Ferdinand Joseph LaMothe — known as Jelly Roll Morton — was born in New Orleans in 1890 into the city's Creole community. A pianist of extraordinary gifts, he developed his style in the brothels and sporting houses of Storyville, absorbing ragtime, blues, march music, and the Spanish tinge that distinguished New Orleans music from all others.
Morton began recording in the early 1920s, and his Victor recordings with the Red Hot Peppers (1926–1930) are among the first masterpieces of jazz composition and arrangement. These recordings showed that jazz was not just spontaneous improvisation but could be carefully crafted music of real sophistication.