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Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz With Guest Shirley Horn

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Download links and information about Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz With Guest Shirley Horn by Shirley Horn, Marian McPartland. This album was released in 2006 and it belongs to Blues, Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Bop genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 55:28 minutes.

Artist: Shirley Horn, Marian McPartland
Release date: 2006
Genre: Blues, Jazz, Vocal Jazz, Rock, Songwriter/Lyricist, Bop
Tracks: 20
Duration: 55:28
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Conversation 0:53
2. Love Is Here to Stay 2:17
3. Conversation 1:45
4. I Could Have Told You 2:58
5. Conversation 3:44
6. Billie's Bounce 4:13
7. Conversation 0:49
8. Blood Count 2:30
9. Conversation 3:13
10. Love You Madly 4:29
11. Conversation 0:17
12. Violets for Your Furs 2:52
13. Conversation 3:25
14. Cherry 4:53
15. Conversation 2:28
16. There's No You 3:07
17. Conversation 1:10
18. I Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out to Dry 4:21
19. Conversation 0:59
20. Shirley's Blues 5:05

Details

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The late pianist and vocalist Shirley Horn appeared on Marian McPartland's NPR-syndicated Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz Radio Broadcast in 1984, six years after she had begun recording and performing again after a lengthy hiatus. The material played here, as expected, is comprised of standards with the exception of a four-handed blues jam at the end of the program entitled "Shirley's Blues." There are a few surprises — in duet readings of "Billie's Bounce," and Billy Strayhorn's wonderful "Blood Count," as well as a flawed middle section of Don Redman's nugget "Cherry." Horn is in fine voice here, just top-form, really, as in "I Could Have Told You So," where her trademark ballad whisper can just send chills down the spine. The conversation here is lively and fun-filled as well. There is great warmth and humor between Horn and McPartland. As is the usual format of these discs, conversation appears on every other track, and the music takes up the great majority of the program. Thank goodness for CD players and their ability to skip and program tracks quickly, as the musical end of the program makes for especially fine listening.