Jazbo Brown

Jazbo Brown was, according to legend, a black delta blues musician from around the turn of the 20th century.

Biography

Jazbo Brown is semi-legendary, referred to in DuBose Heyward's Jasbo Brown and Selected Poems (1924) as an "itinerant negro player along the Mississippi and later in Chicago cabarets". This book also states that the jazz music genre has possibly taken its name from this travelling musician. Jazbo Brown is featured in the song "Jazzbo Brown from Memphis Town", composed by George Brooks and performed by Bessie Smith.

He also appears in the opening scene of George Gershwin's opera, Porgy and Bess, with the spelling 'Jasbo Brown'. He takes no part in the plot, but plays "a low-down blues" on the piano while couples dance. This goes on for several minutes, expanding as the chorus and orchestra join in, before transitioning into the song "Summertime".[1]

gollark: We did do various random practical things. Which mostly consisted of "pour thing into thing, maybe heat it, wait a bit".
gollark: Nice color.
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gollark: One time in Chemistry someone spilt (dilute) hydrochloric acid on my stuff and didn't tell me, which was bad.
gollark: It can be very annoying in school when you have lessons with people who don't really care (or are just kind of stupid).

See also

References

  1. Porgy and Bess. Vocal score, pp. 4-15. New York: WB Music Corp., 1935.
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