Armstrong's funeral attracted 25,000 individuals, including honorary pallbearers Bing Crosby, Ella Fitzgerald, Dizzy Gillespie, Pearl Bailey, Count Basie, Harry James, Frank Sinatra, Ed Sullivan, Earl Wilson, Alan King, Johnny Carson, and David Frost. Armstrong is buried in the Flushing Cemetery, Flushing, New York.
As critic William Ruhlman has said, "Louis Armstrong was the first important soloist to emerge in jazz, and he became the most influential musician in the music's history." Armstrong shifted the focus of jazz from the collective music of the traditional New Orleans ensemble to a music that valued solo performance and virtuosity.
A good example of Armstrong's improvisational genius is "Weather Bird," in which he and pianist Earl Hines turn a traditional ragtime piece into a brilliant interchange of call and response and broken rhythms.
In his book, The 101 Best Jazz Albums, Len Lyons recommends two records of Louis Armstrong:
- Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines: The Genius of Louis Armstrong, Vol. 1 1923-1933 (Columbia CG 30416, 2 LPs)
- Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines: Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines, 1928 (Smithsonian Collection R-002, 2 LPs)
- Louis Armstrong: The Complete Hot Fives and Hot Sevens (Buy at Amazon.com)
- Louis Armstrong: Hot Fives and Sevens (Buy at Amazon.com)
- Louis Armstrong: The Big Band Recordings 1930-1932 (Buy at Amazon.com)
- Louis Armstrong: The Hot Fives, Volume I (Buy at Amazon.com)
- Louis Armstrong: The Hot Fives & Hot Sevens, Volume II (Buy at Amazon.com)
- Louis Armstrong: The Hot Fives & Hot Sevens, Volume III (Buy at Amazon.com)
- Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines: Louis Armstrong and Earl Hines, Volume IV (Buy at Amazon.com)
- Louis Armstrong: Louis in New York, Volume V (Buy at Amazon.com)
- Louis Armstrong: St. Louis Blues, Volume VI (Buy at Amazon.com)
- Louis Armstrong: You're Drivin' Me Crazy, Volume VII (Buy at Amazon.com)
- Louis Armstrong: Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, 1923-1934 (Buy at Amazon.com)