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The
People of Traditional New Orleans Jazz:
"Papa Jack"
George Vetiala Laine
If music is the essence of the
New Orleans Jazz National Historical Park, then people are
the heart of our story.
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George Vetiala "Papa Jack" Laine, musician and bandleader, was
born in New Orleans on September 21, 1873. The son of Francois Laine
and Bernadine Wink, Laine spent all of his life in or near the citys
8th Ward (Lower Faubourg Marigny). Laines love for music began
early. His first drum, a toy, came from bandleader Patrick S. Gilmore's
son. By age eleven, Laine had progressed from a toy drum to a field
drum purchased by his father at a salvage sale.
As a youth, Laine played in parades with other neighborhood boys
using rag-tag homemade instruments. He later moved on to fife and
drum type bands, playing tin flutes and penny whistles. Though primarily
remembered as a bass drummer, he also played snare drum, full trap
set, alto horn and string bass.
By the age of 16, Laine was an accomplished bandleader of both
string bands and brass bands. He also led a large drum and bugle
corps during the Spanish-American War. One of Laine's early specialties
was playing music for funerals, and by agreement with other New
Orleans bandleaders played only in Algiers and Gretna.
In 1895, Laine married Blanche Nunez, the daughter of Cuban immigrants.
Jack and Blanche had two children, Alfred (b.1895), and Alma (b.1901).
The Glory Years
Near the turn of the century, Laine organized his famous Reliance
Brass Band which he lead for nearly 20 years. The market demand
for music in the early 1900s eventually called for three separate
units of this group, plus four others, the Tuxedo Band, Laine's
Band, the Formal Band, and another, with no name at all. As the
crave for vernacular dance music grew, Laine also included dance
bands, adding pianists, guitarists and string bassists with brass
band players. Laines love of music and his role in its
perpetuation is reflected in his creation of a childrens band.
Laine often turned his house into a dormitory to ensure performers
were available early for picnics, excursions, and out-of-town parades.
Although segregation laws of the day prohibited blacks and whites
from performing together, Laines band included lighter-skinned
blacks and creoles that he could hire without running afoul of the
rule. The age of his musicians spanned the full gamut of years.
Some had a great deal of formal musical training while others, none.
His bands were made up of readers and fakers (those who could
read music and those who could not), a winning combination in playing
both standards and the evolving new music. In 1904, he combined
New Orleans musicians with St. Louis locals at the St. Louis Exposition
in Missouri, playing with the group briefly before returning to
New Orleans.
As a bandleader, Laine hired many musicians, 150 of whom are now
identifiable. A third of them became mainstays of early jazz. Many
of these musicians went on to perform with such groups as Tom Brown's
Band From Dixie, the Original Dixieland Jazz Band, the Louisiana
Five, Jimmy Durante's Original New Orleans Jazz Band, and the New
Orleans Rhythm Kings and became internationally famous. Some still
retain this fame today, including Tom Brown, Nick LaRocca, Larry
Shields, Eddie Edwards, Tony Sbabaro, Alcide Nunez, Achille Baquet,
George Brunies, and Chink Martin.
The Legend
One of Laine's last jobs before retiring was at Camp Beauregard
in Alexandria, LA., organizing and operating bands which included
many of his band members who had been drafted during World War I.
In 1919 Laine retired from the music business, but played occasionally
with his son Alfred "Pantsy" Laine's band. He returned to his old
occupation as a blacksmith, working predominantly for the Dennis
Sheen Transfer Company in Fauborg Marigny.
"Papa Jack" started to take on the role of an early New
Orleans music legend in November 1939, when the Sunday Times-Picayune
ran a story entitled "Hot Music's Granddad Beats Anvil Instead
of Drum." When the National Jazz Foundation was organized in
New Orleans in 1945, interest in Laine expanded and continued to
grow. The New Orleans Jazz Club succeeded the foundation and later
put out a special issue of their Second Line magazine
highlighting Laine in May 1954. In January 1959, a recording was
made of Laine playing bass drum with cornetist Johnny Wiggs's band.
Laine surprised everyone by still being able to play and producing
an extremely vibrant, driving bass drum sound that definitely kicked
the band along.
Laine's interviews between 1951 and 1964 give an account of his
life and the development of jazz over time. On September 28, 1963,
a week after his 90th birthday, the New Orleans Jazz Club honored
Laine with a Certificate of Merit at a special function at the Royal
Orleans Hotel. In late 1963, the National Educational Television
network (NET) did a special entitled "Jack Laine- Patriarch of
Jazz." By the time of his death on June 1, 1966, Laine had regained
some of the glory of the days when he was at his peak. Jack Laine
was extremely important in the long, extended development of New
Orleans jazz. As a legendary figure, he pre-dated Buddy Bolden,
and his career continued long after Bolden became incapacitated.
As a bandleader and musician, his influence affected the course
of jazz and touched many up-and-coming superstars, even after he
himself had retired.


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