Background
Her mother, Diyaw (sometimes spelled Diyah or Dyer) Jones, was a pre-Armstrong jazz trumpeter who also taught Valaida Snow how to play. Her father played the saxophone.
Her mother, Diyaw (sometimes spelled Diyah or Dyer) Jones, was a pre-Armstrong jazz trumpeter who also taught Valaida Snow how to play. Her father played the saxophone.
She was the first female trumpeter to be recorded. She was briefly married to saxophonist Jimmy "Hook" Hutchinson, during which she began to use his last name professionally. Although her mother may have taught her how to play, Jones was largely self-taught.
She and her mother adopted the surname Armenra (sometimes spelled Armenera or Amenra).
In the early 1920s, she formed a trio in Kansas City called the Three Classy Misses. Dolly then toured as a trombonist in the bands of Ma Rainey in the Grand Theater in Chicago and was cornetist for First Rate (at Lloyd's) Wynn"s Okeh recordings.
She toured with Ida Cox in 1928 and with Lil Hardin Armstrong"s Harlem Harlicans in the early 1930s. The band performed in the Lafayette Theater and Apollo Theater in New York City and Chicago"s Regal Theater.
In 1932, she formed her own band the Twelve Spirits of Rhythm.
In New York City, she was part of a 15-member multiracial band called the Disciples of Swing. This band was billed as "seven whites, seven colored, and Dolly". Jones was the first trumpet player who recorded a jazz record.
She was involved in two recording sessions: in 1926, Albert Wynn"s Gut Bucket Five (including with Barney Bigard) and 1941 in the Stuff Smith Sextet.
She played Mission Watkins, "a little girl from Birmingham", a trumpet player in Oscar Michaux"s 1936 musical film Swing!. She was credited as "Doli Armena".
She has no speaking role in the film, but makes several cameo performances as a trumpeter, playing the songs "I May Be Wrong (But I Think You"re Wonderful)" and "China Boy". Jones also appeared as an extra in Michaux"s other 1938 movie God"s Step Children.
She continued to play into the seventies with Eddie Barefield.