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Poor Butterfly by the M'N'M Trio (Mazzy Newberger Muranyi)

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Uploaded by on Jun 20, 2007

1996 performance of the M 'N' M (Mazzy-Newberger-Muranyi) Trio at the Sancy Snow Jazz Festival, Mt. Dore, France. Two months later, the trio recorded "Halfway to Heaven" for Stomp Off Records. http://www.jazzbymail.com/ViewArtist.aspx?iAID=1471&sPC=1471_4249&sAN...

Here's an excerpt from the notes by jazz historian and clarinetist Fred Starr:

Early jazz produced surprisingly few really small groups. Yes, there were string bands playing on the galleries of New Orleans homes, and Jelly Roll Morton did his famous trio recordings in the ''20s. But these were exceptions. And no one - absolutely no one - conceived the unlikely possibility of a trio consisting of clarinet, high tenor banjo, and profundo CC tuba. Like the bumblebee, this arrangement shouldn''t fly. Yet, the M ''N'' M Trio makes it do so, gloriously.

So unlikely is this combination that a word about its origins is in order. The key figure is definitely Jimmy Mazzy, the virtuoso banjo player from Holliston, Massachusetts. Known to thousands for his long run with the Paramount Jazz Band of Boston and for his inexhaustible mine of rare lyrics, this self-effacing artist carries on the great banjo tradition of Fred van Eps and Ernest Jones, except on the tenor banjo rather than the older five string classic instrument. As a professional piano technician he is accustomed to precision, which shows in all he does. A show-stopper by himself, Mazzy soars still higher and gains yet more freedom for himself when someone is playing a bass line beneath him.

Enter Eli Newberger, as unusual a tuba player as Mazzy is banjoist. Tubas came late to classic jazz and their role was limited to repetitious oompahs. Not Eli. Grounded in piano playing and be-bop, Eli conceived a new, more complex role for the tuba. Its hallmarks: string bass-like lines, the highlighting of unusual chords, and an aggressive playfulness that is akin to an elephant performing on the balance beam.

Enter "Big Joe" Muranyi, the finest jazz clarinetist of his generation. Long a fixture of the New York scene, Muranyi''s musical roots trace back through Martin''s Ferry, West Virginia, to his parents'' native Hungary, point zero of one of Europe''s most lyrical traditions in music and most intricate schools of reed playing. Best known for his years with Louis Armstrong''s All-Stars, Muranyi honed his style in smaller groups on the minuscule bandstand at Nick''s in the Village - the perfect preparation for the Mazzy-Newberger team.

Taken together, this heady mix of eclecticism, virtuosity, and lyricism imparts to the M ''N'' M Trio a quality that is exciting, exceedingly pleasant and wonderfully fresh. No wonder the French critic exploded with "Bravo les MNM! Pourquoi pas les ''MMM'' (Master-Master-Master)?" Well spoken! - S. Frederick Starr
http://www.elinewberger.com

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  • Just lovely,Eli! We have enjoyed your work since the "Sticky Wicket " days. Also, I well remember Jimmy playing outside Jordons in the early 70s. Thanks for putting these on and keep on playing.

  • amazing!!!!!!!!

  • incredible how you three boys create ATHMOSPHERE with a few notes and also when playing only in two.... pure feeling! Thanks from MusicDoc Wolfgang

  • :D LOVE it

  • eli newberger is one of the most passionate musical tuba players i've ever heard. he makes love thru the instrument. cheers!!!!

  • Wow, i was surprised because not only was there a clarinet, but a Bango and a Tuba.

  • worth the wait

  • amazingly delightful. thanks so much!! an aunt of mine grew up when this was a hit and she always used to call puccini's opera poor butterfly by mistake. i wish she were here so i could crank up your beautiful rendition and we could sing along to it

  • really beautifull greetings from peru!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • wow seems like some fun slide movement on the tuba :) I love the choice on harmonics where hes not afraid of going out from the norm...

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