Dippermouth Blues (also called Sugarfoot Stomp)

New Orleans Dixieland (1923)

King Oliver and Louis Armstrong, cornets; Johnny Dodds, clarinet; 
Honor Dutrey, trombone; Lil Hardin, piano; Bud Scott, banjo (and vocal break);
Baby Dodds, drums.
This performance is interesting because of the thick activity of the collective improvisation. King Olivers three-chorus solo in this recording was admired and memorized by many trumpet players in the 1920s and 1930s (even in New Orleans style, when a band had a great soloist, they were always given room to solo). The appearance of the very young Louis Armstrong and his future wife on piano (Lil Hardin) gives this particular group extraordinary historical significance.
