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Bunk Johnson

Willie Gary "Bunk" Johnson was a prominent eary New Orleans jazz trumpet player in the early years of the 20th century who enjoyed a revived career in the 1940s.

Bunk gave the year of his birth as 1879, although there is speculation that he may have actually been younger by as much as a decade.

Bunk received lessons from Adam Olivier[?] and began playing professionally in Olivier's orchestra. Bunk probably played a few adolescent jobs with Buddy Bolden, but was not a regular member of Bolden's Band for any length of time (contrary to Bunk's claim). Bunk was regarded as one of the top trumpeters in New Orleans in the years 1905 - 1915, in between repeatedly leaving the city to tour with Minstrel shows and Circus bands. After he failed to show up for a Mardi Gras parade job in 1915 he learned the Krewe members intended to do him bodily harm, and so he left town, touring with shows and then settling in New Iberia, Louisiana. In 1931 he lost his trumpet and front teeth when a violent fight broke out at a dance in Rayne, Louisiana, putting and end to his playing. He thereafter worked in manual labor, occasionally giving music lessons on the side when he could.

In 1938 and 1939 the researchers/writers of the first book of jazz history, Jazzmen[?], interviewed several prominent musicians of the time, including Louis Armstrong, Sidney Bechet, and Clarence Williams, who spoke very highly of Bunk in the old days in New Orleans. The writers tracked down Bunk's address, and traded several letters with him, where Bunk recalled (and possibly embellished) his early career. Bunk stated that he could play again if he only had new teeth and a new trumpet. A collection was taken up by writers and musicians, and Bunk was fitted with a set of dentures and given a new trumpet, and in 1942 made his first recordings.

These first recordings propelled Bunk (along with clarinetist George Lewis[?]) into public attention, attracting a cult following. Bunk and his band played in New Orleans, San Francisco, Boston, and New York City and made many more recordings. Bunk's work in the 1940s show why he was well regarded by his fellow musicians-- on his best days playing with great imagination, subtlety, and beauty-- as well as showing why he had not achieved fame earlier, for he was unpredictable, tempermental, with a passive-aggressive streak and a fondness for drinking alcohol to the point of serious imparement.

Bunk suffered from a stroke in late 1948 and died in New Iberia on July 7, 1949.

Jazz fans and historians still debate Bunk's legacy, and the extent to which his colofull remiscences of his early career were acurate, misremembered, exagerations, or lies.



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