
- Playing
- Tesch:
- From
- Guy Rathbun
Chicago’s Austin high school was not easy for Tesch. He wasn’t an athlete, didn’t make friends easily, quiet, and, to make matters worse, cross-eyed. With the exception of his music classes, Tesch was not academically inclined. Austin High did offer him something no other school had: a cadre of promising musicians including Jimmy and his brother Dick McPartland, Jim Lanigan and Bud Freeman. This was the beginning of The Austin High Gang, a group of white musicians who wanted to play like their New Orleans heroes: the New Orleans Rhythm Kings.
Also in the the Club McKenzie: Your 1920s Jazz Speakeasy series
Turn on the Heat
(58:57)
From: Guy Rathbun
Largely forgotten, bandleader Sam Lanin is possibly the most prolific recording artist of the 1920s. No one really knows just how many records he is responsible for simply ...
Puttin' On the Ritz
(58:59)
From: Guy Rathbun
Composer and lyricist Jerome Kern summed up the life and work of Israel Baline (Irving Berlin) when he said, “Irving Berlin has no place in American music. He is American ...
The Kid
(58:57)
From: Guy Rathbun
By 1911, tailgate trombonist Kid Ory was leading one of the best-known bands in New Orleans. Eight years later he formed a successful band in Los Angeles, but after five ...
The Hawk: 40-years with Coleman Hawkins
(58:58)
From: Guy Rathbun
Considered the first great tenor saxophonist in jazz, Coleman Hawkins was a child he was a gifted musician. In 1922, Mamie Smith spotted him in and hired him to play with her ...
Billy Cotton: That Rhythm Man
(58:57)
From: Guy Rathbun
Despite the vast popularity of "That Rhythm Man," as Billy Cotton was known, his recognition did not reach the states like the bands lead by Ambrose, Noble, Hilton and others.
The Uke
(58:57)
From: Guy Rathbun
The ukulele became as commonplace in the American parlor as the piano in the 1920s. Today we think of the tiny guitar as a Hawaiian instrument, when in reality, it was ...
The Odd Couple
(58:57)
From: Guy Rathbun
Sidney Bechet was one of the early jazz virtuosos. Born in New Orleans, he began his professional career long before jazz was put to wax. Then there was Mezz Mezzrow. ...
Laughing in Rhythm
(58:57)
From: Guy Rathbun
Laughter is the best medicine. But, it feels that today's musicians may be taking themselves too seriously. Here are selections from the 1920s to the '40s where some of the ...
Pee Wee
(58:57)
From: Guy Rathbun
Although he hailed from St. Louis, Charles Ellsworth “Pee Wee” Russell took his clarinet cues from New Orleans. Only now is he beginning to be recognized as one of the most ...
The Wordsmiths
(58:57)
From: Guy Rathbun
This program features those wonderfully talented lyricists of the 1920s who created such memorial songs as "Margie," "You Took Advantage of Me," "Three Little Words," "A Fine ...
Piece Description
Chicago’s Austin high school was not easy for Tesch. He wasn’t an athlete, didn’t make friends easily, quiet, and, to make matters worse, cross-eyed. With the exception of his music classes, Tesch was not academically inclined. Austin High did offer him something no other school had: a cadre of promising musicians including Jimmy and his brother Dick McPartland, Jim Lanigan and Bud Freeman. This was the beginning of The Austin High Gang, a group of white musicians who wanted to play like their New Orleans heroes: the New Orleans Rhythm Kings.
Broadcast History
KCBX Public Radio
Timing and Cues
Segment #1 Incue @ 00:00: Music ... - Outcue @ 18:41: "... with Wailin' Blues
62 second music bed break
Segment #2 Incue @ 19:43: Music ... - Outcue @ 38:48: "... this brief break"
62 second music bed break
Segment #3 Incue @ 39:50: Music ... - Outcue @ 58:58: music ends.
Musical Works
| Title | Artist | Album | Label | Year | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shim-me-Sha-Wabble | Miff Mole & his Little Molers | LP | 00:00 | ||
| I’ve Found a New Baby | The Chicago Rhythm Kings | LP | 00:00 | ||
| Baby Won’t You Please Come Home | The Chicago Rhythm Kings | LP | 00:00 | ||
| Jazz Me Blues | Charles Pierce Orchestra | Lost Chords. | Great Moments | 00:00 | |
| There’ll be Some Changes Made | The Chicago Rhythm Kings | LP | 00:00 | ||
| Wailin’ Blues | The Celler Boys | LP | 00:00 | ||
| China Boy | McKenzie & Condon’s Chicagoans | 78 RPM | 00:00 | ||
| Sugar | McKenzie & Condon’s Chicagoans | 78 RPM | 00:00 | ||
| Copenhagen | Elmer Schoebel & his Friars’ Society Orchestra | LP | 00:00 | ||
| Prince of Wails | Elmer Schoebel & his Friars’ Society Orchestra | LP | 00:00 | ||
| Oh Baby! | Eddie Condon’s Quartet | LP | 00:00 | ||
| One Step to Heaven | Miff Mole & his Little Molers | LP | 00:00 | ||
| Indiana | Eddie Condon’s Quartet | LP | 00:00 | ||
| Liza | McKenzie & Condon’s Chicagoans | LP | 00:00 | ||
| Barrel House Stomp | The Celler Boys | LP | 00:00 | ||
| Nobody’s Sweetheart (exerpt) | Eddie Condon’s Chicagoans | Chicago, Vol. 2. | ABC | 00:00 |
