Artist Name
Marian McPartland
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Origin
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Genre
genre icon Pianist

Style
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Active
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4 users heart off Marian McPartland - The Lady Is A Tramp
4 users heart off Marian McPartland - Stranger in a Dream
4 users heart off Marian McPartland - Stranger in a Dream
4 users heart off Marian McPartland - Stranger in a Dream


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Artist Biography
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Margaret Marian McPartland, OBE (born 20 March 1918; † 20. August 2013), was an English-born jazz pianist, composer, writer, and was the host of Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz on National Public Radio until she stepped down on 10 November 2011.
She pursued classical studies at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama in London. Much to the dismay of her family, she developed a love for American jazz and musicians such as Duke Ellington, Fats Waller, Teddy Wilson, Mary Lou Williams, and many others. In 1938, despite her family's efforts to keep her at Guildhall, Marian left to join Billy Mayerl's Claviers, a four-piano vaudeville act, performing under the stage name of Marian Page. The group toured throughout Europe during World War II, entertaining Allied troops. While touring with USO shows in Belgium, she met and began performing with Chicago cornetist Jimmy McPartland in 1944. The couple soon married, playing at their own military base wedding in Germany.

After the war, they moved to Chicago to be near Jimmy's family. Then, in 1949, the McPartlands settled in Manhattan, living in an apartment in the same building as the Nordstrom Sisters. With Jimmy's help and encouragement, Marian started her own trio which enjoyed a long residency at a New York City jazz club, the Hickory House, during 1952–1960. The drummer Joe Morello was a member of the group until he departed to join Dave Brubeck's Quartet. She also played at The Embers.

In 1958 a black and white group portrait of 57 notable jazz musicians was photographed in front of a Brownstone in Harlem, New York City. Art Kane, a freelance photographer working for Esquire magazine, took the photo, which was called, "A Great Day in Harlem", became an iconic view of NY's Jazz scene at the time. As of Marian McPartland's 95th birthday on March 20, 2013, she was one of only four still living, of the 57 musicians who participated in the iconic 1958 photograph. Along with McPartland, other Jazz notables featured in the photograph are Count Basie, Coleman Hawkins, Dizzy Gillespie, Charles Mingus, and saxophonist Benny Golson, who like McPartland, is among the few still living, today.

After many years of recording for labels such as Capitol, Savoy, Argo, Sesac, Time, and Dot, in 1969 she founded her own record label, Halcyon Records, before having a long association with the Concord Jazz label.
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Last Edit by Axel1105
18th Jan 2021

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