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Obit: Tad Jones RIP (December 31, 2006)
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Subject: Obit: Tad Jones RIP (December 31, 2006) From: Mary Katherine Date: 02 Jan 07 - 10:50 AM >From: info@patjolly.com >Subject: [Community] Music Historian Tad Jones > >I learned this evening that music historian Tad Jones >died last night, December 31, 2006, in an accident at >his home. There are no other details at this time. >I'll send along more information as soon as it becomes >available. > >I'm sorry to pass along this sad news on this most >hopeful first day of a new year. > >Al Kennedy >10:20 p.m. Monday Evening, Jan 1, 2007 > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > >1/1/07 >I just received a call saying that Tad fell and struck >his head. He was found by the police in the pool of his >apartment building about 2pm this afternoon. The time >of death was estimated to have been approximately 12 >hours earlier. I decided to send out an immediate >message so I am glad that you wrote this notification Al. >Tad was involved with many interesting and historically >significant projects. He was kind, passionate about our >great culture, and an important resource for our city >and our people. Arrangement details to follow. > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > > From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia > >Tad Jones is a jazz historian and researcher who is known for >discovering Louis Armstrong's correct birthdate, August 4, 1901. > >Jones is a native and resident of New Orleans, Louisiana. He is a >graduate of Loyola University of New Orleans. > >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > >TAD JONES is a scholar who has accumulated over three decades of >interviews, oral histories and primary source research into the >complexities of musical New Orleans. An early and enthusiastic >supporter of New Orleans-based rhythm and blues, he captured musical >legends Allen Toussaint, Henry Byrd (a.k.a. "Professor Longhair"), >Irma Thomas and Earl King in oral histories and interviews as early as >the mid-1970s. As Executive Director of Oral History Project Inc., he >has worked with a team of fellow jazz historians to complete >interviews with Alvin Alcorn, Milton Batiste, Walter Lewis, Frank >Mitchell and other jazz legends since 1995. > >He has served as consultant to numerous film, radio and print projects >on the history of American music, including the widely acclaimed PBS >documentary ?Piano Players Rarely Ever Play Together? (1980). He >contributed interviews to the PBS series ?Satchmo: The Wonderful World >of Louis Armstrong? and authored the biographical essay on Professor >Longhair for American National Biography. Mr. Jones is co-author (with >Jason Berry and Jonathan Foose) of Up from the Cradle of Jazz: Music >in New Orleans Since World War II, and is currently working on a book, >Louis Armstrong: His Life, Times and New Orleans 1901-1922, which >examines the backdrop of young Louis's life. As a board member of the >New Orleans International Music Colloquium, he continues to actively >support the scholarly study of 20th century American music. > >www.satchmoz.at/t_jones_e.html >~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ > >Up from the Cradle of Jazz: New Orleans Music Since World War II (Da >Capo, 1992) by Jason Berry, Jonathan Foose, Tad Jones. > >~~ |
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