The World Needs a Little Louis Armstrong Right About Now

As the U.S. and the world face a load of uncertainty surrounding the spread of the coronavirus, we are told to limit our contacts with others. But at least we still have some things to comfort us, like the warm sound of Louis Armstrong.

grocery panic buying
The pasta section of a local grocery store

Last week, we had someone try to break into our apartment around 3 a.m. I was already up feeding our baby when I heard a pounding noise in the hallway that kept continuing. So I went to the door and listened, until the person started kicking at our door.

I yelled at the guy through the door, where I soon realized he was drunk and did not live in our building. But he continued to kick our door and others until the police arrived.

Anyway, it turned out that the guy had gone out and gotten extremely drunk in response to some of the news about the coronavirus (reacting to being worried because of what turned out to be inaccurate statements by our president). And he ended up in our neighborhood, where he kicked in two doors of our apartment building.

The point being that while businesses and local leaders are trying to tackle the physical health aspects of the coronavirus and to some extent worrying about the economic impact, this thing is also taking its toll on our mental health. So it is important that each of us take care of each other and ourselves the best we can.

There are ways we can help our neighbors, like making sure elderly neighbors have precious toilet paper until the run on toilet paper and panic buying subsides. We can also give to local food banks that will be needed to help people financially impacted by the closings. One source to find your local food bank is the Feeding America website.

Another way to help ourselves is to take a break from the news, as reporters constantly barrage us with the inevitable growing number of cases. Remember that all of the closures and actions are not designed to stop the spread, which largely be done once we have a vaccine, which will come. But these closures are meant to slow things down so our system can handle the coronavirus until health care officials have a better handle on it.

When you step away from the news, put on an old comforting movie. Or play some music you like. In times like these, we need music that can comfort us.

Louis Armstrong saw a lot of changes and lived through some troubled times in America. But his trumpet and voice broke through the pain and helped us find that joy still exists.

Nowhere is that joy found more clearly than in his performances of “Rockin’ Chair.” Below, Armstrong and Jack Teagarden (vocal and trombone) perform “Rockin’ Chair” in 1957 in New York City with Peanuts Hucko (clarinet), Marty Napoleon (piano), Arvell Shaw (bass), and Cozy Cole (drums). Give it a listen and let your worries subside for a few minutes.

Hoagy Carmichael wrote “Rockin’ Chair” and it was first recorded in February, 1929. Armstrong and Carmichael recorded it in December of that year. Of course, between those dates, the stock market had crashed, and the song gave joy to many as they faced the Great Depression.

My dear old aunt Harriet, in Heaven she be,
Send me sweet chariot, for the end of the trouble I see;
Old rocking chair gets it, judgement day is here;
Chained to my rocking chair.

A year after the above performance, Teagarden and Armstrong performed “Rockin’ Chair” again at The Newport Jazz Festival in 1958. Check it out.

Wash your hands, and take care of yourself.

  • The Pines at Night (Matthew Ryan) Releases Full Album,”A Year of Novembers”
  • A “Song for a Hard Year” from The Pines at Night
  • Jackson Browne Covers Tom Petty’s “The Waiting”
  • I’ll See You In My Dreams: Goodbye 2020, Hello 2021
  • There Will Be Another Christmas
  • We sang, “Silent Night” All Day Long
  • ( Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)

    “What’d I Say”: The Accidental Hit By Ray Charles

    Ray Charles What'd I Say

    On February 18, 1959, Ray Charles laid down the song “What’d I Say” at the Atlantic Records studio on New York City. Besides being a great song, it is also unique for the way the song went from creation to recording to becoming a major hit.

    The Creation of “What’d I Say”

    One night while touring, Ray Charles was trying to fill the four hours he was contracted to perform at a dance near Pittsburgh (reportedly in Brownsville, Pennsylvania). Charles began on his Wurlitzer electric piano, finding a riff. As the riff began to build, Charles began making up words on the spot in front of the live audience.  And then he found himself asking his female backup singers to repeat after him.

    As illustrated in the movie Ray (2004) with Jamie Foxx, below is the film version of the evening (note that this video has the talking dialogue in Spanish but the singing is in English).

    The audience went wild. Charles continued playing the new song on the road, eventually calling Atlantic to say, “I’m playing a song out here on the road, and I don’t know what it is—it’s just a song I made up, but the people are just going wild every time we play it, and I think we ought to record it.”

    Newport Jazz Festival

    The following year, Charles performed “What’d I Say” at the 1960 Newport Jazz Festival in Newport, Rhode Island as his closing number.  But it left the audience wanting more.  He was called back on stage for an encore as his tenth song of the night, “I Believe to My Soul.”

    During this performance at the Newport Jazz Festival, unknown to those on stage, outside the festival police were clashing with a crowd of up to 12,000 young people.  The angry youths were upset they could not get into see the performances.

    “What’d I Say” Becomes a Hit

    After “What’d I Say” was recorded in the studio in two parts, Atlantic released it as a single in July 1959. Then, it became the lead-off two-part title track for the What’d I Say album released in October 1959.

    The song was a shot in the arm for the music industry.  At the time, Elvis was in the army, Chuck Berry would soon be going to jail, and Buddy Holly had died.

    Although some criticized the song for blending gospel with sounds of sexual bliss, the recording became Charles’s first big crossover hit. It climbed to number one on the R&B charts and to number six on the pop charts.

    “What’d I Say” was Charles’s first gold record, and Charles continued to use it as his closing number, as he did in Newport, throughout his career. While he would have other big hits, it was this little impromptu number that helped launch his career into the stratosphere and give the country a little soul.

    What is your favorite Ray Charles song? Leave your two cents in the comments.

  • That Time Willie Nelson Got a Little Emotional Singing with Leon Russell and Ray Charles
  • The World Needs a Little Louis Armstrong Right About Now
  • Ray Charles & Barbra Streisand: “Crying Time” (Duet of the Day)
  • Full Concert of Ray Charles in 1981
  • 2013 Pawscars Award Winners Announced
  • Cartoonish Gunfire But Brutal Slavery in “Django Unchained” (Review)
  • (Some related Chimesfreedom posts.)