Phil Napoleon

Albums

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Memphis Blues
#21914567
Phil Napoleon & His Memphis Five
Label: Sounds Of Yester Year
Number of Discs: 1
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Appearances

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Vol. 7: 1929-1930
#21950027
Annette Hanshaw
Number of Discs: 1

The complete recordings of the great late-'20s/early-'30s jazz singer Annette Hanshaw are being reissued on ten CDs by the Canadian Sensation label. Volume seven has four of [more]

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Paramount Jazz
#21835607
Various Artists
Number of Discs: 4
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Only the Best of the Dorsey Brothers
#21835358
The Dorsey Brothers
Number of Discs: 3
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Jazz Modernists: 1924-1933
#21906852
Various Artists
Number of Discs: 1
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Gennett Jazz
#21928954
Various Artists
Label: JSP Records
Number of Discs: 4

Great Britain's JSP imprint is well-known for its often-exhaustive boxed sets, for single as well as multiple artists, and this one, which covers the Gennett imprint form Indiana [more]

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Biography

  • Born Sep 2nd 1901 in Boston, MA
  • Died Sep 30th 1990 in Miami, FL
  • Styles
    • Early Jazz
  • Instrument(s)

Although it is often overlooked, Phil Napoleon was one of the top trumpeters to be active in New York during 1921-1925. At a time when most so-called hot players in the Big Apple were still playing staccato and halting lines (not being up to the level of their Chicago counterparts), Napoleon's warm sound and legato phrasing swung (before the word had been coined). Classically trained, Napoleon decided to play popular music. By 1921, he was recording frequently with many overlapping groups (most notably the Original Memphis Five, Ladd's Black Aces, the Carolina Cotton Pickers, and, later on, the Charleston Chasers), appearing on literally hundreds of excellent melodic jazz records where his appealing tone and solid lead were a major asset. Although a slight influence on Red Nichols and Bix Beiderbecke (as much for his professionalism and consistency as for his tone), Napoleon never did become a big name. He worked in the studios during the 1930s and '40s, leading his own big band briefly in 1938 and spending part of 1943 with Jimmy Dorsey. In 1949, he emerged with a new version of the Original Memphis Five, playing Dixieland for seven years at Nick's. Napoleon eventually moved to Miami, opened a club called Napoleon's Retreat, and played regularly during his declining years. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide