Dominic James "Nick" La
Rocca (April 11, 1889 in New Orleans, Louisiana
– February 22, 1961 in New Orleans
) was an early jazz cornetist and trumpeter and
the leader of the Original
Dixieland Jass Band. According to La Rocca himself, he
was "The Creator of Jazz", "The
Christopher Columbus of Music", and
"The most lied about person in history since
Jesus
Christ".
Background
La Rocca was the son of poor
Sicilian-American immigrants.
His father was
Girolamo LaRocca of Salaparuta
, Sicily and his mother was
Vita DeNina of Poggioreale
, Sicily. Young Nick
was attracted to the music of the brass bands in New Orleans and
covertly taught himself to play
cornet
against the wishes of his father who hoped his son would go into a
more prestigious profession. La Rocca at first worked as an
electrician, playing music on the side.
From around 1910 through 1916 he was a regular member of
Papa Jack Laine's bands. While not
considered as one of the most virtuosic or creative of the Laine
players, he was well regarded for playing a solid lead with a
strong lip which allowed him to play long parades without let up or
to play several gigs in a row on the same day.
In 1916 he
was chosen as a last-minute replacement for Frank Christian in Johnny Stein's band to play a job up in
Chicago,
Illinois
.
This band
became the famous Original
Dixieland Jass Band, making the first commercially issued jazz
recordings in New York
City
in 1917. These recordings were hits and made
the band into celebrities.
Soon other New Orleans musicians began following the O.D.J.B.'s
path, arriving in New York to play jazz. La Rocca was uneasy about
competition.
Frank
Christian recalled that La Rocca offered him $200 and a return
railway ticket to go back home. After a band featuring New Orleans
musicians
Alcide Nunez,
Tom Brown, and
Ragbaby Stevens won a battle of the bands
against the O.D.J.B., drummer Ragbaby found his drum heads all
mysteriously slashed.
The band gave La Rocca the nickname
"Joe Blade",
and published a song called "Joe Blade, Sharp as a Tack".
La Rocca
led this band on tours of England
and the
United
States
into the early 1920s, when he suffered a nervous
breakdown. He returned to New Orleans and retired from
music, going into the construction and contracting business. His
chair in the band was taken by Henry Levine, a teenaged trumpeter
devoted to traditional jazz stylings; Levine later led one of the
house bands on
NBC's radio series
The Chamber
Music Society of Lower Basin Street.
In 1936 Nick LaRocca reunited the O.D.J.B. for a successful tour
and more recordings. La Rocca proclaimed that he and his band were
the inventors of the now nationally popular swing music.
Personality conflicts broke up the band again the following year,
and La Rocca again retired from music.
In the 1950s he started writing numerous vehement letters to
newspapers, radio, and television shows, stating that he was the
true and sole inventor of jazz music, and that those who claimed
that the music had Negro origins were part of a Communist
conspiracy.
When
Tulane
University
established
their Archive of New Orleans Jazz
in 1958, La Rocca donated his large collection of papers related to
the O.D.J.B. to Tulane, after adding numerous gloss in the margins, often very
insulting to his fellow musicians, and occasionally modifying
documents to make them more in line with his own version of
history.
At the same time, he worked with writer H.O. Brunn on the book
The Story of the Original Dixieland Jazz Band (sometimes
sarcastically nicknamed by jazz historians as "The Gospel according
to Nick La Rocca"). While Brunn toned down some of La Rocca's most
extreme rhetoric, the book still presents a curious tale of La
Rocca growing up in a New Orleans apparently devoid of African
Americans where he founded the Original Dixieland Jass Band in 1908
(8 years before anyone else recalls it existing). The book is
dismissive even of the other members of the O.D.J.B.; it is perhaps
kindest to clarinetist
Larry Shields
who was already dead at the time, but still it claims that Shields,
unlike La Rocca, was not an essential member of the band.
Those trying to assess La Rocca's contributions to jazz are
sometimes perhaps as much hindered as helped by La Rocca's own
statements. A small few (mostly in England) have taken La Rocca on
his word, while a much larger segment of jazz historians have
simply dismissed him out of hand. La Rocca may have inadvertently
done much damage to his own reputation, especially in some of his
statements which are unusually racist even when compared to
interviews with other white southerners born in the late 19th
century, and his dismissal if not outright insults of his fellow
white musicians.
If few of his contemporaries had anything kind to say about La
Rocca, it should be remembered that they were very aware of how he
had little kind to say about them. La Rocca's statements in his
later life were made when he was not completely well. A balanced
assessment may be to regard LaRocca as an important figure in
taking jazz from a regional style to international popularity, the
leader of the most influential jazz band of the period from 1917 to
1921, a good player in a very early jazz style on records such as
"Clarinet Marmalade", and unfortunately his own worst enemy with
his bragging in his old age. La Rocca's playing and recordings were
an important early influence on such later jazz trumpeters as
Red Nichols,
Bix Beiderbecke and
Phil Napoleon.Other information about Nick La
Rocca and his biographer are in a Salvatore Mugno's novel: "Il
biografo di Nick La Rocca. Come entrare nelle storie del jazz",
Besa Editrice, Nardò (Lecce), Italia, 2005.
Legacy
Nick LaRocca's 1917 composition "Tiger Rag" is on of the most
important and influential jazz standards of the twentieth century.
There were 136 cover versions of LaRocaa's copyrighted composition
"Tiger Rag" by 1942 alone.
Among the artists who have recorded "Tiger Rag" are
Louis Armstrong,
Benny Goodman,
Frank
Sinatra,
Duke Ellington,
Kid Ory and his Creole Jazz Orchestra,
Bix Beiderbecke and
Bob Crosby.
The Original Dixieland Jazz Band is now regarded as one of the
seminal groups in the formation and development of modern jazz. The
ODJB compositions have been covered by everyone from Louis
Armstrong to Duke Ellington to Joe Jackson. The influence and
enduring impact of the ODJB in the history and development of
modern jazz are undeniable.
References
External links