VINTAGE BROWN-TONED PRINT INSCRIBED BY LOUIS ARMSTRONG, DATED 1933, ALONG WITH TWO SIMILAR PROMOTIONAL PRINTS
ARMSTRONG, Louis. Photograph inscribed. AND Two photographs. Chicago: Gibson, circa 1933. Three vintage brown-toned prints (7-3/4 by 9-3/4 inches each), each titled and blindstamped on the recto.
Three vintage brown-toned promotional prints of a young Louis Armstrong at the emergence of his “big band period,” one featuring Armstrong at a microphone with his trumpet raised, inscribed, “My Best wishes, To Walter Hawkins, From Louis Armstrong, 3/20/33,” with two additional vintage prints, one duplicating the first, the other of a smiling Armstrong in a three-quarter pose with his trumpet.
These three wonderful vintage prints show the young musician just as he entered his “big-band period… [making] records of great power, beauty and maturity, such as Body and Soul (1930), Star Dust (1931), Sweethearts on Parade (1932) and I gotta right to sing the blues (1933)”(Grove I:60). By then Armstrong had fully “developed his improvisational genius with Fletcher Henderson’s orchestra in New York, then returned to Chicago, already billed as ‘The World’s Greatest Trumpet Player,’ and recorded the legendary Hot Five sessions… By 1932, Armstrong was the preeminent voice in jazz. However, a split lip hindered his ability to perform, and two different agents, Tommy Rockwell and Johnny Collins, claimed him as their client. His fortunes improved when Armstrong reconnected with Joe Glaser. Once manager of the Sunset Café, where Armstrong moonlighted in 1927, Glaser resolved the managerial dispute” (NPR). These early promotional photographs were taken at Gibson studios in Chicago and produced by Johnny Collins to promote the Hot Five, whose highly influential recordings “were modeled on New Orleans ensembles, leading to such masterpieces of the later New Orleans style as Butter and Egg Man (1926)” (Grove I:600). Each print titled on the recto-“Johnny Collins Presents the International Star Louis Armstrong, World’s Greatest Trumpeter”-above the blindstamped “Gibson, Chicago.”
Images fine, each with traces of paper removal to verso.