New Orleans.
Louis Armstrong ( ) “Satchmo”. Daniel Louis Armstrong was born in a run-down cabin in New Orleans, Louisiana, slum. His mother was just fifteen.
Unit 1 Lesson 5 Simple Predicates.
Scott King of rag time “The entertainer”.. Joplin.
1920s Jazz Joe “King” Oliver Edward “Kid” Ory Louis Armstrong Duke Ellington Jelly Roll Morton.
Elvis Aaron Presley King of Rock & Roll. Elvis: The Early Years Born on January 8 th 1935 Grew up living in poverty Often teased in school for stuttering.
T HE J AZZ A GE. M ILES D AVIS An original, lyrical soloist and a demanding group leader, Miles Davis was the most consistently innovative musician in.
Henry’s Book Response on “Who Were The Beatles?” By: Henry Wilms.
American Icons: Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong
By: Arisay Gonzalez & Ever Paz
The Story of Louis Armstrong & His Music By Steven Tausinga.
I am ready to test!________ I am ready to test!________
What is JAZZ? 4 th Grade Music. What is Jazz?? Improvisation is important in Jazz Jazz uses “bent” music notes Jazz expresses many emotions Jazz uses.
 1946 – 10,o00 TV sets in America  1956 – 35 million TV sets in America  Popular TV programs included:  1. Dramas  2. Game Shows  3. Soap Operas.
Sight Words List 1 Mr. Matthews Grade One can.
Miles Davis Miles Davis III was born on May 25, 1926 in Alton, Illinois. He came from a wealthy and well educated family. His father, a dentist was a proud.
L o u i s A r m s t r o n g By Olga Zaplav a. Louis Armstrong ( ) American jazz trumpeter and singer from New Orleans, Louisiana.
By: Alex Ortiz THE COTTON CLUB. THE MOST FAMOUS NIGHT CLUB Staring some of the most famous jazz and blues artists from Duke Ellington, Cab Calloway, Count.
VENN DIAGRAMS PHOEBE GYDESEN WORLD HISTORY HONORS.
He Created a style of sophisticated Jazz different from the rest of the Jazz He played the piano, led an orchestra, and made over 2000 pieces of music.
The Blues/Louis Armstrong Connecting to Invisible Man Catherine Gubbels Storm P. 3.
CULTURAL DEVELOPMENTS AND INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTIONS DURING THE 1920S SS5H4 The student will describe U.S. involvement in World War I and post- World War.
By Corbin Hamilton.  Louis Armstrong was born August 4, 1901, in New Orleans, Louisiana and died on July 6,1981 in Queens, New York, from a heart attack.
1920’s Project By:Stephanie Rodriguez Lilian Serrano Yvette Mejia Shade White.
Musicians and Artist The Harlem Renaissance consisted of many great musicians and writers such as Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, and Edward Hopper.
Louis Armstrong “What we play is life”.
Due to The Great Migration, many African American were moving North, and most of them into Harlem, New York. The Harlem Renaissance also known as the.
District 200 High frequency words
Ch. 23 Section III A Creative Era.
The Harlem Renaissance
Louis Armstrong Joseph Hoke, Johns Hopkins. Louis Armstrong was a jazz trumpeter and singer from New Orleans, Louisiana. Louis was one of the most influential.
African American Biography LOUIS ARMSTORNG By:#9.
The Admirable Louis Armstrong By: Leah Colvin. Early life  Nobody is sure when Armstrong was born  Some say he was born July 4, 1900  Home town was.
Louis Armstrong Birth Life Louis was born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana. He was 5 when his mother and father separated- Willie and Mary.
Kathleen Murray.  Was born and raised in New Orleans, Louisiana in a poor family.  Louis replaced King Oliver in the band Kid Ory around 1918.
Jazz Notes II. Characteristics of Jazz  The difference between New Orleans style Jazz and other cities’ Jazz was improvisation. –The true, individual.
Sight Words.
Jazz History: The Advent of Jazz Dawn of the 20 th Century.
Black History By: Kelly Melendez, Jazmine Ayala, Daniel Diaz.
By: Mariah Boyd Summer 2010 Music Louis Armstrong was born in the Storyville district of New Orleans, Louisiana. He was born on August 4 th 1901.
 Born August 04, 1901 in New Orleans, Louisiana.  Died July 6, 1971 in New York, New York  Commonly known as Satchmo or Pops and is well known for.
Louis Armstrong By: Sean Avjian. Armstrong Childhood Born August 4, 1901 in New Orleans in a ghetto known as the “Back of Town” Armstrong was many times.
PRESENTS A Promise Production A FAMOUS JAZZ MUSICIAN BY ARELLA HILL Louis “Satchmo” Armstrong.
Ray Charles By: Evan Gordon. Ray Charles is extremely famous. He may have been blind but he made great music. One of his best selling records were “Hit.
Something About Music By: Nicholas Nguyen. Sex Jazz.
LOUIS ARMSTONG Blues and jazz pioneer. JAZZ & BLUES The blues was intensely personal, and was an expression and reflection of the individual facing hardships.
What is JAZZ? 4 th Grade Music. What do I already know about jazz?
Jazz Quiz Review. Types of Jazz Ragtime - one of the early musical styles that contributed to the development of jazz. It combined a sixteenth-note-based.
Edward Kennedy "Duke" Ellington was born on April 29, 1899, in Washington, D.C. He began studying the piano at the age of seven. He started playing.
A traditional Christmas song, which is often sung in the church on Christmas Day. Choral.
Created By Sherri Desseau Click to begin TACOMA SCREENING INSTRUMENT FIRST GRADE.
The Devil´s Music..  Definition.  Origin of the word.  History.  Race.  Role of women.  Louis Armstrong.  Mamie Smith.
Louis Armstrong and Ella Fitzgerald. Louis Armstrong
American Trumpet Player, Singer, Occasional Actor
Unit 6: The Jazz Age The 1920’s Culture & Influential African Americans By: Mrs. Laren Carlton SS5H4: The student will describe U.S. involvement in World.
By John Nguyen & Chuan Phan
SS5H4: The student will describe U. S
Biography Report by: Katie Gilliam
Louis Armstrong By Dillon Scott.
Presentation transcript:

America’s Musical Ambassador Louis Armstrong America’s Musical Ambassador

Louis Armstrong was born on August 4th, 1901, in New Orleans, Louisiana. His father, William Armstrong, abandoned the family while Louis was still an infant. He spent the first years of his life living with his Grandmother. At age 5 he moved into a house with his mother and sister, whom he called Mama Lucy. They were incredibly poor.

A local Russian-Jewish Family, the Kamofsky’s, hired Louis to work on their junk wagon. He used the money he made to buy his first cornet. This is the actual cornet Armstrong owned as a boy. It is valued by Sotheby’s auction house to be worth $80,000 to $100,000!

On New Year’s Eve, 1912, Louis fired a pistol to celebrate New Years On New Year’s Eve, 1912, Louis fired a pistol to celebrate New Years. A nearby policeman arrested Louis and the next day he was confined to the Colored Waif's Home for Boys. While in the Waif's Home, Louis received his first cornet lessons from the band director. He was 12 years old. That’s him in the center.

Eventually, Louis would lead the band at the Waif’s Home.

Released from the Waif’s Home, Armstrong returned to live with his mother. Joe Oliver, one of the finest trumpet players in New Orleans, became Louis's teacher and mentor. At night he started performing with local groups. In the daytime, he would deliver coal and sell newspapers to help feed himself, his mother, and his sister.

In 1918 Joe “King” Oliver moved to Chicago …but Louis stayed in New Orleans and became the lead trumpet player in the Kid Ory band, one of the most popular groups in the city.

A few years later, King Oliver asked Louis to come to Chicago to join his new group, King Oliver’s Creole Jazz Band.

The style of this band featured a lot of improvising, and it suited Louis well. King Oliver was a big influence on him, but as he was getting older, he was ready to start his own band.

Armstrong moved to New York, and started his own band, the Hot Five Armstrong moved to New York, and started his own band, the Hot Five. With this group, he recorded many of his earliest hits, including “West End Blues”.

Despite racial barriers, Louis became more and more famous as he continued to record, and began to work in film as well. Audiences were amazed when he hit dozens of high B-flat’s followed by a high G while playing a bandleader in the movie “Pennies from Heaven” starring Bing Crosby.

His easygoing style, polite charm, and his comical features made him easy for people to like.

Here he displays his trademark grin for which he is so famous.

Throughout the 50’s and 60’s, Louis Armstrong toured and performed all over the world. He had become America’s musical Ambassador.

Satchmo? Due to his big grin and small stature as a boy, Louis Armstrong had many nicknames. Among them were Gatemouth, Dippermouth, Little Dipper, Little Louie, and Satchelmouth (which a reporter mispronounced). When Louis arrived in England in 1932 he was met by Percy Brooks, the editor of Melody Maker magazine, and in Louis’ own words "that morning when I got off the boat and he shook my hand and said to me 'HELLO SATCHMO'. I had never heard that name before." Armstrong liked the sound of it, and adopted it as his nickname!

While in Paris in 1960, Satchmo said, “you can take the boy out of New Orleans, but you can’t take New Orleans out of the boy!”

By the early 60’s, Louis Armstrong was a household name By the early 60’s, Louis Armstrong was a household name. Most had grown up listening to his magnificent trumpet playing, and he was equally well known for his raspy, grand-fatherly voice. Here is an example of Scat-singing, which he made popular. How is scat singing different from regular singing?

Louis setting trends? You are all familiar with rap, but before 1980, it couldn’t be found anywhere. In this video from the 1930’s, Louis busts out a rap 50 years before it would become popular.

It rocketed to the top of the charts, even knocking off guess who? In 1964, at age 63, he recorded the theme song to the Broadway musical Hello Dolly! It rocketed to the top of the charts, even knocking off guess who?

You guessed it! The Fab Four themselves saw their latest hit, “Love Me Do” fall off the top of the list when Hello Dolly was released. They don’t seem too happy about it, do they?

Louis took home a Grammy for his performance on Hello Dolly Louis took home a Grammy for his performance on Hello Dolly!, making him the oldest person to ever have a number one hit on the Billboard charts.

Louis Armstrong loved Children, and in the 1960’s he recorded a series of Disney favorites called Disney Songs the Satchmo Way.

Satchmo wasn’t done just yet, however. In 1968 he recorded What a Wonderful World. This song would become a hit in America and in Europe, and again hit the charts when it was used for the soundtrack to the movie “Good Morning Vietnam”, starring Robin Williams.

He passed away quietly in his sleep on July 6, 1971. From 1969-1971 Louis Armstrong made numerous television appearances, traveled to London to record the soundtrack to the James Bond film On Her Majesty’s Secret Service, and also recorded the poem ‘Twas the Night before Christmas. He passed away quietly in his sleep on July 6, 1971.

Louis Armstrong represented the very best in entertainers Louis Armstrong represented the very best in entertainers. Part performer, part comedian, and completely genuine. In a stadium of thousands, his gentle demeanor could make you feel like he was playing every song just for you. Louis Armstrong also represented the very best in Amercian Ideals: He broke racial, social, and cultural barriers. His music was and is loved by children, grandparents, and all those in between. He was America’s first black superstar, and he truly was an Ambassador of America.

Watch the video to “What a Wonderful World” Louis Armstrong Watch the video to “What a Wonderful World”

America’s Musical Ambassador Louis Armstrong America’s Musical Ambassador Listening Hello Dolly! (Click to start) West End Blues (Click to start) Review for Ragtime, Blues, & Jazz Test next class If time: Multicultural Band 30 yrs early