If not for a stint in reform school, young Louis Armstrong might never
have become a musician. It was a teacher at the Colored Waifs Home who
gave him a cornet, promoted him to band leader, and saw talent in the
tough kid from the even tougher New Orleans neighborhood called
Storyville. But it was Louis Armstrong's own passion and genius that
pushed jazz into new and exciting realms with his amazing,
improvisational trumpet playing. His seventy-year life spanned a
critical time in American music as well as black history.