Johnny Guarnieri: Biography

Johnny Guarnieri
Born:
Mar 23, 1917 in New York, NY

Died:
Jan 7, 1985 in Livingston, NJ

Genres:
Classical Music, Jazz Music, Swing, Classic Jazz Music

Decades Active:
1930's|1940's|1950's|1960's|1970's|1980's


Artistic Quality
High
Cultural Impact
Medium
Popularity
Medium



One of the most talented pianists of the 1940s, Johnny Guarnieri had the ability to closely imitate Fats Waller, Count Basie, and even Art Tatum. Not too surprisingly, he was in great demand during his prime years. Guarnieri started classical piano lessons when he was ten and soon switched to jazz. In 1939, he joined Benny Goodman's orchestra, recording frequently with both the big band and B.G.'s sextet. In 1940, Guarnieri became a member of Artie Shaw's orchestra and gained fame playing harpsichord on Shaw's popular Gramercy Five recordings. After further associations with Goodman (1941) and Shaw (19411942), he was with Tommy Dorsey (19421943) and then freelanced. Among Guarnieri's many recordings during this era were important dates with Lester Young ("Sometimes I'm Happy"), Roy Eldridge, Ben Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Rex Stewart, Don Byas, and Louis Armstrong ("JackArmstrong Blues"). He also recorded frequently as a leader during 19441947, including one date on which Lester Young was his sideman. Guarnieri joined the staff of NBC in the late '40s, appeared in the Coleman Hawkins/Roy Eldridge television pilot After Hours (1961), moved to California in the '60s where he often played solo piano, and a few times in the 1970s toured Europe. Guarnieri's later records often found him playfully performing stride in 5/4 time. He recorded as a leader through the years for such labels as Savoy, Majestic, Coral (1956), Golden Crest, Camden, Dot, Black Blue, Dobre, and TazJazz (1976 and 1978).

- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

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