Marian McPartland - Kpm 1000 Series: Piano Cocktail (1972)
Artist: Marian McPartland
Title: Kpm 1000 Series: Piano Cocktail
Year Of Release: 1972
Label: KPM 1000 LP Series
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:39:08
Total Size: 177 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Kpm 1000 Series: Piano Cocktail
Year Of Release: 1972
Label: KPM 1000 LP Series
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:39:08
Total Size: 177 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01 - Piano Cocktail 02:11
02 - Touch of Ivory 02:16
03 - Ode to a Trio 02:23
04 - Passing Glance 02:21
05 - Piano in Partyland 02:58
06 - Magic by Candlelight 02:54
07 - Softly She Swings 02:33
08 - Linger Awhile 02:53
09 - Contentment 03:49
10 - Small Talk 04:18
11 - Piano Nocturne 03:59
12 - Satin Blues 03:20
13 - Blue Sophisticate 03:13
Marian McPartland became famous for hosting her Piano Jazz radio program beginning in 1978, but she was a well-respected pianist decades before. She played in a four-piano vaudeville act in England and performed on the European continent for the troops during World War II. In Belgium in 1944, she met cornetist Jimmy McPartland and they soon married. Marian moved with her husband to the United States in 1946, where she sometimes played with him even though her style was more modern than his Dixieland-oriented groups. McPartland eventually had her own trio at the Embers (1950) and the Hickory House (1952-1960), which until 1957 included drummer Joe Morello. She recorded regularly for Savoy and Capitol during the 1950s and also made sessions for Argo (1958), Time (1960 and 1963), Sesac, and Dot. Although eventually divorced from Jimmy, they remained close friends, sometimes played together, and even remarried just weeks before his death. She formed her own Halcyon label and recorded several fine albums between 1969-1977. McPartland also made three albums for Tony Bennett's Improv label during 1976-1977 before signing with Concord, where she remained after 1978. The Jazz Alliance label has made available over 30 CDs' worth of material from Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz show, some of which are quite fascinating and significant. McPartland died in August 2013 at her home in Port Washington, New York; she was 95 years old. ~ Scott Yanow