His granddaughter, Lori Schexnayder, said the trumpeter she called "paw-paw" died peacefully, surrounded by friends and family yesterday.
Ferbos performed all over New Orleans and its suburbs for decades. His ability to read music made him an in-demand musician for gigs that took him to parks, schools, churches, dance halls and even prisons. He also performed at his 102nd birthday party and at every New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival until this past year.
He had recently become too weak to hold his trumpet, but family members would occasionally hold it to his mouth so that he could blow into it, Schexnayder said.
"He missed it so much, but his arms just weren't strong enough to hold it up," she said.
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Early on, Ferbos performed with New Orleans society jazz bands at well-known venues such as the Pelican Club among a string of clubs along Rampart Street a downtown strip that in the 1920s and '30s was the epicenter of the city's bustling black entertainment district.
"He was very advanced and technical for his time," said Dixieland jazz musician Lars Edegran, who performed with Ferbos for decades with the New Orleans Ragtime Orchestra, a group formed in the 1960s to revive the old music unearthed in the jazz archives at Tulane University.
"You needed advanced music reading skills to play in the orchestra, and Lionel was a very well-trained musician," Edegran said. "He was very professional on stage, a beloved person, and there's just nobody else like him."