Frankie Dusen Jr. became the trombonist inBuddy Bolden's band in 1906 and took over the group after Bolden went insane in 1907. He re-named the group the Eagle Band after the Eagle Saloon at Perdido and South Rampart Street in the Storyville district. They were a hot, hard-drinking outfit and were quite popular in New Orleans up until around 1917. It is said that they played the same songs in the same style as when Boldenwas the bandleader. Cornetist Tig Chambers replaced Bolden in 1907 and in 1910 Bunk Johnson replaced Chambers until around 1914 when Buddy Petit replaced him. Many up-and-coming Jazz musicians passed through the band including Bill Johnson,Baby Dodds, Pops Foster, Ed Garland, and a teenager named Sidney Bechet occasionally played with the group. In 1917 Dusen, Buddy Petit and Wade Whaley went to Los Angeles to join Jelly Roll Morton at Baron Long's night club in Watts. When they arrived Morton ridiculed them so much for their down home clothes and ways, that Dusen and Petit soon returned to New Orleans, angry and swearing to kill Mortonif he ever returned to the city. Wadley stayed on and went on to play with Kid Ory. Ironically, Morton's verse about Dusen in his 1939 recording of Buddy Bolden's Blues has given Dusen a touch of immortality, but it doesn't paint a very flattering picture of him. The lyrics are as follows:
Thought I heard Frankie Dusen shout Gal give me the money or I'm gonna beat it out I mean the money like I explain you, I'm gonna beat it out Cause I heard Frankie Dusen say Dusen started another band when he returned to the city. In 1918 he played with the band on the riverboat S.S. Capitol. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s he played occasionally with Louis Dumaine's Orchestra and he received money from the WPA during the Depression. Dusen never recorded and he died in poverty sometime around 1940. |
This Black Social History is design for the education of all races about Black People Contribution to world history over the past centuries, even though its well hidden from the masses so that our children dont even know the relationship between Black People and the wealth of their history in terms of what we have contributed to make this world a better place for all.
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