Artist's albums
Johnny Dodds & Jimmy Blythe 1926-1928
1993 · album
New Orleans Stomp (Live Recording)
1991 · album
Johnny Dodds: Recordings 1926–1929
2023 · album
Wild Man Blues
2023 · album
The King Of New Orleans Clarinets
2022 · album
Anthology: The Deluxe Collection (Remastered)
2021 · album
Stompin' In Chicago
2021 · album
Walkin' in Winter
2020 · album
Salty Dog
2018 · album
East Coast
2018 · album
Isabel
2018 · album
Memphis
2018 · album
Chicago
2018 · album
Wild Man Blues
2016 · album
The Johnny Dodds Collection 1923-29
2013 · album
Johnny Dodds on Paramount
2011 · album
The Very Best Of New Orleans Clarinet
2010 · compilation
King of the Blues Clarinet 1923 - 1940
2008 · album
Drop That Sack (The Very Best Of)
2008 · compilation
Presenting Johnny Dodds
1927 · album
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Biography
One of the all-time great clarinetists and arguably the most significant of the 1920s, Johnny Dodds (whose younger brother Baby Dodds was among the first important drummers) had a memorable tone in both the lower and upper registers, was a superb blues player, and held his own with Louis Armstrong (no mean feat) on his classic Hot Five and Hot Seven recordings. He did not start on clarinet until he was 17 but caught on fast, being mostly self-taught. Dodds was with Kid Ory's band during most of 1912-1919, played on riverboats with Fate Marable in 1917, and joined King Oliver in Chicago in 1921. During the next decade, he recorded with Oliver's Creole Jazz Band, Jelly Roll Morton, Louis Armstrong, and on his own heated sessions, often utilizing trumpeter Natty Dominique. He worked regularly at Kelly's Stables during 1924-1930. Although Dodds continued playing in Chicago during the 1930s, part of the time was spent running a cab company. The clarinetist led recording sessions in 1938 and 1940, but died just before the New Orleans revival movement began. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi