Remembering Louis Armstrong

Episodes

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Louis Armstrong Remembered, By Gregory Porter2021080120220723 (R2)This year marks the 50th anniversary since we lost one of the most influential jazz artists in history, Louis Armstrong. Gregory Porter celebrates his incredible musical achievements, paying tribute to his unique vocal style and trailblazing musicianship, as well as the importance of his success as a black man in a very divided society through the decades.

Hear Gregory express his own gratitude for Satchmo's legacy as he handpicks the tracks which mean the most to him and details how they inspired his own sound.

Gregory Porter celebrates Louis Armstrong's incredible musical achievements.

Radio 2 remembers Louis Armstrong

Louis Armstrong: Behind The Music2011080320210804 (R2)Sir Michael Parkinson profiles one of his heroes - Louis Armstrong - a man famed for his charismatic stage presence and instantly recognisable voice, almost as much as for his trumpet playing. Satchmo's influence extends well beyond jazz music and, by the end of his career in the 1960s, he was widely regarded as a major influence on popular music in general.

Away from the trumpet, Louis married four times, raised a severely disabled adopted son, and became obsessed with the health benefits that could be derived from taking laxatives. We also hear how this descendant of slaves, went on to cancel a planned tour of the U.S.S.R. on behalf of the State Department, saying that he couldn't represent his government abroad when it was in conflict with its own people at home.

What we play is life' he once said, and so the programme covers the whole gamut of Armstrong's music as we try and understand that life, with classics including: What a Wonderful World, Hello Dolly, When The Saints Go Marching In, and We Have All the Time in the World.

The programme features a whole host of new interviews, including broadcaster and musician Digby Fairweather; jazz singer Cleo Laine; Armstrong's road manager (later manager) Oscar Cohen; his former producer at Columbia, George Avakian; band leader Chris Barber; Dan Morgenstern from the US Institute of Jazz Studies; and jazz musician David Ostwald.

The programme also hears from those who heard him play live, takes a tour of The Louis Armstrong House Museum, and hears from today's jazz musicians as they prepare for the regular Armstrong session at the Birdland Jazz club in New York.

Sir Michael Parkinson profiles one of his heroes.

Radio 2 remembers Louis Armstrong

Satchmo, By Satchmo: The Louis Armstrong Tapes2011072720210731 (R2)4th August marks the 120th birth anniversary of one of the most important musicians in the history of jazz - Louis Armstrong. Satchmo By Satchmo, takes a visit to the jazz legend's private tape vault.

Broadcaster and journalist Paul Sexton sets the scene for a unique review of great man's life and times - unique because it's by Louis himself, talking about his life and times in largely unheard home recordings. Armstrong was one of the first artists to embrace reel-to-reel home tape technology. He loved to record his own voice for posterity, whenever the occasion allowed, from around 1950 (when he had already been an artist for some 30 years) until shortly before his death in 1971.

The tapes make for an extraordinary and often hilarious first-hand commentary on a singular life. Satchmo looks back on his earlier career, talking about recording in the 1920s with Joe 'King' Oliver, 'Empress of the Blues' Bessie Smith and others, and describes the contemporary events in his life in this fascinating audio diary.

We hear Louis talk about the day that he and his wife Lucille met the Pope ('such a fine little old fellow!') and how the pontiff prayed for them; there's the time he took a phone call in the middle of one of his 'audio letters' from his drummer in the Louis Armstrong All-Stars, 'Cozy' Cole; and, to illustrate just how long his incredible career lasted, we also hear what he thought of the Beatles.

In one of the most remarkable excerpts, Satchmo issues a severe verbal reprimand to his fellow jazz musician Jelly Roll Morton, who had expressed the opinion that 'scat' singing had started before Armstrong established the style (according to Louis, on the 1926 recording Heebie Jeebies). 'I'm not going to let you get away with that, young man,' says Louis, before we realise that at the point he makes the admonishment, Morton is already dead.

There are clips of Armstrong singing to himself on his home tapes, (including completely acappella versions of Beale Street Blues and the calypso from High Society) and Louis tells some of his favourite jokes, such as the one about the alimoney and the one about the alligator! Plus, there are songs from his superb catalogue to illustrate the speech, including C'Est Si Bon, When It's Sleepy Time Down South and, as he makes a moving final analysis of his life as it nears the end, Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen.

The jazz legend sings, talks and tells jokes in largely unheard home recordings.

Radio 2 remembers Louis Armstrong