Music

Earl Palmer
Earl Palmer was an innovative, influential drummer in New Orleans and Los Angeles.
Earl Palmer was an innovative, influential drummer in New Orleans and Los Angeles.
Edmond Dédé was a prominent African-American musician and composer in born in New Orleans in the nineteenth century.
Edward Noon Johnson was a New Orleans musical personality, multi-instrumentalist, and inventor.
Modern jazz pianist and leading jazz educator Ellis Marsalis was the patriarch of the musical New Orleans family that includes his sons trumpeter Wynton Marsalis and saxophonist Branford Marsalis, both internationally acclaimed modern jazz artists.
Emanuel Paul was a traditional jazz and brass band saxophonist and multi-instrumentalist from New Orleans.
Emanuel Sayles was a New Orleans traditional jazz, blues, and rhythm and blues singer, banjoist and guitarist.
Emile Barnes was a ragtime, early jazz, and brass band clarinetist from New Orleans, perhaps best remembered for his distinctive, blues-inflected sound and performance style.
Ernie Cagolatti was a trumpet player in the the New Orleans jazz scene for much of the twentieth century.
The late New Orleans rhythm & blues artist Ernie K-Doe remains an iconic figure in Crescent City music and culture.
Eugène Chassaignac was a composer and music critic in nineteenth century New Orleans.
New Orleans pianist and singer Antoine "Fats" Domino is revered as a founding father of rock & roll, along with Elvis Presley, Chuck Berry, Little Richard, and Jerry Lee Lewis.
Ferdinand Dunkley was an organist and composer who sought to incorporate Louisiana folklife into his compositions in works such as “Street Cries” and “Bayou Songs.”
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