Music

Frank Amacker
Frank Amacker, nicknamed “Dude,” was not only a gifted jazz musician, but also an impeccable dresser.
Frank Amacker, nicknamed “Dude,” was not only a gifted jazz musician, but also an impeccable dresser.
Frank "Little Daddy" Moliere was a traditional jazz piano player and singer from New Orleans.
Blind since his birth in New Orleans, Henry Butler transcended life in the public housing projects to earn advanced music degrees and become a respected pianist and vocalist.
Henry Gray was a pioneer of the Chicago blues style of piano.
James Carroll Booker III was a distinctive New Orleans pianist who mixed gospel, boogie-woogie, blues, traditional and modern jazz, and classical music into a unique and breathtaking sound.
Jelly Roll Morton was the first important composer and arranger of New Orleans jazz, as well as an agile pianist, a compelling singer, and one of the early jazz world's most flamboyant characters.
Jerry Lee Lewis was one of the founding fathers of rockabilly music.
From 1925 until his death in 1964, Joe James was the regular pianist in Kid Thomas’s band.
Traditional jazz and early rhythm and blues pianist Joe Robichaux may be best remembered as bandleader of the New Orleans Rhythm Boys.
Joseph Butler was a jazz bass player frequently heard at Preservation Hall in New Orleans's French Quarter.
Louis Gallaud, a pianist from the Treme neighborhood of New Orleans, is known for the memorable recordings he made with Punch Miller.
Marcia Ball, a blues and swamp-rock pianist and singer, grew-up in the small town of Vinton.
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