Search - Earl Hines, Marva Josie :: Jazz Is His Old Lady & My Old Man

Jazz Is His Old Lady & My Old Man
Earl Hines, Marva Josie
Jazz Is His Old Lady & My Old Man
Genres: Jazz, Pop
 
  •  Track Listings (10) - Disc #1

Full Title - Jazz is His Old Lady & My Old Man. The great Earl Hines first met Marva Josie in 1968, impressed by her range, style & appearance she became the latest in a long line of important vocalists who had ...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Earl Hines, Marva Josie
Title: Jazz Is His Old Lady & My Old Man
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Acrobat
Release Date: 12/23/2003
Album Type: Import
Genres: Jazz, Pop
Style: Swing Jazz
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 824046401825, 766483464349

Synopsis

Album Description
Full Title - Jazz is His Old Lady & My Old Man. The great Earl Hines first met Marva Josie in 1968, impressed by her range, style & appearance she became the latest in a long line of important vocalists who had worked with the master pianist. On this album recorded for Catalyst in 1977 her versatility is well in evidence as she sings a variety of numbers ranging wildly in tempo, age, & mood. Ten tracks. Acrobat. 2003.
 

CD Reviews

Overly qualified and exploited potential jazz diva
Samuel Chell | Kenosha,, WI United States | 03/23/2004
(3 out of 5 stars)

"This recent, hastily assembled reissue is the only recording I've discovered by Marva Josie, a glamorous and gifted vocalist who should have been a "can't miss" star. On the occasions I was fortunate enough to catch her live, she simply brought down the house on the strength of her powerful and virtuosic interpretations of admittedly inferior material. On a recording such as this, however, the flimsiness of Marva's repertory--a combination of popular ephemeral tunes ("Feelings"--yuck!) and tired "jazz-age" chestnuts--along with indifferent arrangements, inferior audio, and sloppy production values, insure that her voice will have little appeal to any listener outside of someone like me who remembers her electrifying live performances.Artists like Ellington and Hines could not follow their creative muses without frequently playing "down" to the public. Broad and boisterous entertainment was the ticket to commercial success and a means of subsidizing their passion. Hard as it is to admit, they essentially "used" vocalists as a device for putting a "voice" (not to mention a pretty face or arresting figure) on their music. At least the emphasis on "show business" could capture the notice of a public otherwise clueless to Duke's or Earl's actual importance and musical genius.Unfortunately, Marva Josie could not have realized that her 12 year-plus tenure with Fatha was less of a platform than a dead end. In her case, one can only wonder "what if--.""