Charles Joseph "Buddy" Bolden (September 6, 1877 – November 4, 1931) was an American
cornetist who was regarded by contemporaries as a key figure in the development of a
New Orleans style of
ragtime music, or "jass", which later came to be known as
jazz.
Childhood
When he was born, Bolden's father, Westmore Bolden, was working as a driver for William Walker, the former master of Buddy's grandfather Gustavus Bolden, who died in 1866. His mother, Alice (née Harris), was 18 when she married Westmore on August 14, 1873. Westmore Bolden was around 25 at the time, as records show that he was 19 in August 1866. When Buddy was six years old, his father died, after which the boy lived with his mother and other family members.[1] In records of the period the family name is variously spelled Bolen, Bolding, Boldan, and Bolden, thus complicating research.[2] Buddy likely attended Fisk School in New Orleans, though evidence is circumstantial, as early records of this and other local schools are missing.[3]
Musical career
Bolden was known as "King" Bolden[4] (see
Jazz royalty), and his band was at its peak in New Orleans from around 1900 to 1907. He was known for his loud sound and improvisational skills, and his style had an impact on younger musicians. Bolden's trombonist
Willie Cornish, among others, recalled making
phonograph cylinder recordings with the Bolden band, but none are known to survive.[5]
Many early jazz musicians credited Bolden and his bandmates with having originated what came to be known as jazz, though the term was not in common musical use until after Bolden was musically active. At least one writer has labeled Bolden the father of jazz.[6] He is credited with creating a looser, more improvised version of
ragtime and adding
blues; Bolden's band was said to be the first to have brass instruments play the blues. He was also said to have adapted ideas from
gospel music heard in uptown African-American
Baptist churches.[7]
Instead of imitating other cornetists, Bolden played the music he heard "by ear" and adapted it to his horn. In doing so, he created an exciting and novel fusion of ragtime, black sacred music,
marching-band music, and rural blues. He rearranged the typical New Orleans dance band of the time to better accommodate the blues: string instruments became the rhythm section, and the front-line instruments were clarinets, trombones, and Bolden's cornet. Bolden was known for his powerful, loud, "wide open" playing style.[8]Joe "King" Oliver,
Freddie Keppard,
Bunk Johnson, and other early New Orleans jazz musicians were directly inspired by his playing.[9]
One of the best known Bolden numbers is "Funky Butt" (later known as "Buddy Bolden's Blues"), which represents one of the earliest references to the concept of
funk in popular music. Bolden's "Funky Butt" was, as
Danny Barker once put it, a reference to the olfactory effect of an auditorium packed full of sweaty people "dancing close together and belly rubbing."[10]
Bolden is also credited with the invention of the "Big Four,"[11] a key rhythmic innovation on the marching band beat, which gave early jazz more room for individual improvisation. As
Wynton Marsalis explains,[12] the big four (below)[13] was the first syncopated bass drum pattern to deviate from the standard on-the-beat march.[14] The second half of the Big Four is the pattern commonly known as the
hambone rhythm developed from
sub-Saharan African music traditions.
Physical and mental decline
Bolden had an episode of acute alcoholic
psychosis in 1907 at age 30. With the full diagnosis of
dementia praecox (today called
schizophrenia), he was admitted to the
Louisiana State Insane Asylum at Jackson, a
mental institution, where he spent the rest of his life.[8][10] Recent research has suggested that Bolden may in fact have had
pellagra, a vitamin deficiency common among poor and black groups in the population, which in 1907 swept through the southern United States.[15] His death on November 4, 1931, was caused by cerebral
arteriosclerosis according to the death certificate.[16]
Personal life
In 1895–1896, Bolden began a relationship with Harriet "Hattie" Oliver, a woman several years his senior who lived in the same neighborhood. Their relationship was brief, and though they never married, she gave birth to their son, Charles Joseph Bolden Jr., on May 2, 1897.[17]
Further life and legend
While there is substantial first-hand oral history about Bolden, facts about his life continue to be lost amidst colorful myth. Stories about his being a barber by trade or that he published a
scandal sheet called The Cricket have been repeated in print despite being debunked decades earlier.[18]
The Bolden band tune "Funky Butt", better known as "Buddy Bolden's Blues" since it was first recorded under that title by
Jelly Roll Morton, alternatively titled "I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say," has been covered by hundreds of artists, including
Dr. John, on his album Goin' Back to New Orleans, and
Hugh Laurie, on his album Let Them Talk.
Bolden has inspired a number of fictional characters with his name.
The Canadian author
Michael Ondaatje wrote the novel Coming Through Slaughter, which features a Buddy Bolden character who in some ways resembles Bolden, but in other ways is deliberately contrary to what is known about him.
The character of Buddy Bolden helps
Samuel Clemens solve a murder in
Peter J. Heck's novel A Connecticut Yankee in Criminal Court (1996).[20]
He is a notable character in Louis Maistros' novel The Sound of Building Coffins,[21] which contains many scenes depicting Bolden playing his cornet.
Canadian author Christine Welldon wrote the novel Kid Sterling (2021),[22] which centers on the character of Buddy Bolden and his life, based on the author's archival research.
Nicholas Christopher's historical fiction novel Tiger Rag (2013) [23] centers around the legend and repercussions of a wax cylinder recording by Bolden's band as well as Bolden's later life.
Plays and films
Bolden is featured in
August Wilson's play Seven Guitars. Wilson's drama includes the character King Hedley, whose father named him after King Buddy Bolden. King Hedley constantly sings, "I thought I heard Buddy Bolden say..." and believes that Bolden will come down and bring him money to buy a plantation.
A
biopic about Bolden with mythical elements, titled Bolden!, was released in 2019. It was written and directed by Dan Pritzker.
Gary Carr portrays Bolden.[24][25]
During the 1980s, an adaptation of
Michael Ondaatje's novel Coming Through Slaughter was staged at Harvard's Hasty Pudding Theater. The music was scored by Steven Provizer and the production was directed by Tim McDonough.[26]
In 2011, Interact Theater in
Minneapolis produced a new work-in-progress musical entitled Hot Jazz at da Funky Butt in which Buddy Bolden was the feature character. The music and lyrics were by Aaron Gabriel and featured New Orleans musicians and collaborators Zena Moses, Eugene Harding and Jeremy Phipps. In 2018, Interact Theater premiered the production renamed Hot Funky Butt Jazz at the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, MN. The song "Dat's How Da Music Do Ya" quoted the "Buddy Bolden Blues."
A three-channel video installation,
"Precarity", was created by the British experimental filmmaker John Akomfrah in 2017 as a commissioned piece for the
Ogden Museum and the
Nasher Museum, exploring themes related to the life of Buddy Bolden.
^See
Marquis 2005, p. 107: "on that fabled cylinder, according to Willie Cornish, they [Buddy Bolden's band] had recorded a couple of marches." In the 2005 epilogue to the book, Marquis also discusses these recordings that have not been found (
Marquis 2005, pp. 158–159). On pages 44–45 of the same book the question is discussed in detail (
Marquis 2005, pp. 44–45). Marquis concludes: "That the cylinder was made is quite believable; that it is gone forever is even more believable..." (
Marquis 2005, p. 44)
^Gioia, Ted. The History of Jazz. Oxford/ and New York, 1997. p. 34.
^Daniel Hardie, The Loudest Trumpet: Buddy Bolden and the Early History of Jazz (Self-published using iUniverse, 2000), 86–87.
ISBN9781583486078
^
abBarlow, William. "Looking Up At Down": The Emergence of Blues Culture. Temple University Press (1989), pp. 188–191.
ISBN0-87722-583-4.
^
ab"Two Films Unveil a Lost Jazz Legend".
National Public Radio. December 15, 2007. Retrieved April 14, 2008. By most accounts, a mix of alcohol and mental illness sent Bolden into an asylum in 1907; he stayed there until his death in 1931.
^Burns, Ken, and Geoffrey C. Ward. Ken Burns' "Jazz: The Story of America's Music." New York: Sony Music Entertainment, 2000. Sound recording. Episode 1
^"Louisiana, Orleans Parish Death Records and Certificates, 1835-1954", database, FamilySearch (
https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:ZNTN-3XMM : 27 May 2020), Charles Bolden, 1931. The death certificate is filed at the Louisiana State Archive and Research Library, in Statewide Deaths for
East Feliciana Parish, 1931, Vol. 32, Pg. 13491.
^See
Marquis 2005, pp. 58, 92: "In asking questions about Bolden, if the barbershop, the Cricket, girls, loudness, and "Funky Butt" are all that is mentioned, one can surmise that rather than actually having known Bolden the person has merely read Jazzman" (the rather inaccurate account, as Marquis proves) by Charles Edward Smith and Frederic Ramsay Jr., the editors of that book; see
Marquis 2005, pp. 3–4.