Tony Parenti

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Tony Parenti
Photo by William P. Gottlieb
Background information
Birth nameTony Parenti
Born6 August 1900
OriginNew Orleans, Louisiana
Died17 April 1972
GenresJazz
InstrumentsClarinet
Associated actsEddie Condon, Ted Lewis

Tony Parenti (6 August 1900 – 17 April 1972) was an American jazz clarinettist and saxophonist born in New Orleans. After starting his musical career in New Orleans, he had a successful career in music in New York City for decades.[1]

Biography[]

Parenti was a childhood musical prodigy, first on violin, then on clarinet. As a child he substituted for Alcide Nunez in Papa Jack Laine's band. In New Orleans he also worked with . During his early teens Parenti worked with the Nick LaRocca band, among other local acts. Parenti led his own band in New Orleans in the mid-1920s, making his first recordings there, before moving to New York City at the end of the decade.

In the late 1920s, Parenti worked with Benny Goodman and Fred Rich, and later in the decade moved to New York City full-time where he worked through the 1930s as a CBS staffman and as a member of the Radio City Symphony Orchestra.

From 1939-1945 Parenti, with Ted Lewis's band, played alongside Muggsy Spanier. In 1944, he recorded and appeared in concert with Sidney Bechet and Max Miller in Chicago.

In the 1940s and still in New York City, Parenti formed a Dixieland jazz band called Tony Parenti and His New Orleanians, and which featured Wild Bill Davison, Art Hodes and Jimmy Archey, among others. He often appeared at such New York jazz spots as Nick's and Jimmy Ryan’s, and also worked with Eddie Condon. Parenti remained active until the 1960s in clubs, and died in New York City on April 17, 1972.

Over his career, Parenti recorded on the labels of Jazzology, Southland and Fat Cat, among several others.

Discography[]

  • UAL/Que Records 195? Dixie By The 7 UAL 28000/ Que JLS 5000

As leader[]

  • Tony Parenti & His New Orleanians (Jazzology, 1949) with Wild Bill Davison, Jimmy Archey, Art Hodes, Pops Foster, Arthur Trappier
  • Ragtime Jubilee (Jazzology)
  • Ragtime! (Riverside Records 205)
  • Tony Parenti & His Downtown Boys (Jazzology, 1955–65) with Dick Wellstood, Armand Hug
  • Tony Parenti & His Ragtime Gang - Ragtime Jubilee (Jazzology J-21) the front cover reads: "Featuring Knocky Parker"
  • The Final Bar (Jazzology, 1971) with Max Kaminsky, , , Buzzy Drootin

References[]

  1. ^ "Tony Parenti (1900-1972)". Red Hot Jazz Archive. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
  • Who's Who of Jazz. John Chilton, Da Capo, 1972
  • Metronome Magazine, Dec 1946, Article by George Hoefer
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