Cover photo for John Baldori's Obituary
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1920 John 2021

John Baldori

February 2, 1920 — May 2, 2021

John Baldori was born near Uniontown, Pennsylvania, on February 2, 1920. He was the fifth of seven children born to Italian immigrants Luigi and Rosa Baldori.

Fulfilling their parents’ musical dreams, each of the Baldori children learned a different instrument, and their family band, The Baldori Sisters Orchestra (with little Johnny on accordion and then trumpet) was a big local success.

John was just nine when his father died in a workplace accident in 1929, and the band became an important source of income for the family during the Great Depression.

The trumpet was John’s mainstay through school as he played with popular big bands around Pittsburgh. In his senior year of college, just after the attack on Pearl Harbor, he met the love of his life, Lucille D’Emilio, who was a singer in the Frankie Barr Orchestra.

June 1942 was a landmark month for John. He graduated college, was drafted into the Army, and married Lucille in the span of two weeks. His first military posting was at the New Cumberland Reception Center, where he was quickly promoted to Sergeant of Company D. As a seasoned musician, he toured with a 40-man army band “Pennsylvania on Parade,” which raised over $2 billion for national defense.

In 1944, John was sent overseas and served in the Mediterranean under General Mark Clark. He trumpeted throughout southern Italy with the army band, on the bill with entertainers such as Mickey Rooney, Red Skelton, and the Andrews Sisters.

After the war, John and Lucille moved to Michigan with their young sons, Bob and Louis. They settled in Dearborn, where John took a job at Ford Motor Company. Two more sons, Leonard and Jeffrey, were born, and John managed a double life of sorts, working at Ford by day and playing Detroit’s biggest venues – The Graystone, The Vanity, The Grande -- by night.

After his retirement in 1980, John continued gigging and working as a contractor for local musicians. He played into his early nineties, and if Papa was ever missing at a family event, his grandchildren knew where to find him: out in the car or in a distant room, blowing his horn.

Relationships were everything to John, and his family came first. Although he sadly lost Lucille in 2017 after 75 years of marriage, John soldiered on. He was dedicated to the well-being of his children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren and many nieces and nephews. He lived for family get-togethers and celebrations where, ever the entertainer, he was always prepared with his trumpet and a vast repertoire of bad jokes, which he repeated with enthusiasm.

He also had a lifetime of close friends that he never let go of, though at 101, he’d outlived most of them.

A long, monumental life, filled with family, hard work, and unforgettable music. “I was lucky,” said John Baldori. “I played the trumpet.”

Friends may visit at St. Kenneth Catholic Church, 14951 North Haggerty Road, Plymouth, Michigan on Friday, May 7, 2021 from 10:00 A.M. until the time of the Funeral Mass at 11:00 A.M. John will be laid to rest alongside his beloved wife, Lucille at St. Hedwig Cemetery, Dearborn Heights, Michigan.
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Service Schedule

Past Services

Visitation

Friday, May 7, 2021

10:00 - 11:00 am (Eastern time)

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Funeral Mass

Friday, May 7, 2021

Starts at 11:00 am (Eastern time)

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