egroj world: Lil Hardin
Showing posts with label Lil Hardin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lil Hardin. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 17, 2024

VA • Boogie Woogie Gals



The word boogie dates to the 14th century. "Bugge" meant phantom or ghost. A similar word, "booger" may originate in West Africa - the Mandingo word "bug" was associated with a fast drumbeat in the performance of voodoo music. Somehow the two words converged.

"Booger" was applied to a form of piano rag which evolved into boogie-woogie. At some time the word 'boogie' became a euphemism for sex. "Boogie-woogie" music was now a form of barrelhouse piano and a vocal expression of sexual prowess.

Boogie-woogie traveled out from the south, finding strongholds in Kansas City, Chicago and St. Louis. Jimmy Yancey, Meade Lux Lewis, Jabbo Williams and Pete Johnson all helped spread the faith.

Cleo (Cleopatra) Brown was one of the first recorded female boogie-woogie pianists/singers. She learned boogie from her brother Everett. Her popular Cleo's Boogie is included here.

Also important was Mary Lou Williams, the most significant female jazz artist during the 1930s. She joined Andy Kirk's band, as pianist and arranger. She also wrote for Goodman, Hines, Armstrong and Ellington. With Kirk she waxed Boogie Woogie Cocktail, one of the most skilfully created boogies ever recorded.

Also included are "The Queen of Boogie," Hadda Brooks, Hazel Scott, Martha Davis, Lil Armstrong Hardin, Beryl Booker, Sarah McLawler and Anna Mae Woodburn. These women and the many others featured proved, once again, the old adage that to succeed women have to be twice as good? Not content with that - they provided a large slice of glamour as well.




La palabra boogie data del siglo XIV. "Bugge" significaba fantasma o fantasma. Una palabra similar, "booger", puede tener su origen en África Occidental: la palabra mandinga "bug" se asociaba a un rápido golpe de tambor en la interpretación de la música vudú. De alguna manera, las dos palabras convergieron.

"Booger" se aplicó a una forma de trapo de piano que evolucionó a boogie-woogie. En algún momento la palabra "boogie" se convirtió en un eufemismo para el sexo. La música del "boogie-woogie" era ahora una forma de piano de barril y una expresión vocal de la destreza sexual.

El boogie-woogie viajó desde el sur, encontrando baluartes en Kansas City, Chicago y San Luis. Jimmy Yancey, Meade Lux Lewis, Jabbo Williams y Pete Johnson ayudaron a difundir la fe.

Cleo (Cleopatra) Brown fue una de las primeras pianistas/cantantes de boogie-woogie grabadas. Aprendió el boogie de su hermano Everett. Su popular Cleo's Boogie se incluye aquí.

También fue importante Mary Lou Williams, la artista femenina de jazz más importante de la década de 1930. Se unió a la banda de Andy Kirk, como pianista y arreglista. También escribió para Goodman, Hines, Armstrong y Ellington. Con Kirk grabó "Boogie Woogie Cocktail", uno de los boogies más hábiles jamás grabados.

También se incluye a "La Reina del Boogie", Hadda Brooks, Hazel Scott, Martha Davis, Lil Armstrong Hardin, Beryl Booker, Sarah McLawler y Anna Mae Woodburn. Estas mujeres y muchas otras demostraron, una vez más, el viejo adagio de que para triunfar las mujeres tienen que ser el doble de buenas... No contentas con eso, también aportaron una gran dosis de glamour.


Saturday, June 1, 2024

Lonnie Johnson • He's A Jelly Roll Baker

 



Biography
by Bill Dahl
Blues guitar simply would not have developed in the manner that it did if not for the prolific brilliance of Lonnie Johnson. He was there to help define the instrument's future within the genre and the genre's future itself at the very beginning, his melodic conception so far advanced from most of his prewar peers as to inhabit a plane all his own. For more than 40 years, Johnson played blues, jazz, and ballads his way; he was a true blues originator whose influence hung heavy on a host of subsequent blues immortals.

Johnson's extreme versatility doubtless stemmed in great part from growing up in the musically diverse Crescent City. Violin caught his ear initially, but he eventually made the guitar his passion, developing a style so fluid and inexorably melodic that instrumental backing seemed superfluous. He signed up with OKeh Records in 1925 and commenced to recording at an astonishing pace -- between 1925 and 1932, he cut an estimated 130 waxings. The red-hot duets he recorded with white jazz guitarist Eddie Lang (masquerading as Blind Willie Dunn) in 1928-1929 were utterly groundbreaking in their ceaseless invention. Johnson also recorded pioneering jazz efforts in 1927 with no less than Louis Armstrong's Hot Five and Duke Ellington's orchestra.

After enduring the Depression and moving to Chicago, Johnson came back to recording life with Bluebird for a five-year stint beginning in 1939. Under the ubiquitous Lester Melrose's supervision, Johnson picked up right where he left off, selling quite a few copies of "He's a Jelly Roll Baker" for old Nipper. Johnson went with Cincinnati-based King Records in 1947 and promptly enjoyed one of the biggest hits of his uncommonly long career with the mellow ballad "Tomorrow Night," which topped the R&B charts for seven weeks in 1948. More hits followed posthaste: "Pleasing You (As Long as I Live)," "So Tired," and "Confused."

Time seemed to have passed Johnson by during the late '50s. He was toiling as a hotel janitor in Philadelphia when banjo player Elmer Snowden alerted Chris Albertson to his whereabouts. That rekindled a major comeback, Johnson cutting a series of albums for Prestige's Bluesville subsidiary during the early '60s and venturing to Europe under the auspices of Horst Lippmann and Fritz Rau's American Folk Blues Festival banner in 1963. Finally, in 1969, Johnson was hit by a car in Toronto and died a year later from the effects of the accident.

Johnson's influence was massive, touching everyone from Robert Johnson, whose seminal approach bore strong resemblance to that of his older namesake, to Elvis Presley and Jerry Lee Lewis, who each paid heartfelt tribute with versions of "Tomorrow Night" while at Sun.
https://www.allmusic.com/artist/lonnie-johnson-mn0000275401/biography

///////

Biografía
por Bill Dahl
La guitarra de blues simplemente no se habría desarrollado de la manera en que lo hizo si no fuera por la prolífica brillantez de Lonnie Johnson. Él ayudó a definir el futuro del instrumento dentro del género y el propio futuro del género desde el principio, con una concepción melódica tan avanzada con respecto a la mayoría de sus colegas de antes de la guerra que habitaba un plano propio. Durante más de 40 años, Johnson tocó blues, jazz y baladas a su manera; fue un auténtico iniciador del blues cuya influencia pesó mucho en una multitud de inmortales del blues posteriores.

Sin duda, la extrema versatilidad de Johnson se debió en gran parte a su infancia en la musicalmente diversa Crescent City. Al principio le atrajo el violín, pero acabó convirtiendo la guitarra en su pasión, desarrollando un estilo tan fluido e inexorablemente melódico que el acompañamiento instrumental parecía superfluo. En 1925 firmó un contrato con OKeh Records y comenzó a grabar a un ritmo asombroso: entre 1925 y 1932, se calcula que grabó 130 discos. Los dúos al rojo vivo que grabó con el guitarrista de jazz blanco Eddie Lang (disfrazado de Blind Willie Dunn) en 1928-1929 fueron totalmente innovadores por su incesante invención. Johnson también grabó trabajos pioneros de jazz en 1927 nada menos que con los Hot Five de Louis Armstrong y la orquesta de Duke Ellington.

Después de soportar la Depresión y mudarse a Chicago, Johnson volvió a la vida discográfica con Bluebird durante un periodo de cinco años a partir de 1939. Bajo la supervisión del omnipresente Lester Melrose, Johnson continuó justo donde lo había dejado, vendiendo bastantes copias de "He's a Jelly Roll Baker" para el viejo Nipper. En 1947, Johnson fichó por King Records, con sede en Cincinnati, y enseguida cosechó uno de los mayores éxitos de su inusualmente larga carrera con la melosa balada "Tomorrow Night", que encabezó las listas de R&B durante siete semanas en 1948. Le siguieron otros éxitos: "Pleasing You (As Long as I Live)", "So Tired" y "Confused".

El tiempo parecía haber pasado de largo para Johnson a finales de la década de 1950. Trabajaba como conserje en un hotel de Filadelfia cuando el intérprete de banjo Elmer Snowden alertó a Chris Albertson de su paradero. Johnson grabó una serie de álbumes para la filial Bluesville de Prestige a principios de los 60 y se aventuró a viajar a Europa bajo los auspicios del American Folk Blues Festival de Horst Lippmann y Fritz Rau en 1963. Finalmente, en 1969, Johnson fue atropellado por un coche en Toronto y murió un año después a causa de las secuelas del accidente.

La influencia de Johnson fue enorme y llegó a todo el mundo, desde Robert Johnson, cuyo enfoque seminal se parecía mucho al de su tocayo mayor, hasta Elvis Presley y Jerry Lee Lewis, que rindieron un sentido homenaje con versiones de "Tomorrow Night" mientras estaban en Sun.
https://www.allmusic.com/artist/lonnie-johnson-mn0000275401/biography

 

Thursday, May 16, 2024

Lonnie Johnson • Another Night To Cry

 

 

Biography
by Bill Dahl
Blues guitar simply would not have developed in the manner that it did if not for the prolific brilliance of Lonnie Johnson. He was there to help define the instrument's future within the genre and the genre's future itself at the very beginning, his melodic conception so far advanced from most of his prewar peers as to inhabit a plane all his own. For more than 40 years, Johnson played blues, jazz, and ballads his way; he was a true blues originator whose influence hung heavy on a host of subsequent blues immortals.

Johnson's extreme versatility doubtless stemmed in great part from growing up in the musically diverse Crescent City. Violin caught his ear initially, but he eventually made the guitar his passion, developing a style so fluid and inexorably melodic that instrumental backing seemed superfluous. He signed up with OKeh Records in 1925 and commenced to recording at an astonishing pace -- between 1925 and 1932, he cut an estimated 130 waxings. The red-hot duets he recorded with white jazz guitarist Eddie Lang (masquerading as Blind Willie Dunn) in 1928-1929 were utterly groundbreaking in their ceaseless invention. Johnson also recorded pioneering jazz efforts in 1927 with no less than Louis Armstrong's Hot Five and Duke Ellington's orchestra.

After enduring the Depression and moving to Chicago, Johnson came back to recording life with Bluebird for a five-year stint beginning in 1939. Under the ubiquitous Lester Melrose's supervision, Johnson picked up right where he left off, selling quite a few copies of "He's a Jelly Roll Baker" for old Nipper. Johnson went with Cincinnati-based King Records in 1947 and promptly enjoyed one of the biggest hits of his uncommonly long career with the mellow ballad "Tomorrow Night," which topped the R&B charts for seven weeks in 1948. More hits followed posthaste: "Pleasing You (As Long as I Live)," "So Tired," and "Confused."

Time seemed to have passed Johnson by during the late '50s. He was toiling as a hotel janitor in Philadelphia when banjo player Elmer Snowden alerted Chris Albertson to his whereabouts. That rekindled a major comeback, Johnson cutting a series of albums for Prestige's Bluesville subsidiary during the early '60s and venturing to Europe under the auspices of Horst Lippmann and Fritz Rau's American Folk Blues Festival banner in 1963. Finally, in 1969, Johnson was hit by a car in Toronto and died a year later from the effects of the accident.

Johnson's influence was massive, touching everyone from Robert Johnson, whose seminal approach bore strong resemblance to that of his older namesake, to Elvis Presley and Jerry Lee Lewis, who each paid heartfelt tribute with versions of "Tomorrow Night" while at Sun.
https://www.allmusic.com/artist/lonnie-johnson-mn0000275401/biography

///////

Biografía
por Bill Dahl
La guitarra de blues simplemente no se habría desarrollado de la manera en que lo hizo si no fuera por la prolífica brillantez de Lonnie Johnson. Él ayudó a definir el futuro del instrumento dentro del género y el propio futuro del género desde el principio, con una concepción melódica tan avanzada con respecto a la mayoría de sus colegas de antes de la guerra que habitaba un plano propio. Durante más de 40 años, Johnson tocó blues, jazz y baladas a su manera; fue un auténtico iniciador del blues cuya influencia pesó mucho en una multitud de inmortales del blues posteriores.

Sin duda, la extrema versatilidad de Johnson se debió en gran parte a su infancia en la musicalmente diversa Crescent City. Al principio le atrajo el violín, pero acabó convirtiendo la guitarra en su pasión, desarrollando un estilo tan fluido e inexorablemente melódico que el acompañamiento instrumental parecía superfluo. En 1925 firmó un contrato con OKeh Records y comenzó a grabar a un ritmo asombroso: entre 1925 y 1932, se calcula que grabó 130 discos. Los dúos al rojo vivo que grabó con el guitarrista de jazz blanco Eddie Lang (disfrazado de Blind Willie Dunn) en 1928-1929 fueron totalmente innovadores por su incesante invención. Johnson también grabó trabajos pioneros de jazz en 1927 nada menos que con los Hot Five de Louis Armstrong y la orquesta de Duke Ellington.

Después de soportar la Depresión y mudarse a Chicago, Johnson volvió a la vida discográfica con Bluebird durante un periodo de cinco años a partir de 1939. Bajo la supervisión del omnipresente Lester Melrose, Johnson continuó justo donde lo había dejado, vendiendo bastantes copias de "He's a Jelly Roll Baker" para el viejo Nipper. En 1947, Johnson fichó por King Records, con sede en Cincinnati, y enseguida cosechó uno de los mayores éxitos de su inusualmente larga carrera con la melosa balada "Tomorrow Night", que encabezó las listas de R&B durante siete semanas en 1948. Le siguieron otros éxitos: "Pleasing You (As Long as I Live)", "So Tired" y "Confused".

El tiempo parecía haber pasado de largo para Johnson a finales de la década de 1950. Trabajaba como conserje en un hotel de Filadelfia cuando el intérprete de banjo Elmer Snowden alertó a Chris Albertson de su paradero. Johnson grabó una serie de álbumes para la filial Bluesville de Prestige a principios de los 60 y se aventuró a viajar a Europa bajo los auspicios del American Folk Blues Festival de Horst Lippmann y Fritz Rau en 1963. Finalmente, en 1969, Johnson fue atropellado por un coche en Toronto y murió un año después a causa de las secuelas del accidente.

La influencia de Johnson fue enorme y llegó a todo el mundo, desde Robert Johnson, cuyo enfoque seminal se parecía mucho al de su tocayo mayor, hasta Elvis Presley y Jerry Lee Lewis, que rindieron un sentido homenaje con versiones de "Tomorrow Night" mientras estaban en Sun.
https://www.allmusic.com/artist/lonnie-johnson-mn0000275401/biography


Monday, January 22, 2024

Lil Hardin & Her Swing Orchestra, 1936-1940



Lillian Hardin Armstrong (née Hardin; February 3, 1898 – August 27, 1971) was an American jazz pianist, composer, arranger, singer, and bandleader. She was the second wife of Louis Armstrong, with whom she collaborated on many recordings in the 1920s.
Her compositions include "Struttin' with Some Barbecue", "Don't Jive Me", "Two Deuces", "Knee Drops", "Doin' the Suzie-Q", "Just for a Thrill" (which was a hit when revived by Ray Charles in 1959), "Clip Joint", and "Bad Boy" (a hit for Ringo Starr in 1978). Armstrong was inducted into the Memphis Music Hall of Fame in 2014.

Background
Lil's grandmother, Priscilla Martin, was a former slave from near Oxford, Mississippi. Martin had a son and three daughters, one of whom was Dempsey, Lil's mother. Priscilla Martin moved her family to Memphis to escape from her husband, a trek the family made by mule-drawn wagon. Dempsey married Will Harden, and Lillian Hardin was born on February 3, 1898. She grew up in a household with her grandmother. Will died when Lil was seven. Dempsey later remarried to John Miller.
During her early years, Hardin was taught hymns, spirituals, and classical music on the piano. She was drawn to popular music and later blues.

Early education and mentors
Hardin first received piano instruction from her third-grade teacher, Violet White. Her mother then enrolled her in Mrs. Hook's School of Music. At Fisk University, a college for African Americans in Nashville, she received more advanced training, and earning a diploma from Fisk, returned to Memphis in 1917. In August 1918, she moved to Chicago with her mother and stepfather. By then she had become a proficient sight-reader, a skill that helped her gain a job as a sheet music demonstrator at Jones Music Store.
The store paid Hardin $3 a week (US$58 in 2022 dollars), but bandleader Lawrence Duhé offered $22.50 (US$438 in 2022 dollars). Knowing that her mother would disapprove of her working in a cabaret, she made it known that her new job was playing for a dancing school. As observed by Thomas Brothers, the discrepancies between her education and that of Duhé's band members were apparent; when she asked what key the New Orleanians were going to play in, they remarked, "We don't know what key. When you hear two knocks start playing." Three weeks later the band moved to a better booking at the De Luxe Café, where the entertainers included Florence Mills and Cora Green. From there, the band moved up to Dreamland. Here the principal entertainers were Alberta Hunter and Ollie Powers. When King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band replaced Duhé's group at Dreamland, Oliver asked Hardin to stay with him. She was with Oliver at Dreamland in 1921 when an offer came for the orchestra to play a six-month engagement at the Pergola Ballroom in San Francisco. At the end of that booking Hardin returned to Chicago while the rest of the Oliver band went to Los Angeles. She later studied at the New York College of Music, where she earned a post-graduate diploma in 1929.

Marriages and divorces
In Chicago, Hardin returned to work at Dreamland as a pianist in an orchestra for Mae Brady, a violinist and vaudeville stalwart. While there, she fell for Jimmie Johnson, a young singer from Washington, D.C., whom she married on August 22, 1922. The marriage was short-lived, ending in divorce. The Oliver band returned from California and opened at the Royal Gardens with Bertha Gonsoulin at the piano but soon found itself back at Dreamland with Hardin at the piano.
King Oliver's band was enjoying enormous success at Dreamland when he sent for Louis Armstrong to join as second cornetist. Armstrong was beginning to make a name for himself in New Orleans and regarded Oliver ("Papa Joe") as his mentor. At first, Hardin was unimpressed, remembering that she "was very disgusted" by Louis, who arrived in Chicago wearing clothes and a hair style that she deemed to be "too country" for Chicago, but she worked to "take the country out of him", and a romance developed (to the surprise of other band members, some of whom had been trying to woo her for some time with no success). They would visit cabarets and after-hour spots after their job at Lincoln Gardens, but their relationship was solidified after Armstrong's mother's intervention in 1923, when she visited Armstrong in Chicago. She and Armstrong needed to be divorced from their previous relationships (Lil Hardin to Jimmie Johnson, Louis Armstrong to Daisy Armstrong) and "claimed desertion" from said relationships to annul the marriages. Hardin and Armstrong were married on February 5, 1924, and honeymooned/toured with the Oliver band in Biglerville, Pennsylvania. The Defender noted that Hardin was dressed in a "Parisian gown of white crepe elaborately beaded in rhinestones and silver beads."
Hardin took Armstrong shopping and taught him how to dress more fashionably. She got rid of his bangs and began working to foster his career. In addition to updating his appearance, Hardin assisted Armstrong in learning classical music with the help of a German teacher in Chicago. She felt he was wasting his talent in a secondary role. Armstrong was happy to be playing next to his idol, but Hardin at first persuaded him to manage his own money and assert himself on the bandstand and during recording sessions; eventually, she convinced him to leave Oliver and go out on his own. Armstrong resigned from Oliver's band and in September 1924 accepted a job with bandleader Fletcher Henderson in New York City. Hardin stayed in Chicago, first with Oliver, then leading a band of her own. When Hardin's band got a job at the Dreamland Café in Chicago she prepared for Armstrong's return to Chicago by having a huge banner that read "The World's Greatest Trumpet Player".
Richard M. Jones convinced Okeh Records to make a series of sessions under his name: the Armstrong "Hot Five" recordings. With Hardin at the piano, Kid Ory on trombone, Johnny Dodds on clarinet, and Johnny St. Cyr on banjo, this group rehearsed at Armstrong and Hardin's residence on Chicago's East 41st Street and held its first session on November 15, 1925.
In the late 1920s, Hardin and Armstrong grew apart due to class differences and money issues. He formed a new Hot Five with Earl Hines on piano. Hardin reformed her own band with Freddie Keppard, whom she considered second only to Armstrong. Hardin and Armstrong separated in 1931 when he had a liaison with Alpha Smith, who threatened to sue Armstrong for breach of promise, so he begged Hardin not to grant him a divorce. They finally divorced in 1938.

Later years
In the 1930s, sometimes billing herself as "Mrs. Louis Armstrong", Hardin led an "All Girl Orchestra", a mixed-sex big band which broadcast nationally over the NBC radio network. In the same decade she recorded for Decca as a swing vocalist and performed as piano accompanist for other singers. She also performed with Red Allen.

Solo work
In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Hardin worked mostly as a soloist, singing and playing piano. In the late 1940s, she decided to leave the music business and become a tailor, so she took a course in tailoring. Her graduation project was to make a tuxedo for Armstrong.
Hardin returned to Chicago and the house on East 41st Street. She made a trip to Europe and had a brief love affair in France, but mostly she worked around Chicago, often with fellow Chicagoans. Collaborators included Red Saunders, Joe Williams, Oscar Brown Jr., and Little Brother Montgomery.
In the 1950s, Hardin recorded a biographical narrative for Bill Grauer at Riverside Records that was issued in LP form. She would again appear on that label in 1961, participating in its project Chicago: The Living Legends as accompanist for Alberta Hunter and leader of her own hastily assembled big band. The Riverside recordings led to her inclusion in a 1961 NBC network special, Chicago and All That Jazz, and a follow-up album released by Verve. In 1962, she began writing her autobiography with Chris Albertson, but she changed her mind when she realized the book would include experiences that might discomfit Louis Armstrong, so the project was delayed until his death. She died before finishing the book.

Death
When Louis Armstrong died in 1971, she traveled to New York for the funeral and rode in the family car. Returning to Chicago, she felt that work on her autobiography could continue, but the following month, performing at a televised memorial concert for Armstrong, she collapsed at the piano and died from a heart attack on the way to the hospital. After her funeral, her letters and the unfinished manuscript of her autobiography disappeared from her house.
She was interred at Lincoln Cemetery in Blue Island, Illinois.
In 2004, the Chicago Park District renamed a community park in her honor.

Legacy
Hardin's song "Bad Boy" was recorded by Ringo Starr in 1978 and became an international pop hit.
Armstrong's composition "Oriental Swing" was sampled by electro swing musician Parov Stelar to create the 2012 song "Booty Swing". The song gained notoriety when it was used in a 2013 Chevrolet commercial.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lil_Hardin_Armstrong  




 
 
 
 
 
Lil Harding [1898-1971] fue la primera mujer extraordinaria en el jazz en la década de los años 20, dándose a conocer en la banda de King Oliver.

Pianista destacada en una época cuando los instrumentos estaban dominados por hombres, cantante, arreglista, directora de bandas y gran compositora. Entre sus muchas composiciones están los famosos Struttin´ With Some Barbecue, Don´t Jive Me, Just For A Thrill (revivida por Ray Charles en 1959) y Bad Boy (reinterpretada por Ringo Starr en 1978 con mucho éxito).

Lil fue también la segunda esposa de Louis Arrmstrong, con quien dejó muchas grabaciones hechas en los años 20, Lil Harding toca piano en el conjunto de King Oliver en una de sus primeras grabaciones; en ese grupo estaba también el protegido de Oliver, Louis Armstrong.


Bio:
Nació en Memphis, Tennessee (EE UU) y tuvo una formación clásica en piano al asistir desde pequeña a una escuela de música, y que continuó en la Fisk University.
En 1918, Lil se traslada junto a su madre y su padrastro a Chicago y comienza a trabajar en una tienda de música llamada Jones Music Store. Su propietaria, Jennie Jones, también era agente de música y, conociendo las dotes musicales de Lily, la animó para que aceptase tocar en alguna banda de música swing o jazz. Sin embargo, la madre de Lil no veía con buenos ojos esa música a la que calificaba de "pecado".
Lillian, para poder tocar en la banda del clarinetista Lawrence Duhe, engañó a su madre diciéndola que tocaba en una escuela de danza. De allí, la banda fue cogiendo fama en los clubes de Chicago hasta que en 1921 se asentó en uno de los locales nocturnos más importantes de la ciudad: "The Dreamland". Fue allí donde conoció a Joe King Oliver y éste la ofrece el puesto de pianista en su grupo Creole Jazz Band. Hardin toca con ellos durante un tiempo limitado tanto en Chicago como el San Francisco, pero cuando la banda se traslada a Los Ángeles, Lil decide volver a su ciudad.
Lillian Hardin vuelve a trabajar en el local "Dreamland" como pianista, y allí conocería a Jimmie Johnson, un cantante más joven que ella del que se enamoraría. Se casaron en 1922, pero se separaran poco tiempo después. Es entonces cuando la Creole Jazz Band regresa a Chicago y Joe King Oliver la vuelve a ofrecer el puesto de pianista; ella acepta.
En 1922, Oliver invita a Chicago a Louis Armstrong para unirse a su banda como segundo cornetista, ya que éste ya empieza a tener fama como trompetista. Es entonces cuando al Creole Jazz Band alcanza un gran éxito tanto artístico como económico y Armstrong se convierte en un músico famosísimo. Lillian Hardin se enamora de Louis al que, en un principio, consideraba un pueblerino. Este enamoramiento causa sorpresa entre los integrantes de la banda ya que algunos habían intentado, sin éxito, conquistarla. Lil ayuda a Louis a poder divorciarse de su primera esposa y ambos se casan en 1924.
Lillian Hardin, admirando el talento de su segundo esposo, convence a éste de abandonar amistosamente a Oliver para poder alcanzar mayores metas artísticas. Armstrong se traslada a Nueva York en 1924 pero Hardin continúa trabajando para Joe King Oliver, hasta que decide formar su propia banda y en 1925 vuelve a asentarse por tercera vez en el club "Dreamland".
Ese mismo año, regresa Armstrong, y el matrimonio junto a Kid Orly (trombón), Johnny Dodds (clarinete) y Johnyy St. Cyr (banggio) forman la banda Hot Five (y los Hot Seven junto a Earl Hines), con la que obtendrían grandes éxitos tanto artísticos como económicos pues realizaron numerosas grabaciones.
Pero a partir de 1928, el matrimonio se empezó a separarse, entre otras causas debido a las infidelidades de Louis. Earl Hines ocupa el piano y Lily forma otra banda propia. En 1931 se divorcian.
Lillian Hardin siguió trabajando como pianista, pero también como cantante. Grabó varios temas para Decca Records y trabajó con otros artistas como Ray Charles y Ringo Starr. Pero poco a poco empieza a alejarse del mundo de la música, al que tan sólo vuelve en ocasiones puntuales.
En 1962, escribió su autobiografía en colaboración con Chris Alberson.
Muere en Chicago en 1971 de un colapso mientras tocaba el piano en un concierto televisado en homenaje de Louis Armstrong, que había fallecido un mes antes.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lil_Hardin_Armstrong