Artist

Joe Muranyi

Genre: Jazz ,Dixieland
Origin: U.S.A
Listen on Coda
Joe Muranyi, a clarinetist whose talents often went unrecognized, earned his primary renown as the reed player in the last edition of the Louis Armstrong All-Stars from 1967 to 1971, though he pursued an active solo career in the years that followed. He once took lessons from Lennie Tristano, yet his core musical focus remained fixed on pre-bop styles, above all Dixieland, even while proving capable in mainstream contexts. During a three-year military stint he performed in an Air Force band. After moving to New York in the early 1950s, Muranyi collaborated with numerous all-star musicians tied to Eddie Condon, among them Jimmy McPartland, Max Kaminsky, Yank Lawson, Bobby Hackett, and Red Allen, without ever attaining the visibility those traditional-jazz figures enjoyed. He continued freelancing through much of the 1950s and 1960s, appearing on recordings by the Red Onion Jazz Band between 1952 and 1954, Danny Barker, and additional artists. In 1963 he assembled the Village Stompers, a Dixieland-oriented group that subsequently toured Japan. Once the Armstrong engagement concluded, Muranyi performed with Roy Eldridge, the World’s Greatest Jazz Band in 1975, Cozy Cole, Lionel Hampton, and numerous European classic-jazz musicians while maintaining a steady freelance schedule. He also distinguished himself as a writer of insightful liner notes, a record producer, and a capable vocalist and soprano saxophonist. Several sessions under his leadership appeared on Fat Cat’s Jazz during the 1970s. Muranyi died of congestive heart failure in Manhattan on April 20, 2012, at the age of 84.