Performance

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Current

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Current

Streams

Current

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Current

Popularity

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Top Releases

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Diga Diga Doo

149.1K streams

149,114

Ring Dem Bells (Remastered & Extended)

34K streams

34,014

Ring Dem Bells (Live)

32.8K streams

32,800

Hooray For Bix!

31.7K streams

31,677

Just for Fun - Singin' and Swingin'

30.2K streams

30,240

Just for Fun! (Live)

28K streams

28,042

Keep a Song in Your Soul

16.9K streams

16,922

Marty Grosz And His Hot Comb

15.2K streams

15,172

Rhythm Is Our Business

14.1K streams

14,146

Left to His Own Devices

3.6K streams

3,621

Biography

One of jazz music's great comedians (his spontaneous monologues are often hilarious), Marty Grosz is a brilliant acoustic guitarist whose chordal solos bring back the sound of Carl Kress and Dick McDonough of the 1930s, while his vocals are very much in the Fats Waller tradition. It took Grosz a long time to get some visibility. He grew up in New York, attended Columbia University, and in 1951 led a Dixieland band with Dick Wellstood that was unrecorded. Based in Chicago, Grosz did record with Dave Remington, Art Hodes, and Albert Nicholas in the 1950s; led sessions of his own in 1957 and 1959 for Riverside and Audio Fidelity; and tried his best to coax Jabbo Smith out of retirement (some of their rehearsals were later released on LP), but was pretty obscure until he joined Soprano Summit (1975-1979). After that association ended, Grosz became a busy freelancer on the classic jazz scene, playing with Dick Sudhalter, Joe Muryani, and Dick Wellstood in the Classic Jazz Quartet, and later heading the Orphan Newsboys, a superb quartet that also includes Peter Ecklund, Bobby Gordon, and bassist Greg Cohen. Marty Grosz, a unique personality, has recorded several delightful sets for Jazzology and Stomp Off. ~ Scott Yanow, Rovi