Artist's albums
Jubilee
2000 · album
Dave McKenna: Solo
1973 · album
Easy Street
1995 · album
The Maybeck Recital Series, Vol. 2
1990 · album
Dancing In The Dark
1986 · album
Original Wilber (Remastered 2022)
1979 · album
Groovin' at the Grünewald (Remastered 2022)
1978 · album
Alone At the Palace
1977 · album
Dave Fingers McKenna
1977 · album
Further On
2021 · album
Dave McKenna In Madison
2018 · album
Hear Me Now
2018 · album
Dual Piano Jazz (Remastered 2014)
2014 · album
Piano Jazz Classics
2012 · album
In Another Life
2009 · album
Clarinet Blue
2007 · album
An Intimate Evening With Dav
2002 · album
This Is The Moment
1959 · album
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Biography
One of the top swing-based pianists of the past 25 years, Dave McKenna's hard-driving basslines give momentum to uptempo pieces, and his vast knowledge of superior songs from the 1930s has resulted in many rewarding albums of traditional but fresh music. Although talented from the start, McKenna did not achieve that much recognition until he was already in his forties. He joined the Musicians' Union when he was 15 and picked up early experience playing with Boots Mussulli (1947), Charlie Ventura (1949), and Woody Herman's Orchestra (1950-1951). After two years in the military, McKenna had a second stint with Ventura (1953-1954) and then worked with a variety of top swing and Dixieland players including Gene Krupa, Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, Eddie Condon, Bobby Hackett, and Bob Wilber (in the late '70s), and was a soloist at piano bars in Massachusetts. McKenna had recorded for ABC-Paramount (1956), Epic (1958), Bethlehem (a two-piano date shared with Hall Overton in 1960), and Realm (1963), but in 1973, McKenna's talents finally began to be more fully documented. He led sets for Halycon, Shiah, Famous Door, Inner City (with vocalist Teddi King), and four for Chiaroscuro. And then in 1979 with No Bass Hit (a trio date with Scott Hamilton and Jake Hanna), McKenna debuted with Concord, finding his home. He has made many sessions for Concord ever since, some as a sideman or with small groups, but the best ones being unaccompanied recitals. In the mid-'90s Dave McKenna was at the top of his field. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi