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Narvin Kimball, Preservation Hall banjoist, dies at 97 |
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Written by Dick Parker
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Tuesday, 23 May 2006 |
New Orleans banjoist Narvin Kimball died March 17 at age 97. He was the last of the
founding musicians of the Preservation Hall Jazz Band.
"He was really our last connection to a bygone time in the history of New Orleans," said
Ben Jaffe, director of Preservation Hall, in an Associated Press interview. Jaffe's parents
founded the hall in 1961. Kimball made several trips to the Twin Cities to play with the
Preservation Hall band in the 1960s, '70s and '80s, thanks to the local musicians who
owned the Emporium of Jazz in Mendota.
Kimball's father, Henry
Kimball, was a bass player.
As a boy, Narvin made a
cigar-box ukulele. His
parents encouraged his
interest in the four-string
sound and saw to it that he
had banjo lessons. He began
playing on Mississippi
riverboats in the 1920s with
the Fate Marable Band,
which also employed Louis
Armstrong, and made his
first records in 1928, with
Papa Celestin's Original
Tuxedo Orchestra on the
Columbia label. It was on
the boats that he met
clarinetist Willie Humphrey
to begin a musical association that lasted, on and off, for about 60 years until
Humphrey's death in 1996.
In the 1930s Kimball switched to string bass. His own band, Narvin Kimball's
Gentlemen of Jazz, played in the New Orleans area for about 40 years, and he played
bass with swing bands from 1935 to 1960. But like many musicians, he had a "day job" --
he worked as a mail carrier for 37 years. In 1960 he switched back to banjo, and his
mailman rounds put him in contact with the new Preservation Hall. He joined the original
band as its youngest member – at age 57 – when it came together officially in 1966.
The left-handed Kimball's banjo style was distinctive and a little more elaborate than that
of most players. He varied chord sounds to lead into the changes, supporting the melody
the way a "walking" bass line does. As a soloist he was a virtuoso, and he also supplied
vocals that were warmly received by audiences. He was especially known for his
rendition of "Georgia On My Mind."
His last performance with the Preservation Hall band was in 1999, at age 90, on a PBS
television special. Not long afterward, Jaffe said, he suffered a series of strokes that
ended his banjo playing.
Kimball died at his daughter's home in Charleston, S.C., where he had been staying since
Hurricane Katrina. He was buried in New Orleans on March 23. He is survived by his
wife, Lillian; two daughters, four grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren.
This article first appeared in Coda, an electronic supplliment to the
Twin Cities Jazz Society's Jazz Notes. Material from the Associated Press was used in this report. |