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Byron Stripling speaks about Hot Fives / Hot Sevens

18 February 2010 One Comment

Jazz Arts Group celebrates the music of Louis Armstrong’s Hot Fives and Hot Sevens in this video, hosted by Columbus Jazz Orchestra Artistic Director Byron Stripling and filmed by WOSU Public Media. Special guest Mark Flugge on piano. Tune in to WOSU TV on Wednesday, March 24 at 9 PM to see the full concert as captured by WOSU Public Media. Catch the rebroadcast on Thursday, March 25 at 9 PM on WOSU Plus.
UPDATE: A special encore broadcast of the full concert will air on Wednesday, August 18 at 9 PM on WOSU TV.



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Louis Armstrong’s Hot Fives & Hot Sevens Revisited

February 19 – 20, 2010

Friday – Saturday, 8 p.m.

Artists:
Byron Stripling – trumpet
Allan Vache – clarinet
Wycliffe Gordon – trombone
Mark Flugge – piano
Don Vappie – banjo/guitar
Robert Breithaupt – drums
Tony Zilincik – tuba
Larry Cook – bass
Venue:
Lincoln Theatre
Map/Directions

Show Description:

The Jazz Arts Group of Columbus will present the music of Louis Armstrong’s famous Hot Five and Hot Seven recordings through a series of concerts and educational activities in February to coincide with Black History Month and the rebirth of the Lincoln Theatre. The music of the Hot Five and the Hot Seven is considered by most critics to be among the finest recordings in jazz history. The Hot Fives began in 1925 and the instrumentation included trumpet, clarinet, trombone, piano and guitar/banjo with the addition of drums and tuba in 1927 to make the Hot Sevens. “Louis Armstrong provided jazz with its quantum leap forward – his Hot Five and Hot Seven group recordings were the culmination of all he had accomplished in music to that point,” cites All About Jazz.

 

Learn more about our series of educational workshops at the Jazz Academy in support of the concerts at the Lincoln Theatre.

 

NEA_LogoBlackThis project has been made possible by the National Endowment for the Arts as part of “American Masterpieces: Three Centuries of Artistic Genius.”

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One Comment »

  • Rick Morris said:

    Watching the Hot 5′s & 7′s concert tonight and listening to B. Stripling’s commentary. Both were absolutely wonderful! Let Stripling and the guys know how great they were.

    As a long-long time listener of Louis Armstrong–since I discovered his old recordings over 50 years ago–although I never learned to play any instrument, the music has and continues to move me every time I hear it. Thanks so much for your labor of love. Sorry I missed the live concert at the Lincoln. Thanks to WOSU for putting it on TV.

    As Satchmo used to say,
    Red Beans and Ricely Yours,
    Rick Morris
    Worthington

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