On August 15, 1949, the group was recorded in live performance at the Parisian Room on Royal Street; a more extensive amount of recording also occurred during a private party thrown at 1111 Bourbon Street by one Herbert Otto. On this occasion Talbert sang Heebie Jeebies, Just a Closer Walk with Thee, and (in duet with Herb Morand) When the Saints Go Marching In. Two more broadcasts took place in January and March 1950, and the Lewis band opened at the El Morocco, 200 Bourbon Street, on May 9. Perhaps the greatest session of Elmer Talbert's brief recording career took place on May 22, 1950, at Filiberto's Music Store, 325 Baronne Street. Forever identified with the phrase "George Lewis Jam Session," this exciting material has been issued and reissued over the years by a surprisingly complex swarm of small-time labels. Talbert bellowed three gale force vocals: Chicken, 2:19 Blues, and Make Me a Pallet on Your Floor. On June 5, 1950, George Lewis His New Orleans Music cut several titles for the Good Time Jazz record company at Cosimo Matassa's studio on North Rampart Street. Talbert's big vocal number on this date was Mama Don't Allow. The June 6, 1950, issue of Look magazine contained a feature article called "Dixieland Jazz is Hot Again" with an often reproduced photo (taken by a young Stanley Kubrick!) of Talbert puffing his horn with great fortitude in front of the band in live performance. In the text, Talbert was identified as a nighttime musician whose regular work consisted of handling laundry. The only remaining Talbert/Lewis recordings exist in the form of airchecks from WDSU's Dixieland Jambake music show.
Elmer Talbert died suddenly on December 13, 1950, in his hometown of New Orleans. Preceded in the George Lewis discography by Bunk Johnson and Louis Kid Shots Madison, he would be succeeded by Percy Humphrey, Henry Red Allen, Alvin Alcorn, and Kid Howard. Rightly compared with Wooden Joe Nicholas yet often saddled with the adjective "rough," Talbert was a living embodiment of full-throttle New Orleans polyphony, regularly urging his bandmates to achieve and maintain a collective state of improvisational exhilaration that still astounds. Most of the surviving studio, live, and broadcast recordings have been systematically released on compact disc by the American Music label. In the words of George Lewis: "Elmer Talbert, he was working all the time. You can hear that on the some of the records, he's underneath, or doing something. It hasn't got to be fancy because you listen at the rhythm of it, that's what counts." ~ arwulf arwulf, Rovi