Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (2024)

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (1)

    For more than 40 years, Marian McPartland welcomed hundreds of musicians to her Piano Jazz program.

    Courtesy of Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (2)

    Billy Taylor, a fellow NPR jazz program host, was McPartland's first guest on-air.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (3)

    The episode of Piano Jazz with Bill Evans was later issued as a commercial album.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (4)

    The great pianist Oscar Peterson taped an episode of Piano Jazz in 1997.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (5)

    Ray Brown played bass for years in Oscar Peterson's trio and also appeared on the program.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (6)

    McPartland and her peer George Shearing both came to the U.S. from England to pursue jazz piano.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (7)

    McPartland in the '80s.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (8)

    When legendary trombonist J.J. Johnson appeared on Piano Jazz, he brought along the then-up-and-coming bassist Christian McBride.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (9)

    Piano Jazz liked to feature up-and-coming musicians --€” in this case, a young Joshua Redman.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (10)

    Diana Krall appeared on Piano Jazz in 1994. She had just released her debut album the previous year.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (11)

    The set list for Ravi Coltrane's visit to the program included pieces by his father, John Coltrane: "Giant Steps" and "Naima."

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (12)

    Guests on Piano Jazz spanned the entire stylistic gamut of jazz, including free improvisers like Cecil Taylor.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (13)

    In 1997, Dave Brubeck and McPartland taped an episode of Piano Jazz live for an audience in Washington, D.C.

    R.J. Capak/SCETV

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (14)

    Ray Charles taped an episode of the show in January 1990.

    Courtesy of Vanguard

  • Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (15)

    McPartland in 1997.

    Courtesy of Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz

1 of 15

Marian McPartland, who gave the world an intimate, insider's perspective on one of the most elusive topics in music — jazz improvisation — died of natural causes Tuesday night at her home in Long Island, N.Y. She was 95.

For more than 40 years, she hosted Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz, an NPR program pairing conversation and duet performances that reached an audience of millions, connecting with jazz fans and the curious alike. She interviewed practically every major jazz musician of the post-WWII era.

McPartland's soft English accent wasn't the only thing that made her a good radio personality. She was an accomplished jazz pianist herself, which was readily evident on her program.

McPartland The Pianist

Marian McPartland, radio host, was at one time Margaret Marian Turner, piano student. She told NPR in 2005 that her interest in music started when she was a young girl, after she heard her mother play piano.

"From that moment on, I don't remember ever not playing piano, day and night, wherever I was," she said. "At my aunt's house, at kindergarten — wherever they had a piano, I played it. Of course, on the BBC they played all the hits from over here [in the U.S.]. They played them, I heard them and I learned them."

Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz

30 Years Of Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz

Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz

Twilight World: Remembering Marian McPartland's Songs

Young Marian Turner studied classical music, then went on to perform in vaudeville theaters across England. During WWII, she entertained troops, often jamming with American soldiers.

She married one of them: cornetist Jimmy McPartland. After the war, the couple made their way to the U.S. — first to Chicago, then to New York.

There, she tracked down one of her early idols, one of the few women in the bebop revolution, pianist Mary Lou Williams.

"A man might come into New York in 1951 and be kind of gunning for his competition," says Paul de Barros, McPartland's biographer. "Marian McPartland came to New York City and befriended Mary Lou Williams. She immediately tried to establish a kind of camaraderie with her, a kind of female strategy of 'we're in this together.' "

That "we're in this together" attitude was central to the success of her radio program and her career — not that she had an easy time of it at first. As McPartland struggled to make a name for herself in New York, one critic caustically suggested that she had three things going against her: She was British, she was white and she was a woman.

"I guess it wasn't that usual to see a woman musician playing in a group, although there were many, actually," McPartland told NPR. "But everybody seemed to think that this was pretty strange, maybe because I was British also. And someone would say, 'Oh, you play good for a girl,' or 'You sound just like a man.' At the time, I just took all those things as encouragement."

McPartland landed a gig in 1952 at The Hickory House, a noisy steakhouse on 52nd Street, the center of the city's jazz scene.

"Everybody came by," de Barros says. "I mean, she had the opportunity to meet everyone from Duke Ellington to Pee Wee Russell to Thelonious Monk. Jazz was really an underground community, and everybody hung out."

Conversations Like Jazz

McPartland continued to record and perform throughout the 1950s and into the '60s, but as rock 'n' roll took over, she began to lecture on college campuses. In the late '60s, she started spinning jazz records on a New York radio station where other pianists would drop by the studio unannounced, just to chat.

A casual hello became a regular program in April 1979, when McPartland and South Carolina ETV Radio launched Piano Jazz. Her first on-air guest was the late Billy Taylor, also a pianist and NPR jazz host.

"It seemed as if every opportunity that came her way in the past prepared her for being a radio host," de Barros says. "She had researched other people's styles, so she had questions that she wanted to ask. All of those skills were in place, and she was ready for the opportunity that came to her."

McPartland said the conversations themselves were very much like jazz, spontaneous and free-flowing.

"It's so easy to make it a conversation, and you don't know where it's going to lead," McPartland said. "The whole thing is so improvised, you really don't know where it's going to go."

Along the way, McPartland also became a mentor to many young pianists. Geri Allen, one of those pianists, says she hears something familiar to musicians when she listens to Piano Jazz.

"It's a very personal exchange that only happens to musicians on the bandstand," Allen says. "But to have it opened up to the fans, I think it helps to create even more of an understanding [of] what that whole experience of improvising is about."

McPartland was once asked how she did this. Her answer was simple: "You have to love what you do," she said.

That was perhaps Marian McPartland's greatest talent: She made Piano Jazz not about her, but about the musicians, the fans and our collective exploration of jazz. For more than 40 years, she reminded listeners every week that we're all in it together.

Marian McPartland, Jazz Pianist And NPR Host, Has Died (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Sen. Ignacio Ratke

Last Updated:

Views: 5556

Rating: 4.6 / 5 (76 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Sen. Ignacio Ratke

Birthday: 1999-05-27

Address: Apt. 171 8116 Bailey Via, Roberthaven, GA 58289

Phone: +2585395768220

Job: Lead Liaison

Hobby: Lockpicking, LARPing, Lego building, Lapidary, Macrame, Book restoration, Bodybuilding

Introduction: My name is Sen. Ignacio Ratke, I am a adventurous, zealous, outstanding, agreeable, precious, excited, gifted person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.