[Dixielandjazz] Marian McPartland book reviewed

Robert Ringwald rsr at ringwald.com
Thu Sep 6 12:59:05 PDT 2012


"Shall We Play That One Together? The Life and Art of Jazz Piano Legend Marian McPartland"
Publication Date: 2012-10-16
Publisher: St. Martin's
Stage: Adult
ISBN: 978-0-312-55803-1
Price: $35.00
Author: de Barros, Paul
Kirkus Reviews, September 1, 2012
The story of the distinguished female jazz pianist who devoted herself to her art
and won popularity, the respect of her colleagues and just about every honor the
profession bestows. There will not be a more richly detailed biography of McPartland
(born in 1918 in Slough, England, as Margaret Marian Turner). McPartland has led
an extraordinarily peripatetic life, and Seattle Times music writer de Barros seems
to have been a stowaway in her luggage. He has very few negative observations: She
could be crusty (especially later on); she didn't like to read music; she sometimes
had trouble keeping a consistent beat; not all her albums were good. Otherwise, this
is a tribute to McPartland's talent (she learned to play by ear as a girl), her determination
to forge a career in jazz, her writing ability (she published in DownBeat and elsewhere)
and her ongoing artistic evolution.
The author also chronicles the serpentine route of her relationship with her American
husband, the late cornetist Jimmy McPartland, whose drinking problems came and went
-- as did their ability to live together. She played with Jimmy from time to time
but also had her own career -- and her own love affairs, including a long-term one
with legendary drummer Joe Morello. De Barros tells us about her albums (quoting
the reviews -- even the bad ones) and marvels at McPartland's versatility and success
with Piano Jazz, her NPR show that began in 1978. (The book's title comes from her
customary question to her guest on the show.) The author also charts her fierce devotion
to jazz education and, sadly, her physical decline. A splendid catalogue of McPartland's
achievements, although readers may stumble in the great tangle of detail.

 

-Bob Ringwald
www.ringwald.com
Amateur (ham) Radio Operator K6YBV
916/ 806-9551

The crime of taxation is not in the taking of it. It's in the way it's spent.
--Will Rogers March 20, 1932


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