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Joe Marsala

 
Artist: Joe Marsala
  • Born: January 04, 1907, Chicago, IL
  • Died: March 03, 1978, Santa Barbara, CA
  • Active: '30s, '40s
  • Genres: Jazz
  • Instrument: Clarinet
  • Representative Albums: "1936-1942," "Lower Register," "Featuring Adele Girard"
  • Representative Songs: "On the Alamo," "My Melancholy Baby," "Reunion in Harlem"

Biography

An excellent swing clarinetist who could fit into Dixieland settings yet welcomed Dizzy Gillespie to a memorable session in 1945, Joe Marsala was the older brother of trumpeter Marty Marsala (1909-1975) and the husband of the great jazz harpist Adele Girard (1913-1993). He freelanced around Chicago starting in the late '20s, including with Wingy Manone and Ben Pollack. He recorded with Manone in the mid-'30s, playing with Wingy on 52nd Street during 1935-1936. Marsala soon became a leader himself and during the next ten years (much of which was spent playing at the Hickory House), he featured such side players as Adele Girard, Buddy Rich (his first important job), Red Allen, Eddie Condon, Joe Bushkin, Dave Tough, Shelly Manne, Max Kaminsky, and his brother, Marty, among others. He retired from full-time playing in 1948, working instead in music publishing. However, Joe Marsala continued playing on an occasional basis into the 1960s. His studio recordings from 1936-1942 are all collected on a Classics CD. Other sessions have been released on IAJRC, Aircheck, Jazzology, Savoy, Black & White, Musicraft, and a 1957 album for Stereo-Craft. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
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Joe Marsala
Background information
Birth name Joe Marsala
Born January 4, 1907(1907-01-04)
Origin Chicago, Illinois, USA
Died March 4, 1978 (aged 71)
Genre(s) Dixieland
Swing
Occupation(s) Clarinetist
Instrument(s) Clarinet
Associated acts Joe Marsala And His Chosen Seven
Joe Marsala And His Delta Four

Joe Marsala (January 4, 1907 in ChicagoMarch 4, 1978 om Santa Barbara, California) was a Chicago-based jazz clarinetist and songwriter. He was active during the big band era. Marsala is notable as one of the early employers of drummer Buddy Rich. Among his other musicians included pianist Joe Bushkin and guitarist Jack Lemaire,Carmen Mastren. Leonard Feather, among others, gives him a good deal of credit for breaking down race segregation in jazz.[1]

Marsala's own playing was rich and graceful, owing a lot to Jimmie Noone. Although usually thought of as a "dixielander" along with Eddie Condon, Marsala was more adventurous: in the 1940s he used Dizzy Gillespie on a recording session, for instance.

That said, he did have some difficulties adjusting to the bebop era and other clarinetists also found their skills less in demand. By 1949 he partly switched to writing songs in the genre now called classic pop. He did this primarily for Frank Sinatra and Patti Page. Among these songs was the hit Don't Cry, Joe (Let Her Go, Let Her Go, Let Her Go), which led friends to the unfounded fear his marriage to Adele Girard was over.[2] He also wrote And So to Sleep Again for Patti Page.

According to his wife, Adele, Joe Marsala also suffered from chronic colitis and was unable to drink alcohol.

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Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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