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Professor Longhair

Professor Longhair (Henry Roeland Byrd) (December 19, 1918 - January 30, 1980) was a legendary New Orleans blues musician. He was born in Bogalusa, Louisiana. He was noted for his unique piano style, which he described as "a combination of rumba, mambo, and Calypso", and his unusual, expressive voice, described once as "freak unique".

His career in music began in the 1930s, dancing for tips. "The very first instrument I played was the bottom of my feet, working out rhythms, tap dancing. We used to dance all up and down Bourbon Street."

He learned guitar and piano and began to take music seriously when he found he could get out of work by playing piano for his fellow members of the Civilian Conservation Corps. He also worked as a boxer, cook, and professional card player.

In the late 1940s, he sat in on piano at the Caldonia Club while Dave Bartholomew's band was taking a break. He was an immediate hit and Bartholomew, later famous as Fats Domino's bandleader and collaborator, was fired. The band all had long hair and were dubbed Professor Longhair and the Four Hairs.

He began recording the following year. His signature song, "Mardi Gras in New Orleans" (still the theme song of the Mardi Gras) was recorded in 1949 under the name Professor Longhair and the Shuffling Hungarians. "I had one Hindu in the band, but there weren't no Hungarians," he explained.

Longhair's only national R&B hit was 1950's "Bald Head". In the early 1950s, he released several more minor hits, including "Tipitina" and "Ball the Wall".

He appeared under many names, including Roy Byrd and his Blues Jumpers, Roy "Bald Head" Byrd, Roland Byrd, Professor Longhair and his Blues Scholars, and Professor Longhair and the Clippers. These name changes were often related to problems with recording contracts.

His career greatly slowed down in the 1960s, with "Big Chief" his biggest hit. He returned to card playing and even worked as a janitor in a record store until located and recorded by Rounder Records. The 1971 Jazz & Heritage Festival marked a comeback, and he began making a series of critically acclaimed albums throughout the 1970s. Dr. John (Mac Rebbenack) was an important booster. He also appeared in the documentary Piano Players Rarely, If Ever, Play Together with Allen Toussaint, and Tuts Washington, three generations of New Orleans keyboard men.

He was the headliner at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1973, and in 1975, Paul McCartney flew him to play a private party on the Queen Mary.

He died of a heart attack in 1980, and was subsequently inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The famed New Orleans night spot, Tipitina's, is named after one of his songs. His last recordings, the only documentation of his live performance style, were made at Tipitina's by Albert Goldman in 1978.

Quotations

  • "Professor Longhair put 'funk' into music; he's the father of the stuff." Dr. John
  • "He's the Satchel Paige of the piano." Albert Goldman
  • He's the Bach of rock." Allen Toussaint
  • "He's a seminal force, a guru, an original creator of theNew Orleans piano style ... the teacher of great players like Fats Domino, Allen Toussaint, Mac Rebbenack, James Booker, and Huey Smith. All acknowledge him as The Great Master." Jerry Wexler

Official Website: http://www.professorlonghair.com

Referenced By

1910s in music | 1918 in music | 1920s in music | 1930s in music | 1940s in music | 1980 | 1980 in music | 19 December | 19th December | 30 January | 30th January | Bogalusa | Bogalusa, Louisiana | Boogie-Woogie | Boogie woogie | Cajun music | Clifton Chenier | Clifton Chenier & the Zydeco Ramblers | Clifton Chenier and the Zydeco Ramblers | December 19 | December 19th | Doctor John | Dr. John | Dr John | Drive'em Down | Grammy Award for Best Traditional Blues Album | Grammy Award for Best Traditional Blues Recording | Grammy Awards of 1988 | Inductees of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame | January 30 | January 30th | List of Grammy Hall of Fame Award recipients Q-Z | List of Louisiana people | List of Louisianan people | List of boogie woogie musicians | List of inductees to the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame | List of members of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame | List of people from Louisiana | List of people known as the father or mother of something | Mac Rebbenack | Mac Rebennack | Malcolm Rebennack | Music of Louisiana | New Orleans | New Orleans, LA | New Orleans, Louisiana | New Orleans blues | Orleans Parish, Louisiana | Pianist | Pianists | Piano player | Stagger Lee | The Big Easy | The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's 500 Songs that Shaped Rock and Roll | Timeline of trends in music (1900-1949) | Timeline of trends in music (1900-1950) | Willie Hall


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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Professor Longhair ".

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