Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Sweet Emma Barrett

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Birth name
  
Emma Barrett

Name
  
Sweet Barrett

Instruments
  
Piano


Genres
  
Also known as
  
Bell Gal

Role
  
Jazz Pianist

Sweet Emma Barrett Our Jazz Satchmo and New Orleans WJF ENGLISH


Born
  
March 25, 1897 (
1897-03-25
)

Origin
  
New Orleans, Louisiana, United States

Occupation(s)
  
SingerPianistBandleader

Died
  
January 28, 1983, New Orleans, Louisiana, United States

Albums
  
Her New Orleans Music, Sweet Emma and Her Pres, New Orleans Preservat, Marching Down Bourbon, An Album to Benefit Preservat

Sweet Emma Barrett: Bill Bailey


"Sweet Emma" Barrett (March 25, 1897, New Orleans, Louisiana – January 28, 1983) was an American, self-taught jazz pianist and singer who worked with the Original Tuxedo Orchestra between 1923 and 1936, first under Papa Celestin, then William Ridgely. She also worked with Armand Piron, John Robichaux, Sidney Desvigne, and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band.

Contents

Sweet Emma Barrett Sweet Emma quotI Ain39t Gonna Give Nobody None Of My Jellyroll

Sweet emma barrett 1982


Biography

Sweet Emma Barrett Sweet Emma Barrett All About Jazz

In 1947, she accepted a steady job at Happy Landing, a local club, but it was her recording debut in 1961, with her own album in the Riverside Records New Orleans: The Living Legends series, that brought her recognition. Although most of the songs on the album were instrumentals, others featured vocals by Barrett that the liner notes described as her first recordings as a vocalist.

Sweet Emma Barrett Sweet Emma Barrett Additions to National Recording

She was nicknamed "Bell Gal" because she wore a red skull cap and garters with Christmas bells that jingled in time with her music. She was featured on the cover of Glamour magazine and written about in publications in the U.S. and Europe. She toured with the Preservation Hall Jazz Band domestically and internationally, including a stint at Disneyland in 1963.

Sweet Emma Barrett httpslastfmimg2akamaizednetiuavatar300sf

Despite the popular exposure she received at concerts and overseas appearances, Barrett continued to feel most comfortable in her native New Orleans, especially the French Quarter. In 1963, on her album The Bell Gal and Her Dixieland Boys Music, Barrett sings on four of the eight songs and heads two overlapping groups. She is joined throughout by banjoist Emanuel Sayles, bassist Placide Adams, and drummer Paul Barbarin, and four songs feature trumpeter Alvin Alcorn, trombonist Jim Robinson and clarinetist Louis Cottrell, Jr.; the remaining four numbers have trumpeter Don Albert, trombonist Frog Joseph and clarinetist Raymond Burke.

Sweet Emma Barrett Sweet Emma Barrett Know Louisiana

Overall, this set gives listeners a good sampling of the sound of New Orleans jazz circa 1963 and is one of the few recordings of Barrett mostly without the regular members of what would become the Preservation Hall Jazz Band (Robinson and Sayles excepted). The ensemble-oriented renditions of such numbers as "Big Butter and Egg Man", "Bogalusa Strut", and "Take Me Out to the Ball Game"' are rendered with fun and joy.

Sweet Emma Barrett Following your heart Sweet Emma Barrett Stacey Brody Pulse

The Preservation Hall Jazz Band made a brief appearance in the 1965 film The Cincinnati Kid, which featured Barrett as vocalist and pianist for the band and included a close-up of her.

Sweet Emma Barrett Sweet Emma Barrett manwithoutqualities

In 1967, she suffered a stroke that paralyzed her left side, but she continued to work, and occasionally to record, until her death in 1983.


Sweet Emma Barrett Sweet Emma Barrett Music Sounds of New Orleans Pinterest

References

Sweet Emma Barrett Wikipedia


Similar Topics