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Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz With Brad Mehldau

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Download links and information about Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz With Brad Mehldau by Marian McPartland. This album was released in 1991 and it belongs to Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Rock, Latin, Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack, Bop genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 56:02 minutes.

Artist: Marian McPartland
Release date: 1991
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Rock, Latin, Pop, Theatre/Soundtrack, Bop
Tracks: 17
Duration: 56:02
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Conversation (featuring Brad Mehldau) 3:34
2. From This Moment On (featuring Brad Mehldau) 4:44
3. Conversation (featuring Brad Mehldau) 4:19
4. Ron's Place (featuring Brad Mehldau) 4:30
5. Conversation (featuring Brad Mehldau) 1:22
6. Stella By Starlight (featuring Brad Mehldau) 4:23
7. Conversation (featuring Brad Mehldau) 1:55
8. I Get Along Without You Very Well (Except Sometimes) 4:02
9. Conversation (featuring Brad Mehldau) 2:23
10. When I Fall In Love (featuring Brad Mehldau) 4:35
11. Conversation (featuring Brad Mehldau) 2:59
12. Our Love Is Here to Stay (featuring Brad Mehldau) 5:28
13. Conversation (featuring Brad Mehldau) 0:58
14. I See Your Face Before Me 3:54
15. Conversation (featuring Brad Mehldau) 3:34
16. No Particular Blues 3:16
17. Conversation (featuring Brad Mehldau) 0:06

Details

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Red Richards was one of the least-known guests on Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz radio show but he definitely deserved to be there. A veteran of the swing era who was three days short of his 79th birthday at the time of the show, Richards in the mid-'90s is still a strong prebop pianist. The show gave him a rare chance for wider exposure and he sounds in top form on four solos (including Willie "The Lion" Smith's "Echoes of Spring" and "Someday You'll Be Sorry"). McPartland takes two ballads ("A Hundred Years from Today" and "The Talk of the Town") as her features and best of all are their three piano duets: "Tangerine," "Keepin' Out of Mischief Now" and "Runnin' Wild." Since Red Richards has been underrated through the decades, his conversations with McPartland are full of rarely-heard anectodes and fresh material. Recommended.