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Joe Muranyi

Artist

Joe Muranyi

Last updated: 5 hours ago

An underrated clarinetist, Joe Muranyi was best known for being the clarinetist with the final version of <a href="spotify:artist:19eLuQmk9aCobbVDHc6eek">the Louis Armstrong All-Stars</a> (1967-1971) but he had an active solo in the following years. Although he studied at one point with <a href="spotify:artist:6VoQTYD2vUVvm1H031lp3e">Lennie Tristano</a>, Muranyi's main musical interest was always in pre-bop jazz (primarily Dixieland), although he held his own in mainstream settings. He played in an Air Force band while in the military for three years. Settling in New York in the early '50s, Muranyi worked with many all-star players associated with <a href="spotify:artist:1YaB5mqH5zlJqvJaKIsBrS">Eddie Condon</a> -- including <a href="spotify:artist:3bRlHJno4vEvZz8ZxLwGqp">Jimmy McPartland</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:2WvdagVN9k7kgjlJaypZ9S">Max Kaminsky</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:4RD1aDxCjEQEwKzwqMXTdN">Yank Lawson</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:5Wx29PEKBUtWOiTA3kOOXq">Bobby Hackett</a>, and <a href="spotify:artist:1kEniOVLhKw78gS0myngEf">Red Allen</a> -- although he never became as well known as those trad giants. Muranyi freelanced throughout much of the 1950s and '60s, including making recordings with the Red Onion Jazz Band (1952-1954), <a href="spotify:artist:3JEWhsY5qK96eYyOVt0O3f">Danny Barker</a>, and others. He formed <a href="spotify:artist:052sD9jNgGqNAKlYmCAiD8">the Village Stompers</a> in 1963 and the Dixieland-oriented band toured Japan. After the <a href="spotify:artist:04kWWhnACFsQZlReaxSqsc">Armstrong</a> years ended, Muranyi worked with <a href="spotify:artist:4RvXA7BDgqNgGDjsSSJnPc">Roy Eldridge</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:3od5Mdj7OgLATvDkDynmHH">the World's Greatest Jazz Band</a> (1975), <a href="spotify:artist:6fkwnXeEKj729M5HSIaoMr">Cozy Cole</a>, <a href="spotify:artist:2PjgZkwAEk7UTin4jP6HLP">Lionel Hampton</a>, and many European classic jazz players and continually freelanced. Additionally, he was a fine writer (penning some excellent liner notes), a record producer, and a decent vocalist and soprano saxophonist. Muranyi led several dates in the 1970s for Fat Cat's Jazz. He died of congestive heart failure in Manhattan on April 20, 2012 at the age of 84. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi

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