New Orleans (1947)
Now You Has Jazz
21 November 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Anyone unborn at the time High Society was released has had much more chance of catching it in regular airings on TV and Revival houses than they have of checking out New Orleans, released nine years earlier (1947) after which it more or less dropped off the radar. Late-blooming fans of High Society could therefore be forgiven for thinking that when Bing Crosby name-checked the jazz sextet - rhythm section, Barrett deems, Billy kyle, Arvell shaw; front line, Trummy Young, Ed Hall, Louis Armstrong - in the number Now You Has Jazz, he was being innovative. Not so, Satchmo himself name-checked his own combo here, nine years earlier, though he lacked Cole Porter's ability to interlard it with such lines as 'well, you take some skins, jazz begins ... take a bass, man, now we're getting' some place ...' etc. If you dismiss out of hand the peurile 'plot' you're left with some pretty good examples of 'early' jazz performed by Armstrong himself, Zutty Singleton, Barney Bigard and - moving up a decade - Meade Lux Lewis and Woody Herman and although she'd already appeared in 13 previous films Shelley Winters rated only an uncredited scene as a member of the audience. Music: Yes, Other: No
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