Dodo Marmarosa

Dodo Marmarosa

Update: 2025-10-20
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Five hours on piano legend Dodo Marmarosa!


Michael Marmarosa was born on December 12, 1925 to a working class Italian immigrant family in Pittsburgh.  Dodo was a childhood nickname, and he began taking serious classical music lessons as a young child. He also befriended slightly older Steel City jazz pianists such as Billy Strayhorn, and especially Erroll Garner.  With Garner and other young musicians, he explored their developing mutual jazz interests.

  

As a teenager during the World War II years, Marmarosa had opportunities to begin a professional career performing in popular swing era big bands, eventually gaining recognition with Gene Krupa, Charlie Barnet, and Tommy Dorsey.  He had a significant stay with Artie Shaw.  When Shaw disbanded in California in 1945, Marmarosa remained in Los Angeles.  Establishing himself there, he was “present at the creation” to became THE pianist in the formative years of bebop on the West Coast.

  

Dodo not only “played with” all the greats, but he appears on classic, major, historic recordings of Lester Young, Charlie Parker, Artie Shaw’s Gramercy Five, Lucky Thompson, and Norman Granz “The Jazz Scene”.  Marmarosa also delighted in the playground of Slim Gaillard, joining in the fun but also providing luscious piano counterpoint to the jive on many of his records.

  

Marmarosa returned to his native Pittsburgh by 1950, settled down domestically, and played the piano in local clubs and restaurants, away from the national limelight.  He never made any more records, other than three isolated, stunning sessions for Argo in Chicago in 1961 & 1962 (only one of which was released at the time).  He had retired from professional music by the mid-1970's, but lived quietly until 2002, when he died at the age of 76.

 

Dodo’s piano style is lively and tasty, informed from his swing era beginnings, while his harmonic sense also demonstrates the Romantic classical music roots, as well as the jazz modernism of his time. He is a neglected and overlooked figure in the scope of jazz history, but his piano recordings are daring and fresh, and will surprise and enthrall you.


originally broadcast October 12, 2025

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Dodo Marmarosa

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