Every New Orleans has a favorite kind of music, even if it is not jazz, they still value jazz. It is the reason why musicians like Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald are here because jazz music was born and reproduced in the south. The public knows the success of these musicians and the success of the country's reputation. However, most people do not know how these musicians will directly or indirectly affect their lives.
Duke Ellington - "David Danced" by VocalEssence Duke Ellington - "Never" VocalEssence - Duke Ellington - "Come Sunday" by VocalEssence • Ella Fitzgerald - Blue Sky · Ella by Irving Berlin Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong - Cheek on Cheek · William C. Handy, arr. Hall Johnson - "St. Louis Blues" - Undine Smith Moore - "Tambourine to Glory" by Vocal Essence "Unden Smith Moore - Mother to Son" by Vocal Essence - Bessie Smith - I am not without a man
Ella Fitzgerald seems to participate frequently. Lena Horne, Duke Ellington, Josephine Baker, Louis Armstrong, and many others. During the heyday of the bronze building community in southern Chicago, they played at legendary clubs around Chez Paree, Parkway Ballroom, Palm Tavern of Gerri, and 47th Street. During the day, 47th Street is a vibrant business district, and at sunset it will be a thrilling nightlife center. By 1920, more than 50,000 rusters in the southern rural areas emigrated to Chicago and escaped from the threat of cotton fields and lynch. Gerri Oliver, the owner of Palm Tavern, remembers "You can not try on shoes in the city center, you can not try on the hat or coat in the city center."