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Phil Napoleon
Phil Napoleon
American jazz musician
1
Miff Mole
Miff Mole
American jazz musician
2
Frank Signorelli
Frank Signorelli
American jazz musician, songwriter
3
Sam Lanin
Sam Lanin
American jazz bandleader, musician
4
Roger Kellaway
Roger Kellaway
American pianist
5
The Charleston Chasers
The Charleston Chasers
series of recording groups that did not exist outside of the studios
6
Roland Hanna
Roland Hanna
American pianist
7
Art Hodes
Art Hodes
American musician
8
Joachim Kühn
Joachim Kühn
German jazz pianist
9
Jimmy Lytell
Jimmy Lytell
American jazz musician
10
Joey DeFrancesco
Joey DeFrancesco
American jazz musician
11
Benny Green
Benny Green
American musician
Original Memphis Five
American jazz band

Original Memphis Five

Intro
American jazz band
Genres
Record Labels
Music
Members, past and present

The Original Memphis Five was an early jazz quintet founded in 1917 by trumpeter Phil Napoleon and pianist Frank Signorelli. Jimmy Lytell was a member from 1922 to 1925. The group made many recordings between 1921 and 1931, sometimes under different names, including Ladd's Black Aces and The Cotton Pickers. Richard Cook and Brian Morton, writing for The Penguin Guide to Jazz, refer to the group as "one of the key small groups of the '20s".

The group formed around 1917. The name Original Memphis Five was first used in 1920, and applied to various small groups of white musicians throughout the decade. The Ladd's Black Aces name was used from 1921 until 1924. Cook and Morton identify Jimmy Lytell and Miff Mole as standout musicians in the group. Jimmy Durante played piano with Ladd's Black Aces, while both Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey were members of the Original Memphis Five. Occasional vocalists were Anna Meyers, Annette Hanshaw and Vernon Dalhart (as George White).

Both Red Nichols and Miff Mole later led their own groups named Original Memphis Five. Phil Napoleon, however, would continue using the group name until 1990. An example of two of their recordings for Columbia was "Mobile Blues" and "How Come You Do Me Like You Do" on Columbia # 260-D in 1924.