Sunday, 28 June 2026

Jimmy Mundy born June 28, 1907


James Mundy (June 28, 1907 – April 24, 1983) was an American jazz tenor saxophonist, composer and One of the finer arrangers of the swing era, Jimmy Mundy never became a big name to the general public, but musicians of the era certainly knew who he was.

Born in Cincinnati, Ohio, Mundy began developing his arranging skills in the 1920s while playing with local bands led by Erskine Tate, Tommy Miles, and Carroll Dickerson. In 1932 he wrote and sold a few arrangements to Claude Hopkins, and at about the same time joined Earl Hines' famous "Grand Terrace" ballroom band in Chicago. Hines hired him originally as a saxophonist, for whom he worked over the course of the next four years. During this period Mundy developed a reputation as a prolific arranger in the emerging "swing" style and began writing and selling arrangements to other bandleaders in order to supplement his income.

                                  

Late in 1935, Goodman and his band worked their way east to Chicago where they began their historic six-month booking in the Joseph Urban room of the Congress Hotel. After selling one of his arrangements to Goodman, Goodman hired Mundy on a full-time basis. Until 1938, Mundy became one of Goodman's principal staff arrangers, joining Spud Murphy and Fletcher Henderson. From the moment he was hired, it was Mundy upon whom Goodman relied to create up-tempo "flag-waving" musical numbers. Mundy's list of "killer-dillers" include the 1936 (revised) version of "Bugle Call Rag", "Jam Session" (an original composition by Mundy), and the band's 1937 adaptation of "Ridin' High". Mundy was adept at arranging standard popular tunes: "You Turned The Tables On Me" (1936) and "And the Angels Sing" (1939).

Jimmy & Dorothy Mundy

When Gene Krupa left the band in 1938, Mundy left shortly after as well to write for Krupa's new outfit, although he continued to contribute scores to Goodman on a free-lance basis. He briefly led his own band in 1939. Throughout the 1940s Mundy supplied a significant number of original compositions and arrangements to Count Basie (ca. 1940 to ca. 1947), Artie Shaw (1944–45), Dizzy Gillespie (1949), Harry James, Charlie Spivak, Paul Whiteman and many others. He wrote the score to the 1955 Broadway musical The Vamp which starred Carol Channing. The 1957 musical Livin' The Life and the 2010 dance revue Come Fly Away also used some of his music. In 1959, he moved to Paris, where he was musical director for Barclay Records. He returned to the U.S. in the 1960s and continued with his active career as a writer into the 1970s.

Jimmy Mundy led relatively few sessions: a small-group date in 1937, four songs by his short-lived orchestra in 1939, a few existing broadcasts of his 1946 Los Angeles band, and he led two obscure Epic albums during 1958-1959.

Mundy died of cancer at Roosevelt Hospital, New York City at the age of 75.

(Edited from People Pill, AllMusic & Wikipedia)

12 comments:

  1. For "Jimmy Mundy And His Orchestra – Classics 1937-1947 (2001 Classics)" go here:

    https://pixeldrain.com/u/Szu9JVuX

    1 Jim Mundy & His Swing Club Seven– I Surrender, Dear (Vocals – Walter Fuller) 2:53
    2 Jim Mundy & His Swing Club Seven– Ain't Misbehavin' (Vocals – Walter Fuller) 3:01
    3 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– Sunday Special 2:50
    4 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– Little Old Lady From Baltimore (Vocals – Madeline Greene) 2:49
    5 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– All Aboard 2:54
    6 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– A Lover In Blue (Vocals – Madeline Greene) 2:58
    7 The Ginger Snaps With Orchestra Conducted By James Mundy– The Shrimp Man 3:03
    8 The Ginger Snaps With Orchestra Conducted By James Mundy– The Gang That Sang Heart Of My Heart 3:05
    9 The Ginger Snaps With Orchestra Conducted By James Mundy– Tico-Tico 2:50
    10 The Ginger Snaps With Orchestra Conducted By James Mundy– Juke Box Joe 2:57
    11 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– Fiesta In Brass 4:08
    12 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– Hello, Goodbye, Forget It 3:58
    13 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– Fiesta In Blue 4:11
    14 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– Airmail Special 2:58
    15 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– Bumble Boogie 3:13
    16 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– One O'Clock Boogie 3:12
    17 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– I Gotta Put You Down - Part 1 (Vocals – Jimmy Young) 2:40
    18 Jimmy Mundy & His Orchestra– I Gotta Put You Down - Part 2 (Vocals – Jimmy Young) 3:09

    Above album available on most streamers. This copy is @192

    Still looking for his later LP's On A Mundy Flight (1958)
    Playing The Numbers (1959) & Fiesta In Brass (2002)
    Any help will be appreciated.

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  2. Bob, if you're interested in this 50 volume set I'd be happy to give you a download link for it.
    https://chronocentric.blogspot.com/2024/08/hep-chicks.html

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    1. Hello. I checked the link. It leads to this blog where you find the last post that had being uploaded. It is called Hep Chicks of the 40's. A collection of 50 records but no links. Will you be able to provide links to such a huge collection of 40's uptempo girls recordings? Thanks in advance.

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    2. Hello Mike, Looks like I'm In a queue. Do you want to send me a link here or via my e-mail. Regards, from a very interested Bob.

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  3. I'm also interesting by the links of these 50 CD !!! Many thanks !

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  4. Ditto here thanks Mike, and Mr Boppinbob !!

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  5. I'm not that far removed from the 1940s and when I think of the popular music of that era some of the rousing swing instrumentals come to mind, but also the overwhelming amount of male crooning recordings which, frankly, never did much for me and the male vocalist recordings seem to outnumber the female recordings about 50 to 1. While I have nothing against the blues, every now and then (but rarely) I'd hear an uptempo record with a female vocalist and think "what a great record". So I decided to try and compile a collection of those type of records hoping to come up with 100 or so that would make a nice playlist. When I reached over 1200 recordings I stopped researching and began to think about how to organize them. I usually do a walk and a bike ride each day, and conditions-permitting a kayak paddle in the Gulf of America, and each one usually lasts about 70 minutes. So I thought I would organize them into approximately 65 to 70 minute sets, just long enough for a fresh air jaunt. I'm pleased with the results and think it was a worthy project to do.

    Hep Chicks of the 1940's

    1940
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/c6cfaqf3

    1941
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/St446Uaz

    1942
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/TKN6736j

    1943
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/YBSZnpCg

    1944
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/3CKnBDBm

    1945
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/96vEhAjE

    1946
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/reDJmaCE

    1947
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/kUhKdLk9

    1948
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/PUWTPFuH

    1949
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/6Kidsmuw

    Bonus
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/virNLREQ

    If anyone has suggestions for records I overlooked, please share your thoughts. Keep in mind that tempo was the primary factor here. They're all not "great" records, but without moderate ones you wouldn't have great ones.

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  6. Thanks Mike, Must of been a labour of love. The only exercise I get is walking the dog and the odd bike ride due to dodgy lungs.
    Your list of links was sent to the spam folder by blogger for some reason, but now restored to where it should have gone.

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  7. Your welcome. Glad they turned up. Here's another fake CD I recently did from vinyl on the singer/songwriter Mary Taylor who had a bunch of singles on Capitol and Dot between 1963 and 1970. I believe her first single has appeared on a release by the German "Bruin Clan" label, but the rest still only exist on the original vinyl.
    https://pixeldrain.com/u/usmbguKc

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    Replies
    1. Hi Mike, Thanks for the Mary Taylor tracks. I see that she was born May 28, 1936, so I have earmarked May 28, 2027 to hopefully do a profile about her.

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