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Mark Murphy
The following is based on the book This is Hip: the Life of Mark Murphy by Peter Jones (Equinox Publishing, 2018). All rights reserved.
In the opinion of many, Mark Murphy was the greatest jazz singer who ever lived.
Quite a statement, but one that can be made to stand up pretty well in court. There have, of course, been more successful jazz singers; certainly more popular jazz singers. But not one of them has possessed the sheer range of abilities that Murphy was blessed with. He had a natural “instrument” at his disposal, a rich, masculine tone that could shape any jazz standard as beautifully as you were ever likely to hear it. When that great arbiter of musical taste Alec Wilder, author of American Popular Song, heard Murphy for the first time, he declared him to be “one of the very few great singers I have ever heard.”
Murphy perfected all the important styles of jazz. Early in his career, he learned how to swing, as you can hear on his version of "Fascinating Rhythm", the opening track on his first album Meet Mark Murphy (Decca, 1956). As the tune fades out, he launches into a scat solo: that’s another skill he mastered (although he often overdid it later in his career). With That’s How I Love The Blues! (Riverside, 1963) he revealed his natural affinity for the kind of material popularised by Billy Eckstine and Joe Williams, treating the blues with a relaxed familiarity far removed from the efforts of those white performers through the decades who have tried a little too hard to emulate their black progenitors. That feeling was just as strong 40 years later on his Joe Williams tribute album Memories of You (HighNote, 2003). Discovering Brazilian music in the late 1950s, Mark Murphy proved himself just as adept at latin styles, recording many tracks during his career, from a couple of excellent contributions to the compilation album Everybody’s Doin’ the Bossa Nova (Riverside, 1962), to Brazil Song (Muse, 1983) to The Latin Porter (GoJazz, 2000). He was also a peerless interpreter of ballads. As he grew older, the ballads grew deeper and darker, until on the late Verve masterpieces Once to Every Heart (2005) and Love is What Stays (2007), which he recorded in his seventies, he almost seems to be singing from beyond the grave. One such tune - the haunting, crepuscular "Our Game" - was played repeatedly on London’s Jazz FM in the days following Mark’s death in 2015.
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Mark Murphy: An Essential Top Ten Albums
by Peter Jones
Revered by jazz singers the world over, Mark Murphy is barely known to the general public--which is curious, since he enjoyed a recording career that lasted more than half a century, made 48 albums in his lifetime, and played thousands of gigs with hundreds of musicians from Norway to Australia. A notoriously mercurial and secretive character, he was gay at a time when homosexuality was not merely frowned upon but illegal. He was a white man when many thought that ...
read moreThis Is Hip - The Life of Mark Murphy
by Angelo Leonardi
This is Hip The Life of Mark Murphy Peter Jones 247 Pages ISBN: # 978-1-78179-473-9 Equinox Publishing 2018 Non è casuale che questa bella biografia sul più eclettico jazz singer bianco sia opera di un inglese e venga pubblicata in Gran Bretagna. Il pubblico del Regno Unito ha supportato Mark negli anni della Swinging London (i più difficili della sua carriera negli Stati Uniti) e l'ha accolto con entusiasmo alla fine degli Ottanta, ...
read moreL'ultimo hipster. La vita e la musica di Mark Murphy
by Angelo Leonardi
Non trovate accenni a Mark Murphy nelle più recenti storie del jazz, neanche il nome. Una lacuna che appare inspiegabile (a differenza di Frank Sinatra, Mel Tormè e Tony Bennett) che si giustifica solo col ritardo a collocare il cantante di Syracuse in una prospettiva storica. Eppure già prima della sua scomparsa -il 22 ottobre 2015 all'età di 83 anni--autorevoli critici e musicisti hanno considerato Murphy tra i massimi jazz vocalist moderni, il più importante tra i ...
read moreMark Murphy: Live in Italy 2001
by Angelo Leonardi
Quest'inedito concerto di Mark Murphy del 2001 è un documento prezioso che ci ricorda uno dei massimi vocalist della storia del jazz, il più eclettico e creativo della sua generazione. Incrementa il valore del compact la presenza di Marco Tamburini--allora 42enne--in uno smagliante quartetto con Marco Piacentini, Piero Leveratto e Marco Tonin. Il 18 maggio 2001 il cantante di Syracuse fu invitato a Brescia ad aprire la prima Rassegna Jazz e Letteratura" quale grande interprete del vocalese ...
read moreMark Murphy: Live in Athens, Greece
by Dan Bilawsky
No figure in jazz personified hip the way that the late Mark Murphy did. For more than half a century he taught the world what it meant to be a true artist, pushing boundaries, walking the tightrope, and going where he pleased. He had it all--wit, charm, guile, good taste, a pure improviser's spirit, a flexible and powerful voice--and he willingly shared it. Murphy remained current and above the trend-based fray(s) for most of his career, starting ...
read moreMark Murphy: A Beautiful Friendship: Remembering Shirley Horn
by Bruce Lindsay
In his time, vocalist Mark Murphy has been described as hip, cool, swinging, fearless, gruff, and eccentric (among other things). Some-- but most definitely not all--of these terms could also be applied to Shirley Horn. So it's fitting that Murphy should pay tribute to his compatriot, as he does on A Beautiful Friendship: Remembering Shirley Horn, even though Murphy acknowledges that the two vocal legends didn't know each other too well.This four-track vinyl EP (accompanied by a download ...
read moreMark Murphy: Inside the Mystery
by Suzanne Lorge
Beyond its stylistic differentiators, jazz contains what vocalist Mark Murphy calls a wonderful mystery," a mystery that was fostered in small, regional clubs around the US during the '30s-40s, when Murphy was developing the distinctive vocal style that launched his decades-long career. I've seen this mysterious quality of jazz set rooms on fire," Murphy attests. [Rooms] where nothing was going on until the band shuffled up and this musical rhythmic thing would happen right there on the spot." ...
read moreMark Murphy, 1972-1991 (Pt. 2)
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JazzWax by Marc Myers
Yesterday, on what would have been vocalist Mark Murphy's 91st birthday (he died in 2015), I posted 10 favorite clips in the early part of his career, between 1956 and 1962. Murphy then left for the U.K.,where he remained until his return in 1972. When he arrived back in the U.S., there was a new artistic maturity about Murphy. In Europe, free from the commercial clutches in America, Murphy grew comfortable in his own skin. His first album recorded in ...
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Jazz Musician of the Day: Mark Murphy
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Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Mark Murphy's birthday today!
The following is based on the book This is Hip: the Life of Mark Murphy by Peter Jones (Equinox Publishing, 2018). All rights reserved. In the opinion of many, Mark Murphy was the greatest jazz singer who ever lived. Quite a statement, but one that can be made to stand up pretty well in court. There have, of course, been more successful jazz singers; certainly more popular jazz singers. But not ...
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Mark Murphy, 1956-1962 (Pt. 1)
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JazzWax by Marc Myers
Jackie Paris and Mark Murphy had a lot in common. Both were hip club singers with bop flexibility and a natural sense of swing. But where Paris took Charlie Parker as his inspiration, Murphy was more enamored of Miles Davis. Murphy, of course, began his recording career nearly 10 years after Paris, and while Paris had his best years at the start of his career, Murphy didn't become a household name in jazz circles until 16 years after his his ...
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Jazz Musician of the Day: Mark Murphy
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Mark Murphy's birthday today!
The following is based on the book This is Hip: the Life of Mark Murphy by Peter Jones (Equinox Publishing, 2018). All rights reserved. In the opinion of many, Mark Murphy was the greatest jazz singer who ever lived. Quite a statement, but one that can be made to stand up pretty well in court. There have, of course, been more successful jazz singers; certainly more popular jazz singers. But not ...
read more
Jazz Musician of the Day: Mark Murphy
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Mark Murphy's birthday today!
The following is based on the book This is Hip: the Life of Mark Murphy by Peter Jones (Equinox Publishing, 2018). All rights reserved. In the opinion of many, Mark Murphy was the greatest jazz singer who ever lived. Quite a statement, but one that can be made to stand up pretty well in court. There have, of course, been more successful jazz singers; certainly more popular jazz singers. But not ...
read more
Tony Adamo Pays Tribute To Mark Murphy And UFOs By Chris Rizik for Soultracks
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Tony Adamo
First Listen: Tony Adamo pays tribute to Mark Murphy and UFOs (May 13, 2020) In 2015, we described singer and spoken word artist Tony Adamo as “a true anachronism: a performer who is authentically ‘cool’ in a timeless, almost reckless way that almost no popular artist today can match.” It’s five years later and the irrepressible Mr. Adamo is still doing his thing —his thing being a vocal / hipspokenword sound that is unlike anything else out there, with a ...
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Jazz Musician of the Day: Mark Murphy
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Mark Murphy's birthday today!
Mark Murphy is one of the world's greatest — and hippest — jazz vocalists performing today. His coterie of fans includes tap dancer Gregory Hines, who spontaneously jumped up on stage at Mark's Las Vegas engagement in 1995 to join him for an impromptu duet. Legendary composer Alec Wilder said of Mark, 'I was quite literally amazed. Mark's musicianship, range, intonation, diction, inventiveness and incredible rhythmic sense are all of a ...
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Scott Yanow Reviews Tony Adamo's Latest Single 'Did Mark Murphy Believe in UFOs?'
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Jazz Vocalist and All About Jazz
Tony Adamo Did Mark Murphy Believe in UFOS?" Ropeadope The hippest of the spoken word artists and a fine singer too, Tony Adamo has long championed jazz. His recordings, which feature him improvising lyrics over a funky jazz rhythm section, have included tributes to such greats as Joe Henderson, Eddie Gale, Sun Ra, Eddie Harris, Mike Clark, and Art Blakey plus B.B. King and James Brown. Following on the success of his Ropeadope debut Was Out ...
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Vocalist Nancy Kelly's Remembering Mark Murphy CD Release Performance At Birdland Theater On July 4-5-6
Source:
Scott Thompson Public Relations
Nancy Kelly: Remembering Mark Murphy CD Release Performance at Birdland Theater July 4-5-6 with John Di Martino & Friends Climbing the Jazz Week Charts International Airplay Birdland Theater 7pm- Doors Open at 5:30pm 315 W. 44th St., New York, NY 10036 $20-$30 Phone: 212-581-3080 Nancy Kelly: vocals John di Martino: piano Yoshi Waki- bass Vince Cherico: drums
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Jazz Musician of the Day: Mark Murphy
Source:
Michael Ricci
All About Jazz is celebrating Mark Murphy's birthday today!
Mark Murphy is one of the world\'s greatest — and hippest — jazz vocalists performing today. His coterie of fans includes tap dancer Gregory Hines, who spontaneously jumped up on stage at Mark\'s Las Vegas engagement in 1995 to join him for an impromptu duet. Legendary composer Alec Wilder said of Mark, \'I was quite literally amazed. Mark\'s musicianship, range, intonation, diction... Read more.
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