Although the big trophies in the jazz tournament always seem to be won by the great soloists and bandleaders, there are a number of players who don't lead bands and didn't seem to take many solos, either. Yet musicians such as
Gus Aiken, an early jazz trumpeter from South Carolina, maintained long and distinguished careers simply by being good section players, combined with the ace timing that is needed to get in on the ground floor of major musical constructions. The trumpeter, whose younger brother Bud Aikin played trombone alongside him in some of the same outfits, began appearing on recordings of black music almost as soon as they were being cut in the early '20s. He was born
Augustus Aiken, is sometimes identified as
Rice Aiken, and suffers the frequent misspelling of his name as "Aitkin" in a variety of scholarly jazz documents, including one of the biographies of his longtime boss,
Louis Armstrong. There are discographies that list
Gus Aiken and
Gus Aitkin side by side, as if one ran in the door of the recording studio while the other was outside having a smoke. He was one of a group of musicians who as young men came out of the band of the New York City Jenkins Orphanage, not all of whom were actually orphans. He was professionally cutting records and playing live dates by the time he was 17 years old. One of his first important connections was the songwriter and pianist Perry Bradford, who wisely predicted a market for African American music as far back as 1919, although for a long time he had very little luck convincing any record companies to back him. Finally, the good folks at OKeh became interested in Bradford's idea.
Aiken was in on some of the very first test sessions, backing classic blues singer
Mamie Smith, a star of the musical revue Maid of Harlem. After a few tries, Bradford and the label came up with a smash hit that wound up selling more than two million copies, prompting most other record companies to follow suit and resulting in mucho recording dates for the players such as
Aiken who had been in on the idea from the start. With
Smith, the trumpeter recorded such numbers as the overheated "Got to Cool My Doggies Now" and the profound "It's Right Here for You (If You Don't Get It Ain't No Fault o' Mine)." Of course, there were many blues numbers, most of which were identified with "blues" in the title, such as "Wish That I Could But I Can't Forgive You Blues" and "You Can Have Him, I Don't Want Him, Didn't Love Him Anyhow Blues." One song even had blues in the title twice, setting some kind of record for misery: "Sighin' Around With the Blues Blues." Through the mid-'20s,
Aiken blew his horn on blues records by singers such as Mary Jackson, the festive Eliza Christmas Lee, the flowery Daisy Martin , Lavinia Turner, Louise Vant, Essie Whitman,
Lena Wilson, the deep
Ethel Waters, and of course more singers named Smith, such as
Clara Smith and Cindy Smith. By the mid-'20s, songwriter and producer Bradford was cutting his own sides, tapping
Aiken as one of the trumpeters at most of the sessions. The phrankly phony phenomenon of phonetically philling in phrases with "ph" was not phirst phiddled with by
Phish:
Aiken played in Perry Bradford's Jazz Phools way back in 1925, with
Satchmo on the session. It was an early meeting for
Aiken and the great New Orleans trumpeter and
Armstrong turned out to be an important connection.
By 1935,
Satchmo had to break up his own band thanks to the nasty folks at the New York City Musicians' Union up to their usual trick of playing "keepsies" with all-important union cards. As a result,
Armstrong made the decision to join forces with
Luis Russell, who had his own big band assembled and ready to go. The
Russell group was already a well-respected New York big band and interestingly enough, several equally praised groups that were in action at the time featured
Aiken in the horn section, usually in the first trumpet chair. One collaboration with
Armstrong was an engagement at Connie's Inn, for which the group was held over for one and a half years.
Armstrong also charged into his new Decca recording contract with this lineup, cutting about two dozen sides that have turned out to be at least the rib cage of his discographical skeleton. The
Russell orchestra had started out in Chicago and then moved to New York, where it became noted as an innovative band, meaning nobody involved was making any money. When
Aiken joined up in the late '20s, the outfit featured some of the best hot musicians from New Orleans, such as
Barney Bigard Omer Simeon, and
Pops Foster. The group first backed up
Armstrong in 1929 on a recording and by the mid-'30s, the loveable
Satchmo had taken over the
Russell orchestra completely. Through 1941, it solely functioned as backup band for
Armstrong, with the former leader acting in the capacity of musical director. Thus,
Aiken won a place in the lineup on some great
Armstrong recordings, as well as sides by
Sidney Bechet, who also worked with this orchestra's backing. But there was a dark side to the teaming up of
Armstrong and
Russell, at least in the minds of the latter artist's die-hard fans. They lament the fact that their hero "sold out," supporting the entertaining, commercial
Armstrong rather than pursuing his own musical dream. Perhaps
Russell deserves a break, however, for making this decision at the height of the Depression, when so many great musicians were struggling, some of them completely giving up music.
This was not the only jazz outfit of interest that
Aiken worked with, although the relationship with
Armstrong certainly got him the most notoriety. He also played in the bands of Charlie Johnson, who held forth regularly at the famous Harlem venue Small's Paradise from the mid-'20s to mid-'30s, fronting various outfits including Charlie Johnson's Paradise Band, the Paradise 10, and the Original Paradise Band. Elmer Snowden and the Washingtonians was a smaller band that
Aiken worked with from 1931 through 1933, alongside jazz giants such as drummer Big Sid Catlett, trumpeter
Roy "Little Jazz" Eldridge, and trombonist
Dicky Wells. The group's piano player wasn't bad either: a fellow by the name of
Duke Ellington. Although
Aiken lived in New York City until the early '70s, his music jobs became much more "general business"-orientated following the collapse of the jazz big band scene, and the public's growing interest in rock & roll. Society bands and for-hire musician's union groups were his main support and he rarely worked with high-profile recording artists again. ~ Eugene Chadbourne