Top 28 Quotes & Sayings by Marian McPartland

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English musician Marian McPartland.
Last updated on November 21, 2024.
Marian McPartland

Margaret Marian McPartland OBE, was an English–American jazz pianist, composer, and writer. She was the host of Marian McPartland's Piano Jazz on National Public Radio from 1978 to 2011.

Well it's because the record companies are pumping away with their commercial stuff. I think it's a shame.
Nowadays it seems to me nobody takes trouble about anything, especially writing songs.
Baldwin is sort of getting to be a bit funny. I don't know what happened, but a few years ago they suddenly went bankrupt and Gibson bought the whole outfit. Since then they haven't seemed to be doing an awfully good job of providing pianos.
I would really hate to have e-mail. It's bad enough with all the mail I get. — © Marian McPartland
I would really hate to have e-mail. It's bad enough with all the mail I get.
At the risk of being a fuddy-duddy I don't have a computer; I don't have e-mail; and I really don't need something in my house that I would be sitting in front of for hours.
It's awful to have to, but I've started thinking about that, you know. 86. I'm thinking, well, maybe I might make it to 90. At least I'd like to have my brains.
I love to play in the different keys like B or F sharp, or keys that most people don't play in, because they have a better resonance or something. I'm really not fond of F and C. I just stay away from those if I can.
The house is in turmoil with records on every space. In the kitchen and in the dining room is covered with records. I don't have a big enough house to accommodate everything.
I have a West Coast rhythm section and a New York rhythm section. I've got them spread out all over the place.
There are a million good tunes.
I need to get up and walk around and keep my knees from getting bad, which is what's happening.
My hands look terrible but I can do anything I want to do, so, you know, I just think I'm playing all around with more good taste and not dashing up and down the piano.
So I have a friend who works for me once a week. She's got e-mail, so anybody that must send an e-mail, they send it to her and she faxes it to me. Sounds like a long way of doing things, but it works for me.
Although I do feel that with a show like ours we ourselves are getting a lot more young listeners at concerts.
I'm trying to get the record that I made at my birthday party last year, trying to get that out, and the lawyers are diddling around with it and it probably won't be out until next year. I don't know.
I'm not too fond of changing things into waltzes, but sometimes that works.
So if I think of something in my head I don't have to do it. If I can't do I don't do it, I do something else.
As long as I can still be on my own and do my own thing and be working full time, it's great.
Boy, I'm just quietly doing my thing, and I hope they'll look around and get my record out.
I like minor tunes.
By the way, I got a Grammy, which was a big thrill.
That's something Mary Lou Williams used to tell me: If you're not feeling right about what you're doing and you play a minor tune it all comes back, falls into place. I don't know if that's true, but I do it.
I'd just as soon be on a good Steinway or Yamaha just as well. — © Marian McPartland
I'd just as soon be on a good Steinway or Yamaha just as well.
I started to play Jazz music in my early teens. A boyfriend brought records over, so I listened to everything
One should leave the piano when Oscar comes in. This man is dangerous.
Sometimes go around with guys who are scuffling -- for awhile. But usually they end up marrying some cat with a factory. This is the way world ends, not with a whim but a banker.
Duke Ellington is my choice for many reasons. Nobody has written so many great pieces of music, which are everlasting, and he has made them available to the world through his orchestrations of his work in a unique way. Lastly, he was himself a fine pianist. He covers the entire musical spectrum with his genius.
The key of D is daffodil yellow, B major is maroon, and B flat is blue.
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