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Satchmo and the Jews
Commentary Magazine ^ | Nov 2009 | Terry Treachout

Posted on 11/18/2009 7:26:59 AM PST by AreaMan

Satchmo and the Jews

Terry Teachout From issue: November 2009

In addition to being the greatest jazz musician of the 20th century, Louis Armstrong was also the most beloved. “I never met anybody that didn’t love him that ever saw him work or ever has encountered him, had any connection or any business with him,” said Bing Crosby. The secret of Armstrong’s charm lay in the straightforward openness of his character. Though his personality was more complex than his fans realized, his public and private sides were essentially identical. One of his friends described him as “down-to-earth, natural, completely unpretentious, simple in the best sense of the word.”

Armstrong’s openness was not limited to his fellow blacks. To be sure, he had no illusions about the racism of the society into which he had been born. A colleague once dropped in on him after a performance and asked what was new. “Nothin’ new,” he replied. “White folks still ahead.” Yet he never yielded to the temptation to treat white musicians as he had been treated by whites. He was devoid of personal prejudice, and the All Stars, the band he led from 1947 until his death in 1971, were integrated at a time when it was still uncommon for a working jazz group to be racially mixed—especially one whose leader was black. “Those people who make the restrictions, they don’t know nothing about music, it’s no crime for cats of any color to get together and blow,” he said.

Armstrong’s lack of prejudice extended to Jews, an attitude that was comparatively rare among blacks of his generation. Outside his marriages, his closest adult relationship was with Joe Glaser, a Jewish gangster from Chicago who became his manager in 1935 and with whom he was intimately associated from then on. Armstrong described Glaser as “my dearest friend,” and those who knew both men well agreed that this was nothing more than the truth.

He was similarly admiring of the Karnofskys, a family of Jewish peddlers from Lithuania for whom he had worked as a boy in New Orleans. In 1969 he wrote a lengthy memoir of his relationship with the Karnofskys called “Louis Armstrong + the Jewish Family in New Orleans, La., the Year of 1907.” In it he told of how surprised he had been to discover that they “were having problems of their own—[a]long with hard times from the other white folks[’] nationalities who felt that they were better than the Jewish race. . . . I was only Seven years old but I could easily see the ungodly treatment that the White Folks were handing the poor Jewish family whom I worked for.”

 

The young Armstrong saw the Karnofskys’ problems up close, for they took him under their wing, treating him almost like a relative. “They were always warm and kind to me, which was very noticeable to me—just a kid who could use a little word of kindness,” he recalled. He shared meals with them and borrowed money from them to buy his first cornet. Thereafter he would identify with the Karnofskys and the other Jews of New Orleans so closely that he became an ardent philo-Semite who wore a Star of David around his neck (Joe Glaser gave it to him). “I will love the Jewish people, all of my life,” he wrote in “Louis Armstrong + the Jewish Family,” adding that he learned from them “how to live—real life and determination.”

_____________


One of the most striking aspects of Armstrong’s memoir of the Karnofskys is the explicitness with which it compares their conduct to that of New Orleans’s black community. Armstrong was impressed by the way in which the Jews whom he knew banded together in the face of prejudice, seeking to better their lot through work, and he was dismayed by the contrast with the irresponsibility of the fathers of the black children in his neighborhood. “Many [black] kids suffered with hunger because their Fathers could have done some honest work for a change,” he wrote. “No, they would not do that. It would be too much like Right. They’d rather lazy around + gamble, etc.”

Among the men whom Armstrong had in mind was his own father. Not only did Willie Armstrong refuse to marry Mayann Albert, Louis’s mother, but he left her for another woman on the day his son was born and apparently made no attempt to support Mayann or the two children whom he had by her. Armstrong did not spend any significant amount of time with his father until he was a teenager, and in later years he shunned Willie, whom he regarded with contempt. “Didn’t go to his funeral and didn’t send nothing,” he told a reporter in 1967. “Why should I? He never had no time for me or Mayann.”

Beyond describing Willie as “tall and handsome and well built” in Satchmo: My Life in New Orleans, his 1954 autobiography, Armstrong would never have anything good to say about his father. In the same breath that he praised Willie’s looks, he added that “my father did not have time to teach me anything; he was too busy chasing chippies.”

In “Louis Armstrong + the Jewish Family,” he was franker still:

The next time we heard of him—he had gone into an uptown neighborhood and made several other children by another woman. Whether he married the other woman, we’re not sure. One thing—he did not marry [Mayann]. She had to struggle all by herself, bringing us up.

Armstrong revered Mayann, who did her best to raise him and his younger sister as well as she could. Not so Willie, whom he took as a role model—in reverse. As a boy he worked hard to help feed his family, and as a man he labored no less ceaselessly to perfect the artistry that made him rich and famous. “I think I had a beautiful life,” he told an interviewer in 1970. “I didn’t wish for anything I couldn’t get, and I got pretty near everything I wanted because I worked for it.”

_____________


Armstrong wrote his memoir of the Karnofskys around the time that black anti-Semitism, which had showed signs of subsiding in the early years of the civil-rights movement, underwent a recrudescence that was fueled by the anti-Semitic statements of such black leaders as Malcolm X. Few prominent blacks were willing to speak out in praise of Jews in 1969. Yet Armstrong actually wanted to publish “Louis Armstrong + the Jewish Family,” in which he explicitly attributed black anti-Semitism to envy of the superior achievements of the Jews: “The Negroes always hated the Jewish people who never harmed anybody, but they stuck together. And by doing that, they had to have success.”

Might Armstrong have written “Louis Armstrong + the Jewish Family” in response to the rising tide of black anti-Semitism? It seems unlikely. He was almost entirely apolitical, both in public and in private. “I don’t dive into politics, haven’t voted since I’ve lived in New York, ain’t no use messing with something you don’t know anything about,” he said. Only once did he deviate from this stance. In 1957, Armstrong attacked President Eisenhower for initially refusing to take action to desegregate the public schools of Little Rock, declaring that the president was “two-faced” and had “no guts.” In years to come, he would occasionally make forceful statements about racial matters but only when specifically asked to do so by reporters, and he never took part in civil-rights demonstrations. As a result, many younger blacks, either forgetting or ignoring his highly publicized quarrel with Eisenhower, dismissed him as an accommodationist.

But if Armstrong remained mostly silent about political matters, he was forthright when it came to what he regarded as the moral failings of his own people:

The Negroes always wanted pity. They did that in place of going to work . . . they were in an alley or in the street corner shooting dice for nickels and dimes, etc. (mere pittances) trying to win the little money from [their] Soul Brothers who might be gambling off the money [they] should take home to feed their starving children or pay their small rents, or very important needs, etc.

The bluntness with which Armstrong expressed himself in this 1969 memoir was more than just the remembered resentment of an old man. On numerous other occasions, he made it clear that he believed poor people, regardless of their color, to be largely responsible for their own fate. “You don’t have to do a damn thing bad unless you want to,” he had told a reporter nine years earlier. “Other than that, you weak-minded, you should go to a hospital or somethin’.” In 1940 he went so far as to record “W.P.A.,” a controversial novelty song by the black songwriter Jesse Stone, whose lyrics poked fun at the relief programs sponsored by Franklin Roosevelt’s Works Progress Administration:

Sleep while you work,
while you rest, while you play,
Lean on your shovel
to pass time away.

That the song’s lyrics reflected his own point of view cannot be doubted. “The Lord will help the poor, but not the poor lazy,” he said in a 1961 TV interview.

Armstrong’s autobiography is the definitive statement of his belief in the hard gospel of self-help. Though he did not speak critically in Satchmo of anyone other than his father, it was clear that he saw his own life as proof of the value of deferred gratification. “I was determined to play my horn against all odds, and I had to sacrifice a whole lot of pleasure to do so,” he wrote. No Horatio Alger hero could have improved on his iron determination to get ahead in the world, and once he did so, he felt an obligation to tell others how to do the same.

_____________

Today Armstrong’s views on individual responsibility are the source of considerable disquiet among his admirers, many of whom prefer to ignore them altogether. Contrary to his desire that it be published, “Louis Armstrong + the Jewish People” was buried among his personal papers after his death and was not published in its original form until 1999. To this day, most scholars cite it cautiously, if at all.

The reason for this caution is plain to see. What is mostly left implicit in Satchmo is made wholly explicit in “Louis Armstrong + the Jewish Family,” many parts of which are startlingly contemporary in tone:

[Blacks] hold too much maliceJealousy deep down in their heart for the few Negroes who tries . . . they know within themselves that they’re doing the wrong things, but expects everybody just because he is a Negro to give up everything he has struggled for in life such as a decent family—a living, a plain life—the respect.

Armstrong would appear to have had little in common with those latter-day “white-acting blacks” whose adherence to middle-class codes of social conduct is viewed with suspicion by many of their peers. He never shed the homespun manners of his New Orleans youth, and throughout his life he would criticize blacks (including two of his wives) who had what he called “a sense of ‘Aires.’” But though he never aspired to the refined “airs” of the black bourgeoisie, he believed no less devoutly in the transformational power of middle-class values and resolved to lead his own life according to their lights.

On occasion Armstrong has been compared to Booker T. Washington, whose long-unfashionable vision of racial redemption through self-improvement had a powerful influence on the turn-of-the-century blacks who heeded his call to “cast down your bucket where you are.” Louis Armstrong was one of them, as can be seen by visiting his New York home, an elaborately decorated three--story brick-covered frame house located seven blocks from Citi Field in a rundown but respectable working-class neighborhood. The house, which Armstrong bought in 1943, looks like what it is: the residence of a poor boy who cast down his bucket and pulled it up overflowing. Yet it says as much about him that even after he became wealthy enough to live in a tonier neighborhood, he preferred to stay in Queens. “My home . . . is good, but you don’t see me in no big estates and yachts, that ain’t gonna play your horn for you,” he wrote in his old age.

To visit the Armstrong house, which is now a museum, is to see how its proud owner achieved “everything he has struggled for in life.” It was the outward symbol of the lessons in life that he learned from Mayann, his devoted mother—and from the Jews of New Orleans, who helped teach him to return love for hatred and seek salvation in work.

About the Author

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Terry Teachout, COMMENTARY's chief culture critic and the drama critic of the Wall StreetJournal, is the author of Pops: A Life of Louis Armstrong, out next month from Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. He blogs about the arts at www.terryteachout.com.

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Footnotes

Commentary

© Copyright 2009 Commentary. All rights reserved


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Philosophy; Unclassified
KEYWORDS: blacks; culture; jews; louisarmstrong; music; philosophy; satchmo
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1 posted on 11/18/2009 7:27:00 AM PST by AreaMan
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To: AreaMan

An interesting look at the greatest jazz man of them all.


2 posted on 11/18/2009 7:31:15 AM PST by rogue yam
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To: AreaMan

ping for later


3 posted on 11/18/2009 7:43:48 AM PST by cotton1706
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To: AreaMan

Today Armstrong’s views on individual responsibility are the source of considerable disquiet among his admirers, many of whom prefer to ignore them altogether.

That’s the trouble.....

Thank you for posting this—I like Terry Teachout (and Armstrong) hadn’t seen this—Louie hit the nail on the head in several places.


4 posted on 11/18/2009 7:46:09 AM PST by Mac from Cleveland (Dreams from My Father--food, shelter, and education from some typical white folks)
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To: AreaMan
There were a few people who did not like him and wanted him dead. That passed when Al Capone went to prison and Satchmo felt he could return to play in Chicago.
5 posted on 11/18/2009 7:50:45 AM PST by Leo Farnsworth (I'm not really Leo Farnsworth...)
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To: AreaMan

As a youth back in the early 60’s, I became acquainted with Louis and his entire “All Stars” band over the course of a few years. It was he who first gave me the nickname “Jimbo” that I’ve welcomed in his honor ever since.

Talking to him was like talking to your best buddy. Easy, fun and full of laughs. BTW, the All Star regulars who were with him at the time were Trummy Young, trombone, Ed Hall/Barney Bigard, clarinet, Barrett Deems, drums, Arvell Shaw, bass and Billy Kyle, piano. Oh, and Velma Middleton was always there to sing. What a show they put on.


6 posted on 11/18/2009 7:50:58 AM PST by bcsco (Hey, GOP: The American Indians found out what happens when you don't control immigration...)
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To: AreaMan

Dang. Nice article.


7 posted on 11/18/2009 7:53:56 AM PST by Nonstatist
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To: Mac from Cleveland; bcsco; Leo Farnsworth
A complex man who could have easily followed the well worn path of self destruction like many other musicians.

Also a man that had every right to be bitter and vengeful against the whites of the day yet chose to be better than that.
He was no doormat but he wasn't the stereotypical angry black man.

8 posted on 11/18/2009 7:56:48 AM PST by AreaMan
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To: AreaMan

I have a record of what I believe was his first recorded appearance, an old Gennett-label 78 of King Oliver’s band. Found it at an estate-sale a few years ago. Love old-time jazz.


9 posted on 11/18/2009 8:00:51 AM PST by greene66
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To: AreaMan

‘Now don’t be a fool workin hard is passe
you’ll get a pink slip next week anyway
three little letters that makes life OK
WPA’

Very tounge in cheek record.


10 posted on 11/18/2009 8:01:58 AM PST by Leg Olam (Make yourselves sheep, and the wolves will eat you. - Benjamin Franklin)
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To: greene66
Have you ever visited this site, Red Hot Jazz Archive?
11 posted on 11/18/2009 8:05:04 AM PST by bcsco (Hey, GOP: The American Indians found out what happens when you don't control immigration...)
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To: AreaMan

Pretty dog gone good article.


12 posted on 11/18/2009 8:06:47 AM PST by Dysart
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To: AreaMan

Th way I understood it was:

Jews are rich
Rich people keep us down
Therefore:
Jews keep us down

In the urban community, people will use the word “Jew” to mean “rich”. I remember the black kids were fascinated by the Jewish kids because they assumed they all went to private schools. They were amazed that Jews went to public school. if they thought someone was rich, they assumed he was a Jew.


13 posted on 11/18/2009 8:10:19 AM PST by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: greene66

Our local college radio station plays old jazz on Monday nights. Pretty cool.


14 posted on 11/18/2009 8:11:39 AM PST by AppyPappy (If you aren't part of the solution, there is good money to be made prolonging the problem.)
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To: bcsco; PJ-Comix

PJ, see our bcsco/Jimbo’s recollections of Louis Armstrong in post 6.


15 posted on 11/18/2009 8:14:05 AM PST by Charles Henrickson
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To: AreaMan

Booker T. Washington is my personal hero. I now add Satchmo to the pantheon. (I already loved his music; I now admire him for his deeds and words as well.) Why, oh why do modern black people scorn these two American greats?


16 posted on 11/18/2009 8:26:56 AM PST by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
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To: Charles Henrickson

When I said I was in my youth, I mean I was just into my teens. My cousin/Godmother’s husband was an avid jazz fan, his dad having roomed with Hoagy Carmichael in college. Louis made annual visits to the Riviera Ballroom in Lake Geneva, WI and my cousins started bringing me to the concerts when I turned a teenager. Today, all I listen to is jazz and standards.

I met Louis on my first concert. At the break, I went to ask for autographs from Trummy Young & Ed Hall who’d stopped at the bar for a drink (not sure it was alcohol...I was too nervous to wonder over such stuff). They said they would but asked me to come back in a little while after they’d had a few minutes to rest. True to their word, they motioned me over and we became acquainted. While talking, Louis came up, I was introduced to him, and I was never so thrilled.

The next year, he must have seen me in the audience because during the break, after coming in from the bus, he motioned me over and asked how I was doing. It was then he called me “Jimbo” for the first time, recalling my name. Over the course of the next couple years he always had time for me during the breaks.

Obviously, this wasn’t a big relationship but it was a personal one, one I’ll always remember with gratitude. He was a special man who showed a kindness to me I didn’t expect, being the ‘star’ that he was. Is there any wonder I’ve been a fan ever since?


17 posted on 11/18/2009 8:39:04 AM PST by bcsco (Hey, GOP: The American Indians found out what happens when you don't control immigration...)
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To: bcsco

Oh, yep! But I also have a ton of it on CDs. Probably about 300 CDs of pre-war jazz.


18 posted on 11/18/2009 8:40:19 AM PST by greene66
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To: CaptainAmiigaf

interesting ping!


19 posted on 11/18/2009 8:42:39 AM PST by Mrs. B.S. Roberts
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To: bcsco; PJ-Comix

Great story, Jimbo!


20 posted on 11/18/2009 8:42:43 AM PST by Charles Henrickson
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