also listed as
Jelly Roll Morton ~~~ Jelly Roll Morton and his Red Hot … Read Full Bio ↴also listed as
Jelly Roll Morton ~~~ Jelly Roll Morton and his Red Hot Peppers ~~~ Jelly-Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers
The Red Hot Peppers were a jazz band from the 1920s featuring Jelly Roll Morton. He formed the Red Hot Peppers and made a series of classic records for Citor, who were just starting to get into the race records market and were looking for talent. The recordings he made in Chicago featured the best New Orleans sidemen including Baby Dodds, Kid Ory, and Barney Bigard. These recordings are considered some of the finest in the “hot style” of early jazz
Jelly Roll Morton ~~~ Jelly Roll Morton and his Red Hot … Read Full Bio ↴also listed as
Jelly Roll Morton ~~~ Jelly Roll Morton and his Red Hot Peppers ~~~ Jelly-Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers
The Red Hot Peppers were a jazz band from the 1920s featuring Jelly Roll Morton. He formed the Red Hot Peppers and made a series of classic records for Citor, who were just starting to get into the race records market and were looking for talent. The recordings he made in Chicago featured the best New Orleans sidemen including Baby Dodds, Kid Ory, and Barney Bigard. These recordings are considered some of the finest in the “hot style” of early jazz
Original Jelly Roll Blues
Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers Lyrics
Instrumental
Lyrics Licensed & Provided by LyricFind
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@sandrogiorgetta217
I love this music❤❤❤
@salukitrader
I wanna party with these guys.
@johnluger1642
Lively piece, Man!, Without question, I'm a Jelly Roll fanatic!
@nicholasgill5575
Incredible swing...superb musicianship...brilliant composition...FJM a towering genius
@memoriam.victoriam
i was looking for old jelly roll recepies and found this banger i love youtube
@beereaucrat3233
Holds up, even 100 years later.
@badmoonrisin4700
Hotter than the Devil's kitchen!
@joelashadali
What a legend
@bblegacy
Absolutely wonderful, and so forward thinking too - especially for 1926 - in that there was not a banjo in the band, but a guitar.
@benkoldoff8662
And a couple years later the Carter family would record Wildwood Flower, which was the song that established the guitar as a leading instrument.