Joe Mudele
Joseph C Mudele, was a British jazz double bass player, one of the Club Eleven collective, where he first played with John Dankworth.
Early career
Mudele grew up in Downham, South East London. He left school at the age of 14 and began singing and playing in local bands, but only began playing double bass at the age of 17 after buying an upright bass in a junk shop. During the war he served in the Royal Air Force.After the war he studied for a while with James Merritt, principal double bassist with the Philharmonia Orchestra, while resuming an earlier career as a roofer. His professional playing career took off in 1947 with the likes of clarinetist Carl Barriteau, accordionist Tito Burns and with the Jimmy Macaffer Band. He toured with visiting American pianist Hoagy Carmichael during the autumn of 1948. Attending the 1949 International Jazz Festival in Paris, Mudele was invited to sit in with Charlie Parker and his drummer Max Roach.
Club Eleven and after
In 1948 Mudele became a founder member of Club Eleven, a Soho nightclub open between 1948 and 1950 which played a significant role in the emergence of the bebop jazz movement in Britain. The club was so named because it was a musicians cooperative with 11 founders – business manager Harry Morris along with ten British bebop players, including Mudele: the others were Lennie Bush, Leon Calvert, Tony Crombie, Bernie Fenton, Laurie Morgan, Johnny Rogers, Tommy Pollard, Ronnie Scott, and Hank Shaw. John Dankworth was also involved, heading up one of two house bands with Mudele on bass.After the club was closed Mudele became a founder member of the John Dankworth Seven, while also continuing to play with others, including Ambrose, Jack Nathan, the Norman Burns Quintet and Kenny Baker's Quartet. He formed his own band, Blue Room, for a year, was a member of the house band of the Coconut Grove nightclub in Regent Street, then stayed for an extended period with the Tommy Whittle Quintet and later the Tony Kinsey Quartet. During this period Mudele also played for Sophie Tucker, Judy Garland and Billy Eckstine and recorded with Larry Adler, Humphrey Lyttelton, the Melody Maker All Stars, George Chisholm and Sid Phillips.