Alcide “Slow Drag” Pavageau was an early jazz guitarist, string bassist, and dancer from New Orleans. A popular figure with a larger-than-life personality, Pavageau is often said to have been the most photographed musician at Preservation Hall during the 1960s. As one writer at the time noted, “He does so many interesting things that everyone who has a camera wants his picture.”
A gifted stringed instrument player internationally recognized for his bass playing, Pavageau was also a talented dancer (hence his nickname, “Slow Drag,” after the Ragtime-era dance). He was also a second line grand marshal, serving in this capacity for the Eureka Brass Band and others. Pavageau’s musical talents can best be heard on recordings he made with Bunk Johnson and George Lewis in the 1940s and 1950s, respectively.
Pavageau was born on March 7, 1888, in New Orleans. The Pavageaus were a musical family and related to many other musicians in New Orleans. Pavageau began learning guitar in 1906 with musical tutoring from his multi-instrumentalist father—who also worked as a cigar maker—and lessons from his cousin, Ulysses Picou. Other relatives included cousin Alphonse Picou, a famous clarinet player, and the musically-inclined Tio and Piron families, including band leader and music publisher Armand Piron. These men and their forebears had traveled and played music in Mexico, Cuba, and Haiti and incorporated Afro-Latin influences into their songs.
Pavageau’s first public gigs were with a band that busked on Basin Street and played for dances and parties in the area. Pavageau also made a name for himself as a champion at dance competitions held in New Orleans community dance halls, where he showed off his talents at the reigning dances of the era. Pavageau’s wife, known as Sister Annie Pavageau, was a gospel-oriented pianist and vocalist.
Around 1928, when Pavageau was in his late thirties, he fashioned his own three-string bass and learned to play it. However, Pavageau never did learn how to tune a bass properly, which became a source of complaint later when he performed with Bunk Johnson’s band. Pavageau began playing bass with Emile Barnes, Buddy Petit, and Herb Morand. In the early 1940s Pavageau started with clarinetist George Lewis, creating a musical partnership that would last throughout the remainder of his career. In 1945 Pavageau traveled to New York and was a player in the well-known 1945 Bunk Johnson New York sessions. In 1958 he toured the United States and Europe with Lewis. Beginning in 1961 Pavageau served as grand marshal for the Eureka Brass Band, a position he would hold until his death.
At Preservation Hall Pavageau played with a number of groups, including those led by Johnny Wiggs, Lewis, “Sweet” Emma Barrett, and Punch Miller. He recorded dozens of times during his long career, including with Kid Thomas (1954), Louis Cottrell Jr. (1961), Kid Sheik (1961 and 1963), Kid Howard (1963), and Percy Humphrey (1965). Many jazz scholars have noted that Pavageau’s percussive bass lines played a primary role in keeping Lewis’s famed rhythm section a consistently driving force.
Pavageau died on January 19, 1969, in New Orleans.
(Source - Holly Hobbs article @ 64 Parishes)
3 comments:
For”Alcide "Slow Drag" Pavageau – Drag's Half Fast Jazz Band (2016 GHB)” go here:
https://www.imagenetz.de/fu8oP
1 Move The Body Over
2 Struttin' With Some Barbeque
3 Little Brown Jug
4 I Can't Escape From You (Slowly)
5 I Can't Escape From You (Swiftly)
6 Brahms' Cradle Song
7 Creole Song
8 Stack-O-Lee Blues
9 Climax Rag
Kid Thomas-George Lewis Ragtime Stompers
10 Bucket's Got A Hole In It
11 Salty Dog
12 Battle Hymn Of The Republic
Banjo – George Guesnon (tracks: 1-9)
Banjo, Vocals – Emmanuel Sayles (tracks: 10-12)
Bass – Alcide 'Slow Drag' Pavageau
Clarinet – Albert Burbank (tracks: 1-9), George Lewis (2) (tracks: 10-12)
Cornet – Fred Vigorito (tracks: 1-9)
Drums – Bill Bissonnette (tracks: 1-9), Sammy Penn (tracks: 10-12)
Piano – Don Ewell (tracks: 1-9)
Trombone – Jim Robinson (2)
Trumpet – Kid Thomas (tracks: 10-12)
1-9 recorded in New Orleans, April 21, 1965. This contains Pavageau’s only album as a leader, a set from Apr. 21, 1965 that ironically was his final recording (although the bassist lived until 1969).
10-12 recorded November 22, 1961 at Cosimo Matassa's Jazz City Studio. These are three alternate takes by the Kid Thomas-George Lewis Ragtime Stompers from 1961. Since Vigorito was influenced by Kid Thomas Valentine and Burbank often hints at Lewis, there is a definite unity on this reissue.
Hi Bob!
Thank you so much for this latest contribution. Remember reading about Alcide Pavageau but never actually listened to him. Fascinating, will try to find out more about him. Warm regards
Who is Matassas?
Legendary New Orleans recording engineer Cosimo
Matassa, who died in 2014, owned three studios,
including the one on Camp Street as a restaurant.
His J&M Recording Studio opened in 1945 in the back
of a record and appliance shop at North Rampart and
Dumaine streets.
In 1956, Matassa moved to the larger Cosimo’s
Recording Studio in the 500 block of Gov. Nicholls St.
In 1966, Matassa moved his studio to the second floor of
a warehouse at 748 Camp St., which he called “Jazz City.”
Jazz City closed in 1978.
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