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and a host of others, were in their prime and working at many venues throughout the city, in everything from duos, to six-piece jazz bands, to brass bands. Goudie may even have worked with, or crossed paths with, a young man close to his age,
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country, where he lived until age of eight. (It is likely he learned to speak French while growing up there, which would be useful later in his life.) His family then moved to New
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199:) and the early 1920s, New Orleans experienced a diaspora of musicians, one of whom was Goudie. In 1921 he joined a band accompanying a traveling
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Goudie's recording career began in
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Goudie's arrival in New
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As a young man, his great height earned him the nickname "Tree," and he became known as "Big Boy" during his years in Paris.
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jazz community and it was not long before he again was playing music and in demand, working with bands led by trumpeter
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Who's Who in Jazz: Storyville to Swing Street by John
Chilton. Bloomsbury Bookshop, London, 1970
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Between the years following the 1918 closure of "The
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In mid-1957 he returned to the U.S. to run his uncle's business in
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his home base for the next 14 years. Work was plentiful for expat
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In 1946, Goudie moved back to Paris, playing there with
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trumpeter, alto and tenor saxophonist and clarinetist.
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266:(1937), and
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169:King Oliver
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353:References
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326:Earl Hines
217:California
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197:Storyville
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343:Pathétone
227:in 1925.
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