got to New York [1927], Bauduc was there and working with

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JACK TEAGARDEN. Others present. Reel I-Summary-Retyped Mrs, Addie Teagarden Georgia Burrows/ a photogra]: Richard B. Alien ei Georgia Burrows, reporter for the New Orleans States- Item, asks if the people of Asia [in reference to a U. s. State Department-sponsored tour the Teagarden band took]./ understand and/or have a real feeling for jazz. The Teagardens reply that they do have a feeling for itr that they are exposed to it via radio/ particularly the Voice of America program» In response to Mr. Alien's question/ the Teaga^dens reply that the king of Siam [Thailand] plays with his own band when the Teagarden band is not in Siam? the band is composed of the king's cabin- t mem'-bers, one of wliom, the bass player, was once ambassador to the U. S. Teagarden says that he has [the king]» a "bunch of music over there to send to him In response to Mr. Alien's question about h6w Ray Bauduc got his first break/ Teagarden says that the first -time he ever saw Bauduc/ Bauduc was "barnstorming" with Johnny Bayersdorffer, and were in Shreveport at the time. They barnstormed to the west coast, and all over the country/ working just enough to pay expenses. When Teagarden got to New York [1927], Bauduc was there and working with the orchestra of Freddie Ricli. Teagarden went with Ben Pollack*s band, and when Pollack decided to merely front the band, Teagarden got Bauduc the drummer's -J-ob. The band with Bauduc stayed at one hotel job for about ten years, at which time it "became the Bob Crosby band [and presumably left the job.]

JACK TEAGARDEN 2 Reel.IE- Summary- Retyped Miss Burrows asks if the Teagarden "band is going on another [foreign] tour. Mrs. Teagarden says no, not immed-.^ / lately/ but that they are due to go on one to South America^ agai-n for the State Department. The Teagarden band has been to England/ Denmark, Sweden, Norway and Wales, and also to Germany/ the Benelux countries-belgium, the Netherlands/ and Luxembourg, France/ Italy, and Switzerland. [In the bac'kground] Teagarden remarks/ "This thing liere is a Cambodian flute," which he shows around. Teagarden says fhat he can't play it, and Mr. Alien says that Raymond Burke can play it, that he can play anything li;ke that. The Teagarden band made its Asian tour from September 23, 1958, to January 23, 1959. The band made its Euopean tour[s?] before making the one to Asia. Teagarden answers Miss Burrows' question about Russia by saying he would like to tour Russia, and Mrs. Teagarden says she dreamed the night before that they received a cable about going there. Teagarden says that he has not been anywhere that the people didn't like jazz. It is incredible to Teagarden because people in Europe, especially have wonderful music and folk music of their own, and "the funny part of it is that it's the real, unadulterated jazz that they like-of the swing era. They like Benny Goodman, they lilce Louis Armstrong/ they like music of that type." He says the Europeans can easily play modern jazz/ but to play "the other" they have to copy from

JACK TEAGARDEN 3 Reel I-Suinmary--Retyped recordings/ and "it doesn't come natural to them. *' Mrs. Teagarden says that fhe king of Thailand likes Jimmie Noone. Mr*-Alien explains that Noone was from Plaquemines [possibly ^ ^ St. Bernard] parish, and played around New Orleans [before he went north]. Teagarden says the king of Thailand had Benny Goodman and his loand come to Thailand once; he says the king has/ he guesses, every jazz record ever made^ and that he has a radio station and a theater containing a Hammond organ, a fine grand piano, and all the other equipment. When the Teagarden band was in Thailand, the king had a tape recorder running all the time the band played/ even when they were putting an arrangement or a routine together; he wanted every note, everything/ even the tuning up. Teagarden responds to the question of the King's musicianship by saying that by our standards over here [the U. S.l he would have plenty of competition, but over there he didn't have any. To tlie question of the universal appeal of "New Orleans" jazz, Teagarden quotes the king of Cambodia/ who said that it expresses freedom, and [has] a very happy beat. When the Teagarden band played at a university in Kandy/ Ceylon/ and American [diplomatic?] 6fficer said that he didn't think the dean of the university would stay for more than half an hour of the concert/ that he never did; but the dean stayed for the entire concert, and would have staged longer. Teagarden says the officer was speaking of the other kinds

JACK TEAGARDEN 4 Reel I- Summary- Retyped of entertainment that had been brought over there. Speaking about the "far-i-eaching effects" that jazz tours have had on international relations/ Teagarden says the tours have afforded the prople their first opportunity of seeing Americans who seemed to be like verytoody in the street/ and the people seemed to like Americans very much===[at least], "they liked us/" and he says he knows the tours have opened up a lot of doors for the "public relations," and that he wished more could toe done along that line. Mrs, Teagarden says they get translations [of articles about jazz?] from Japanese newspapers and magazines from the [U. S»] embassy in Japan, and that since the Teagarden trip to Japan there has been "a real upsurge of Dixieland bands." Teagarden says there is a trombonist in Japan who is called "Little T" and a trumpeter who is called "Louie." Teagarden says the Japanese bands learn how to play ^azz style from recordings/ and that they have developed an ear from American music and have forgotten about their own traditional music, music which Teagarden does not understand. He says that the classical music of India is like jazz/ in that there are no notes [notation] and fefcat tlie'.i^ubilc^ajbr.all improvised? their system of notation is by using numbers. The Indians have a three-string "guitar" on which a bagpipe-like drone is begun, a one^string "violin/" which sounds "like a housecat does when somebody stands on his tail," then begins to play ad lib. Mr, Alien says that f~\ a ens -1 r~> ^1 f rim G-t r> -i at-ic; ^ TnT^v/^'tr-l ci<s/1 ^ri 4-4 1 4-T-io 1 Q+-T-> /^.d-n ^111^^7 an^

JACK TEAGARDEN 5 Reel I-Summary-Retyped Teagarden says that Jewish cantors chant ad lib^ very much like the blues. Teagarden says that the people in the countries where they toured spoke of Marian Anderson and her tour with great respect, and that they liked the [Dave] Brubeck tour, but that the tour which had the biggest impact was the jazz band. At the Brussels worldrs fair, the jazz music [exhibit] drew the biggest crowd, and ^dds that tlie U. S. State ^ Department didn't send BeJ&ny Goodman and his band to the fair/ that Westinghouse Corporation did. Mrs. Teagarden says that she and the meinbers of the band got letters almost every day of the tour from people they had met on the tour/ and that Teagarden sent music to the Philippines/ where interest in jazz had "fallen pretty much by the wayside,"until the visit of the band. Teagarden also sent books on arranging to film companies in Burma, so that the Burmese could write their own music scores for t^ir movies. The Teagardens mention some of the other Jazz band tours and say that Dizzy [Gillespie] toured the Middle East/ and that Dave Bruback started in Japan and went to Thailand, possibly/ and then to Afghanistan. According to Mrs. Teagarden Louis Armstrong also toured. The Teagarden tour was the longest made, including 120 concerts played and taking 18 weeks to complete. Mrs. Teagarden was mistaken for fe representative of UNESCO by a woman at a school in Afghanistan/ and the woman begam telling her what the school needed. ANTA (American

JACK TEAGARDEN 6 Reel I-Summary- Retyped XiL National Theater and Academy) headed by Bob Schnitzer, sent Rod Alexander and a dance troup to Afghanistan shortly after the Teagardens returned from abroad,^ and the Teagardens sent three big cartons of school supplies, via Alea3 cnder, to that school in Afglaanistan, Teagarden says tliat it should be impressed on the U. S. people that jazz should be given seriou thought, because it does so mucb good, that the U. S. Should consider jazz as more than just a pastime [for the public]. The people in foreign countries are actively interested in jazz, as much as they are in any art form. Teagarden says that he and his wife wrote a letter of appreciation to a newspaper columnist in Saigon, who had written a nice report of their appearance there. In his reply, the columnist said/ "Tell your friend, President^Eisenhower, when you get back, that sending your folks over there is about the best thing he ever sent us." The tour program to improve international relations was the idea of Eisenhower/ according to Teagarden. END OF REEL I