Artist's albums
A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square
2023 · single
Deep Cuts
2022 · album
When I Fall In Love
2022 · single
Christmas Snow
2021 · compilation
Christmas Fireplace
2021 · compilation
Winter Wonderland
2021 · compilation
The Christmas Song
2021 · single
Beegie Adair: The Collection
2021 · album
You've Got a Friend
2021 · single
Best Of Beegie Adair: Jazz Piano Performances
2021 · compilation
A Time For Love
2021 · single
Valentine's Day Jazz
2021 · album
Best Of Beegie Adair: Jazz Piano Christmas Performances
2020 · compilation
Escape to New York
2020 · album
Best Of Beegie Adair: Solo Piano Performances
2020 · compilation
Beegie Adair Collection
2020 · album
Let It Snow, Let It Snow, Let It Snow
2019 · single
Grover's Hat Project
2019 · album
By Request
2017 · album
The Ultimate Christmas Playlist
2016 · album
The Ultimate Romance Playlist
2016 · album
The Ultimate Playlist
2016 · album
Some Enchanted Evening
2016 · album
Piano Christmas
2015 · album
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Biography
Beegie Adair was a prolific, award-winning jazz pianist and arranger known for her interpretations of jazz and popular standards and show tunes. She sold over two million recordings globally. Her melodic, fleet-fingered style reflected the sounds of her major influences, including George Shearing, Bill Evans, Oscar Peterson, and Erroll Garner. Adair grew up in Cave City, Kentucky, where she began taking piano lessons at age five. She continued to study piano throughout college, earning a B.S. in music education at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green. During and after college, she played in jazz bands, and spent three years teaching music to children before moving to Nashville, where she became a session musician, working at WSM-TV and on The Johnny Cash Show (1969-1971). She and her husband also started a jingle company to write music for commercials. In 1982, Adair and saxophonist Denis Solee formed the Adair-Solee Quartet, which evolved into the Be-Bop Co-Op, a jazz sextet. In 1998, she released Escape to New York, her first trio-led date with a rhythm section consisting of Bob Cranshaw and Gregory Hutchinson. She signed to the fledgling Hillsboro label for 2001's Dream Dancing: The Songs of Cole Porter; bassist Roger Spencer and drummer Chris Brown joined her. Dream Dancing was the first of dozens of themed albums devoted to songwriters and singers. In 2002, she was named a Steinway Artist. Most of Adair's recordings have been issued by the independent jazz label Green Hill Productions. They include 2008's Yesterday: A Solo Piano Tribute to the Music of the Beatles, 2010's Swingin' with Sinatra, and 2012's The Real Thing (which spent 20 weeks on the jazz charts and was chosen one of the year's best 100 jazz albums). In 2015, her trio collaborated with saxophonist Don Aliquo on Too Marvelous for Words. From 2011 onward, Adair and her trio regularly played Birdland in New York. While visiting, they often collaborated with vocalist Monica Ramey. In the spring of 2016, that partnership bore fruit on the album Some Enchanted Evening. The following year saw Adair issue the compilation By Request, which featured her most requested and personal favorites. Beegie Adair died at her home in Franklin, Tennessee, on January 23, 2022; she was 84 years old. ~ William Ruhlmann, Rovi