How Did Louis Armstrong Influence The Harlem Renaissance

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The magnificent stories of Billie Holiday, the great Louis Armstrong, and Adelaide Hall are about how they struggled, conquered, and worked through the Harlem Renaissance. From realizing they all left an impact on the world. They were very successful African American musicians. It takes a lot to write and express different feelings especially to the world, but they all did in song and in action.
Billie Holiday was born April 7, 1915, in Pennsylvania. Her birth name was Eleanora Logan Gough; her birth certificate states Elinore Harris. She got her name Billie, in honor of Billie Dove. Growing up in Baltimore in the 1920s, she skipped school many times which led to her mother going to court for truancy. Billie’s mother had her when was a teenager …show more content…

His family was poor so he lived with his grandmother. When he was 9 he sang on the street for penny’s, in 1915 Louis shot a gun at midnight and was arrested. After that incident he was sent to a boy’s home, as he was there he learned how to play the cornet. When he was released he learned how to play jazz. When he was 18 he played full time. He was a trumpet player for New Orleans. His rough voice earned him the nickname Satchelmouth and Satchmo. Some of Louis’s famous songs are “What a Wonderful World” and “This little rock of mine.” He was loved by many musicians but critics gave him harsh racial comments he didn’t let that stop him, Armstrong went on tour around Europe numerous times. During this tour his career began to fall because he got into a fight with his manager and was also involved into more conflict with the American Mob. He was married four times, and adopted a disabled boy named Clarence and raised him for the rest of his life and had a daughter named Sharon. By 1932 he began appearing in movies and made way to his first tour. Heart and kidney problems caused Louis to stop performing. In 1969 his manager for the longest passed away, after that he spent most of his time home, but he still had the trumpet in his mouth practicing. By 1971 he died in his sleep at the age of 69, but he had toured the world several times and made over 50 movies. Louis Armstrong was a very successful man. (The Harlem

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