The Emerson, Columbia, and Edison labels all put out Louisiana Five material, promoting the band heavily in Talking Machine World -- not a science fiction plot but a journal of the early phonograph era. The addition of cornet player Doc Behrendson on Slow and Easy is said to have added an entirely new dimension to the combo's sound, although nobody bothered to alter the mathematics in the name as a result. Other things were also happening that, as described in advertising from the time, sound like something off a John Zorn record: "...by a clever manipulation of the clarinet the effect of a yelping hound is realistically brought out and at the same time a perfect Fox Trot rhythm and also a humorous melody are maintained."
Still not in the Roaring Twenties, one critic described a Louisiana Five side as "cyclonic jazz, played by a quintet which has steeped its musical interpretive qualities in a concentrated essence of contortive jungle music." Edison promotional literature from the period also boldly defines the origin of the word "jazz" itself, claiming it comes from the African Gold Coast and means to "liven things up." On some recordings a lineup expanded even further is credited as the Louisiana Five Jazz Orchestra. ~ Eugene Chadbourne, Rovi