This excerpt from Swanston St Shamble is among the first jazz recording of Graeme Bell’s Dixieland Band, from a session in January 1944.
Summary by Ian Gilmour
Graeme Bell and his Dixieland Band were one of the first bands in Australia to be inspired by the music coming out of New Orleans. In this recording you can hear the influence of jazz greats like Fats Waller, Jelly Roll Morton and especially that of Louis Armstrong in the phrasing and melodic riffs of the trumpet part. The band plays in a characteristic slow tempo and rhythmic style known at the time as the 'Melbourne bounce’.
The title refers to traffic in Melbourne’s Swanston St. The recordings were made on a shellac 78 disc for the specialised recording label Ampersand, run by lawyer William H Miller.
Graeme Bell and his younger brother Roger have been key players in Australian jazz for over 60 years and these historic recordings are their first commercially released tracks. They were made three years before their pioneering tours to Europe in the late 1940s.
Swanston St Shamble is among Graeme Bell’s Dixieland Band’s first published recordings, made in Melbourne in 1944. Written by Bell, the titles refer to traffic conditions and hangovers respectively, while the Dixieland style is inspired by the music that started in New Orleans in the first decades of the twentieth century.
Dubbed the ‘father of Australian jazz’, Graeme Bell has been a central figure in the Australian jazz scene for over 60 years. From the mid-1930s, various formations of the Bell brothers’ bands played both in mainstream dance venues such as the Heidelberg Town Hall, and the Palais Royale at the Exhibition Buildings, as well as performing more groundbreaking jazz in smaller venues in St Kilda and Portsea.
Some of their first, unreleased 78 rpm discs were recorded in 1940 and 1942, as ‘Graeme Bell’s Jazz Band’, with a line-up including Ade Monsborough, Norm Davies, Tom Crowe, Norm Blackmore, Lou Silbereisen, Frank Coughlan, Lin Challen and Charlie Blott. These recordings were followed by a series of sessions from January 1944, cut by William H Miller, a Melbourne lawyer who had started his small Ampersand label the year before.
Notes by Ian Gilmour
The National Film and Sound Archive of Australia acknowledges Australia’s Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we work and live and gives respect to their Elders both past and present.