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Original Memphis Five
Original Memphis Five
American jazz band
1
John Gilmore
John Gilmore
American tenor saxophonist
2
Art Lande
Art Lande
American jazz pianist, drummer, composer and educator
3
Ray Bauduc
Ray Bauduc
American musician
4
Buster Williams
Buster Williams
American musician
5
Mulgrew Miller
Mulgrew Miller
American pianist
6
Khan Jamal
Khan Jamal
American musician
7
Elmo Hope
Elmo Hope
American musician
8
Original Dixieland Jass Band
Original Dixieland Jass Band
American jazz band
9
The Charleston Chasers
The Charleston Chasers
series of recording groups that did not exist outside of the studios
10
Charlie Shavers
Charlie Shavers
jazz trumpeter
11
Miff Mole
Miff Mole
American jazz musician
12
Ted Curson
Ted Curson
Jazz trumpeter
13
Harold Mabern
Harold Mabern
American pianist
14
Horace Silver
Horace Silver
American jazz pianist and composer (1928–2014)
15
Sammy Price
Sammy Price
American pianist
16
Red Nichols
Red Nichols
American jazz musician
17
Rashied Ali
Rashied Ali
American jazz musician
18
Marty Napoleon
Marty Napoleon
American pianist
19
Roland Hanna
Roland Hanna
American pianist
20
Jimmy Dorsey
Jimmy Dorsey
American clarinetist, alto saxophonist, bandleader, and composer, brother of Tommy Dorsey
21
Tommy Flanagan
Tommy Flanagan
American jazz pianist
22
Joey DeFrancesco
Joey DeFrancesco
American jazz musician
23
Red Rodney
Red Rodney
American musician
24
Larry Willis
Larry Willis
American pianist
25
Dodo Marmarosa
Dodo Marmarosa
American musician
26
Don Cherry
Don Cherry
American jazz trumpeter
27
Barry Altschul
Barry Altschul
American drummer
28
Phineas Newborn Jr.
Phineas Newborn Jr.
American pianist
29
Archie Shepp
Archie Shepp
American jazz musician
Phil Napoleon
American jazz musician

Phil Napoleon

Intro
American jazz musician
Genres

Phil Napoleon (born Filippo Napoli; 2 September 1901 – 1 October 1990) was an early jazz trumpeter and bandleader born in Boston, Massachusetts. Ron Wynn notes that Napoleon "was a competent, though unimaginative trumpeter whose greatest value was the many recording sessions he led that helped increase jazz's popularity in the mid-'20s." Richard Cook and Brian Morton, writing for The Penguin Guide to Jazz, refer to Napoleon as "a genuine pioneer" whose playing was "profoundly influential on men such as Red Nichols and Bix Beiderbecke."

Napoleon began with classical training, and was performing publicly by age 5. In the 1910s, he was one of the first musicians in the northeastern United States to embrace the new "jass" style brought to that part of the country by musicians from New Orleans, Louisiana. With pianist Frank Signorelli he formed the group "The Original Memphis Five" in 1917. He became one of the most sought after trumpeters of the 1920s. The group were very prolific, one of the most prolific in New York City at the time, and in 1922-1923 alone made over a hundred recordings. Napoleon's 1927 version of "Clarinet Marmalade" was a particular success. The Original Memphis Five split in 1928. During the 1930s Napoleon mainly worked as a session trumpeter, working in the RCA Radio Orchestra in the early 1930s, and in 1937 unsuccessfully tried to form his own orchestra. He recorded with the Cotton Pickers and the Charleston Chasers and also worked with blues singers Leona Williams and Alberta Hunter.

Napoleon joined Jimmy Dorsey's then Los Angeles-based group in the mid 1940s, and he appeared with the band in the film Four Jills in a Jeep. Parting with Dorsey in 1947, he moved back to New York and worked as a studio musician at NBC until 1949-1950 when he reformed The Original Memphis Five. During the early 1950s the group became noted for their performances at Nick's in New York City. Phil also worked frequently with his nephew Marty Napoleon, a jazz pianist. On July 3, 1959, Napoleon and The Five performed at the Newport Jazz Festival, later released as an album. In 1966 opened up his own club named "Napoleon's Retreat" in Miami, Florida where he lived until his death, although continued to perform Dixieland jazz in the club up until the 1980s.