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Today we wrap up Jazz Appreciation Month with GlenDronach 12-year scotch and Yamazaki 12-year Japanese whisky, as we share a legend who was gone far too soon- Clifford Brown. Few may know his name, but Brown was perhaps the greatest jazz trumpet player of all time when he was killed in a car accident at the age of 25. Join us as we learn about his life, his lasting legacy, and the music we're lucky enough to enjoy.
DescriptionRoyal Albert Hall: A Regal Stage for Icons in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop!Fun FactWhen Led Zeppelin played Royal Albert Hall in 1970, their performance was so powerful that the venue's management banned rock concerts for a while! Decades later, rock icons like Eric Clapton and David Bowie reclaimed the stage, proving the hall could handle both symphonies and screaming guitars.__________________________________________________________________About Steven, HostSteven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.__________________________________________________________________You can FOLLOW ME on Instagram.
Hour 1 of Jake & Ben on April 1, 2025 The Jazz picked up their 60th loss of the season last night, the first time ever they have lost that many games. Top 3 Stories of the Day: Isaiah Collier has broke John Stockton's rookie assist record, Ryan Smith committing to help build more ice rinks in Utah, BYU Women's basketball gets their guy. The G League is notorious for having great team names.
DescriptionCarnegie Hall: A Stage for Legends in 60 Seconds. Take a minute to get the scoop!Fun FactIn 1962, The Beatles were rejected by Decca Records, who claimed "guitar groups are on the way out." Two years later, they rocked Carnegie Hall in a sold-out show, proving just how wrong Decca was! Their performance was so wild that police had to hold back screaming fans.__________________________________________________________________About Steven, HostSteven is a Canadian composer & actor living in Toronto. Through his music, he creates a range of works, with an emphasis on the short-form genre—his muse being to offer the listener both the darker and more satiric shades of human existence. If you're interested, please check out his music website for more. Member of the Canadian League Of Composers.__________________________________________________________________You can FOLLOW ME on Instagram.
Hour 1 Starting Lineup: Jazz lose to the Kings but Walker Kessler had a monster game. NFL Combine is underway in Indianapolis. Gregg Popovich addressed the Spurs for the first time since suffering a stroke in November. Glad he's okay but it's time for him to hang it up. Hour 2 Utah Hockey Club insider Cole Bagley Good, Bad & Ugly Whole World News Hour 3 BYU radio PxP Greg Wrubell Sports Roulette Final thoughts
Tonight's Jazz Feature is a previously unissued concert with an early version of Miles Davis' "Second Great Quintet" . This concert was part of the Paris Jazz Festival and recorded on Oct.1,1964 at the Salle Pleyal. It features Miles Davis on trumpet, Wayne Shorter on tenor saxophone, Herbie Hancock on piano, Ron Carter on bass and the teenage genius on drums, Tony Williams. The repertoire is the same as Miles had been playing for several years but was being stretched in new ways. Eventually Miles would drop many of these tunes in favor of original compositions by himself and the band but that was in the future. Everyone here is in top form and Wayne Shorter is playing here with the same intensity as he did in his many years with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. Sit back and enjoy this never before heard music by one of the great bands in Jazz History.
Hour 2 of Jake & Ben on November 6, 2024 Taylor Hendricks suffered an injury that could significantly impact his young career. How have the Utah Jazz been impacted by something like this in the past? What You Got Wednesday: Best moments from BYU/Utah Rivalry games | Best Clint Eastwood Movies. Hear Greg Wrubell's Iconic Call from Jonny Harline's touchdown to beat Utah in 2006.
Guest: Rick DellaRatta, Founder, Jazz For PeaceOn LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/in/rick-dellaratta-08199818/On Twitter | https://twitter.com/jazzmgmtOn Mastodon | https://twitter.com/jazzmgmtOn Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/JazzforPeaceGrant/On TikTok | https://www.facebook.com/JazzforPeaceGrant/On Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/jazzforpeace/On YouTube | https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzDNcDwDyGlYM4ZrajSOODQ_____________________________Host: Marco Ciappelli, Co-Founder at ITSPmagazine [@ITSPmagazine] and Host of Redefining Society Podcast & Audio Signals PodcastOn ITSPmagazine | https://www.itspmagazine.com/itspmagazine-podcast-radio-hosts/marco-ciappelli_____________________________This Episode's SponsorsAre you interested in sponsoring an ITSPmagazine Channel?
Guest: Rick DellaRatta, Founder, Jazz For PeaceOn LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/in/rick-dellaratta-08199818/On Twitter | https://twitter.com/jazzmgmtOn Mastodon | https://twitter.com/jazzmgmtOn Facebook | https://www.facebook.com/JazzforPeaceGrant/On TikTok | https://www.facebook.com/JazzforPeaceGrant/On Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/jazzforpeace/On YouTube | https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCzDNcDwDyGlYM4ZrajSOODQ_____________________________Host: Marco Ciappelli, Co-Founder at ITSPmagazine [@ITSPmagazine] and Host of Redefining Society Podcast & Audio Signals PodcastOn ITSPmagazine | https://www.itspmagazine.com/itspmagazine-podcast-radio-hosts/marco-ciappelli_____________________________This Episode's SponsorsAre you interested in sponsoring an ITSPmagazine Channel?
Jake & Ben Full Show from August 7, 2024 Hour 1 Lauri Markkanen and the Utah Jazz have agreed on a five-year, $238 million dollar contract extension. Top 3 Stories of the Day: Lauri is tied down for at least another year, what's the next move for the Jazz? Also, BYU and Utah are two weeks into fall camp and Team USA crushed Brazil. Just let the hair go, man. Hour 2 Hear from Kalani Sitake and Kyle Whittingham during Week 2 of BYU and Utah Fall Camp. What You Got Wednesday: Best European Basketball Players of All-Time, Best First Big Purchases. Live reaction to a faceplant in the Olympic hurdles.
Lester Kiewit speaks to American jazz pianist and academi,c Darius Brubeck, who recently released his book, “Playing the Changes – Jazz at an African University and on the Road”, co-written with his South African wife Catherine Brubeck. The book chronicles the twenty-three years which they spent in South African from 1983 to 2005, during which he was a lecturer at the University of Natal (later University of Kwazulu-Natal) and also formed a number of student / staff bands which he took to perform at various venues nationally and internationally.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to the J&J on Jazz Podcast. This podcast was originally released on October 15th, 2021, on the Jeff Antoniuk - Educator YouTube channel. Please subscribe to the YouTube channel and feel free to enjoy the video version as well.FOR ALL INSTRUMENTS!In episode #25, James and Jeff talk about the history of this music, and if it is worth our time to go back to some earlier styles. Is there anything in swing music (dance music) that we can learn from? You might be surprised! Tune in and get tuned up. Mentioned in this podcast:• www.JazzWire.net - Since we announced JazzWire back in 2017, it has become an incredible Community of hundreds of adult musicians from over 25 different countries around the world. If you are looking for a plan for your practice, regular insights and wisdom on playing jazz, and a huge COMMUNITY of jazz players from around the world, this is the place for you! • J&J on Jazz - Many of the J&J episodes include a PDF (but not all!!). Just write us at J&JonJazz@gmail.com, and we'll offer you the pdf for the episode you're looking for if available (or all PDFs for a small price)! We will also put you on the list to receive each new pdf, weekly. Amazing practice ideas, every week, for free. What's not to love!?
Enrico Pieranunzi zählt zu den brillantesten Improvisatoren Europas, klassisch ausgebildet, aber auch offen für freiere Spielweisen. Ein moderner Pianist alter Schule, der mehr Alben als jeder andere Jazzmusiker unter eigenem Namen veröffentlicht hat. Von Karsten Mützelfeldt.
Frizz and Bob pop open a bottle of Old Forester 1910 and kick off Pride Month with the remarkable story you've probably never heard, about transgender jazz pianist Billy Tipton. Join us as we dig into a story of true heart and courage as we appreciate the tremendous untold journey of a pioneer.
Frizz and Bob conclude Jazz Appreciation Month by groovin' with a bottle of Australia's Starward whisky and digging into to the funkiest Jazz legend, Herbie Hancock, and his monumental album Head Hunters. Join us as we complain about getting older, unveil mistaken identities throughout history, Dance to the Music with Sly and the Family Stone, and slappa da keyboard.
Frizz and Bob continue Jazz Appreciation Month by digging into the first full-length record from Ella Fitzgerald AND Louis Armstrong, along with a bottle of New Orleans' finest, Sazerac Rye. Jazz it out with us as we chat about the impact of Ella and Louis individually and together, the great Norman Granz, the origins of some of jazz's most classic songs, Dukes of Hazard, and (finally) Doritos.
Frizz and Bob celebrate Bob's birthday by taking out a bottle of 7 year old Bakers and going back to early 1900s New Orleans to tell the untold story of Buddy Bolden. Together we'll learn the triumphant and tragic story of the man who invented jazz, his remarkable rise from cornet player to "King," and how his legacy lives on despite his heartbreaking demise. There will be cheers, tears, treats for your ears, and... some funky butts.
Utah Jazz PxP David Locke Good, Bad & Ugly Whole World News
Councilwoman Cerssandra McPherson and Mayor Kapszukiewicz ring in Black History Month talking about Toledo's Jazz History. Listen along as they discuss Toledo legends like Art Tatum, Jon Hendricks, and Rusty's Café. Glass City Jazz Fest comes back in August, but the spirit of Jazz is present year-round in Toledo!
This episode of The Other Side of the Bell, featuring jazz trumpeter/cornetist Marc Caparone, is brought to you by Bob Reeves Brass. Marc has been listening to classic jazz his entire life and is dedicated to keeping the traditions of the great early jazz trumpet players alive. His specialties are the jazz trumpet styles of the 1920's and ‘30s, and he also has a deep interest in jazz history that started when he began collecting records as a teenager. Marc has performed and recorded with many groups around the world including the High Sierra Jazz Band, Hal Smith's Rhythmakers with Rebecca Kilgore, Narvin Kimball's All Stars, Carl Sonny Leyland, Dave Stuckey's Hot House Gang, Dave Stuckey's Hoot Owls, Clint Baker's New Orleans Jazz Band, the Reynolds Brothers, The Western Swing All Stars and Barbara Dane, and with bands led by his wife, vocalist Dawn Lambeth. For several years Marc performed at Disney California Adventure as a member of the Ellis Island Boys. In addition to leading his own groups he has also put together groups to back up blues legends Little Charlie Baty and Duke Robillard. Marc is a regular member of the Holland-Coots Quintet, and Carl Sonny Leyland's Boogie Woogie Boys and leads the Sierra Stompers and the Back O Town All Stars. In 2022 he was inducted into the Western Swing Society Hall of Fame. To grab an appointment or find out more about Bob Reeves Brass at TMEA, use this link.
Catch “The Drive with Spence Checketts” from 2 pm to 6 pm weekdays on ESPN 700 & 92.1 FM. Produced by Porter Larsen. The latest on the Utah Jazz, Real Salt Lake, Utes, BYU + more sports storylines.
DJ & PK reacted to the Utah Jazz blowing out the Dallas Mavericks and Jordan Clarkson breaking a long streak for the team with a triple-double in the rout.
Tonight's Jazz Feature has been an important part of tonight's Christmas Jazz Show for many years and tradition will continue with the famous and lasting Christmas Eve (1954) recording session with the Miles Davis All-Stars. It's sometimes known as the "Bags' Groove Session" as that tune written by Milt Jackson is the opener. The All-Stars are of course, Miles Davis on trumpet, Milt Jackson on vibes, Thelonious Monk on piano, Percy Heath on bass and Kenny Clarke on drums. Four tunes were recorded and the session has gone into Jazz History as a very important document and timeless music. The men creating this music were just playing what they always played doing it so very well. The tunes are "Bags' Groove by Milt Jackson, Bemsha swing by Thelonious Monk, The Man I Love by the Gershwin Brothers, and Miles Davis', Swing Spring. The spirit of Christmas seems to be evident throughout the session without any actual reference to Christmas music, There will be more tributes to Christmas tonight so when the big day rolls around..... Merry Christmas to Jazz fans everywhere and to a brighter 2024.
As far as we can tell this is the first time in over 90 years that a phonograph has been broadcast on the radio. In this episode, we bring a newly restored phonograph Chase picked up in a collection and we Broadcast it LIVE over the airways. As far as we can tell this hasn't been done since the 1930's because no one is crazy enough to do this........ Please help us out by leaving a comment and sharing our show with others! Don't forget to Subscribe, Comment & leave us a rating and review. We also have a YouTube Channel "Chasing History" where we take you into the field with the men & women who discover history!
Brian Vaccaro graduated from Webster University in St. Louis in 1996 with a Bachelor's Degree in Music with an emphasis in Jazz Studies. He continued his education at Southern Illinois University at Edwardsville where he earned a Master's Degree in Music in Guitar Performance in 2000. Since completing his studies, Brian has been active as an educator as well as a performer. He has taught a variety of jazz and general music courses including Jazz History, Jazz Ensemble, Guitar Ensemble, Rock History, Private Guitar Study and numerous others at Lindenwood University, Southwestern Illinois College, St. Louis Community College, Grand Center Arts Academy and St. Charles Community College. In 2010, Brian received the Outstanding Adjunct Faculty award from St. Louis Community College at Meramec. Brian is now Executive Director of the 501c3 organization "St. Louis Classical Guitar". He has also performed and recorded with many of the top musicians in the St. Louis area. "Going Through the Motions", the debut album by the Brian Vaccaro Trio, was honored to be included in the "Notable Releases of 2011" list by noted critic and author W. Royal Stokes. Brian currently performs in and around the St. Louis area.
It's National Jazz Month, and we take a deep dive into Canada's rich Jazz history! Alan Matheson, a musician and Jazz historian with UBC, tells us about the roots of the genre in Canada and how it has evolved over the last few decades. HEY, DO YOU LIKE PODCASTS? Why not subscribe to ours? find it on Apple, Google, Spotify & Tune In
It's National Jazz Month, and we take a deep dive into Canada's rich Jazz history! Alan Matheson, a musician and Jazz historian with UBC, tells us about the roots of the genre in Canada and how it has evolved over the last few decades. Can a song be a hit if was made with Artificial intelligence? Canadian music correspondent Eric Alper tells us how computer-generated songs could shake up the music industry. RUOK with the Lost and Found? How about misleading tweets? HEY, DO YOU LIKE PODCASTS? Why not subscribe to ours? find it on Apple, Google, Spotify & Tune In
I have been looking forward to this one because I love music. I love all kinds of music, and today we are going to talk about Jazz. Jazz is one of the earliest forms of pop music in The United States and Jazz is a distinctively American style of music originating in the early decades of the 20th century. Its roots include Afro-American folk music traditions, such as spirituals, work songs, and blues. Jazz music is much more lively and upbeat than blues music. Jazz is often associated with swinging and swaying movements, lively atmospheres and improv. Lots of modern musicians will say they are greatly influenced by Jazz. Some of the great Jazz musicians include Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, John Coltrane, Bessie Smith, Fletcher Henderson, and Billie Holiday. In fact, Performers like Elvis Pressley, Chuck Berry, The Rolling Stones, The Doors, The Grateful Dead, and Aerosmith all talk about their Jazz influences. Music styles like Rock, R&B, Hip-hop, Latin, and others that produce a swaying rhythm have been influenced by Jazz. In today's podcast we have a very special guest, the very accomplished Loren Schoenberg. He is the Founding Director at The National Jazz Museum in Harlem, a published author, and teaches Jazz History at The Julliard School in NYC. Always more to learn. Talk to you soon.
Jazz, one of America's great art forms, has a decorated history in Boston. Charlie Parker performed here in the early '50s. Clubs from the Hi-Hat to Savoy Café lined the streets. And Miles Davis resuscitated his career here in 1981, playing a string of sold-out shows. Sue Auclair helped coordinate Davis' return. She described the moment she broke the news to Eric Jackson, who spearheaded decades of radio programming at GBH: "I said, 'You're not gonna believe this but Miles is coming to Boston.' I told him the details, he cut the music midstream — which no one ever does — and he announces this. ... We sold the thing out four nights." But the prevalence of jazz in Boston is not what it once was. From a change in culture to a lack of clubs and gentrification, Auclair and other Under the Radar guests discussed the past, present and future of jazz in Boston. Tessil Collins, host of the Jazz Gallery at GBH, laments today's lack of dedicated jazz venues. "When you look at these places, though, you're talking about playing jazz at a restaurant ... you're having a meal, people are talking, and there's a band over here in the corner doing background music," he said. "It's unfortunate that we have to settle for that." Gentrification and "nightclub apartheid" has impacted the scene as well, says George "Chip" Greenidge Jr., founder and director of the nonprofit Greatest MINDS. "12 years ago [I told a Boston Globe editor], 'Boston has this feeling where it's called nightclub apartheid.' ... You know, people of color are usually relegated on the Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday nights, and Friday, Saturday, Sundays will be given to, pretty much, white people," he said. "... So, we do have to talk about gentrification, we do have to talk about space and place and where people feel comfortable." Greenidge said there used to be more affordable entertainment options. Now, he says, there are few places to just "sit and enjoy yourself." GUESTS Sue Auclair, longtime jazz promoter and president of Sue Auclair Promotions, a Boston-based PR and marketing firm servicing the arts, entertainment and media industries Tessil Collins, host of The Jazz Gallery & managing producer of Jazz 24/7 online Radio at GBH George “Chip” Greenidge Jr., founder and director of the Greatest MINDS, a nonprofit that works with young students and professionals to become civic leaders
Tonight's Jazz Feature is in effect our final tribute to the passing of saxophonist/composer Wayne Shorter. The album is by Miles Davis and "The Second Great Quintet" with Miles Davis on trumpet, Wayne Shorter on tenor saxophone, Herbie Hancock on piano, Ron Carter on bass and the young master drummer, Tony Williams. The album represents the Quintet at a creative peak and as the band was very busy with engagements, it was the right time to enter the recording studio. The album was done in New York in June and July 1967. Three of the compositions are by Wayne Shorter and it's his compositions and concepts that kept the band very fresh. Wayne wrote "Nefertiti", "Fall" and "Pinocchio" and Hancock wrote "Riot" and "Madness" and Tony Williams wrote "Hand Jive". All in all a very important document by one of the finest ensembles in Jazz History and tonight's Jazz Feature.
In conversation with Marc Lamont Hill Professor emeritus of Music at the University of Pennsylvania, Guthrie P. Ramsey, Jr. is a celebrated musicologist, composer, pianist, and music historian. He is the author of Race Music: Black Cultures from Bebop to Hip-Hop and The Amazing Bud Powell: Black Genius, Jazz History and the Challenge of Bebop, the founder of the music blog Musiquology.com, and the former editor of the Music of the African Diaspora series at the University of California Press. Also a producer and bandleader, he has released numerous recordings, performed at venues around the world, written musical scores for various multimedia projects, and collaborated with museums and galleries such as The Whitney, The Museum of Modern Art, and the Staatliche Museen zu Berlin. In Who Hears Here?, Ramsey brings 25 years of his art, commentary, and scholarship to a collection of essays that explore the unique history of Black musical expression. (recorded 2/15/2023)
Lila Ammons has always been interested in stylings from the history of jazz. On her trio's show this Wednesday, January 11 at the Prior lake library, Lila presents historic blues as well as influences from bebop and right up to hip hop. When Lila talked to Phil Nusbaum, Lila first addressed the role of women in 1920s blues.
This week Authentically Detroit takes a look at the city's jazz legacy!Donna and Orlando sat down with Kevin Davidson, Director of Design and Fabrication at the Charles H. Wright Museum. They discuss the museum's latest companion exhibits, “Detroit Jazz: The Legacy Continues” and“Jazz Greats,” plus the future and legacy of the museum itself. For more information about the exhibits, click here. FOR HOT TAKES:PROSECUTOR WON'T CHARGE DETROIT OFFICERS IN PORTER BURKS'SHOOTING DEATH DETROIT TO INVEST $9MILLION IN PARKING LOTS FOR NEIGHBORHOOD BUSINESSES
Judith James Ries grew up in Wales Great Britain and was 4 when she started dancing at the Royal Academy of Dance. After moving to Minnesota with her family she continued training at Larkin Dance Studio.After choosing a business degree at the University of Minnesota, she made her way back to dance when she joined the Zenon Scholarship program where she met Danny Buraczeski.Judith spent ten years performing and touring nationally with JAZZDANCE! as soloist, principle dancer and company member - one of the best jobs ever! After leaving in 2002 to start a family Judith started her teaching career which lead her to Four Seasons Dance, Shattuck/St. Mary's, University of Minnesota, Gustavus, Adolphus College, Hamline University, Concordia University and Macalester College.As a Choreographer, her work has been produced by Zenon Dance Company, Hamline University Dance Ensemble, and Eclectic Edge Ensemble. As Movement Coach her work has been seen at Park Square Theater and the Phipps Center for the Arts.She joined the teaching staff of St. Paul Conservatory for Performing Artists in 2009 and has taught Jazz Dance, Jazz History, Jazz Improvisation, Social Dance, Choreography, Musical Theater Repertory and Directing in the Dance and Musical Theater departments. She is currently the Co-Chair of the Musical Theater department and is an Administrative Assistant to the Arts and Academic staff.
Mr. Henry and Mr. Fite travel through time to learn all about the history of jazz. Learn about the different styles of jazz that evolved throughout time. Even learn about Mr. Henry's and Mr. Fite's experience of playing jazz music! Thank you so much for listening to the show. Please leave us a review on iTunes! Send in your jokes by visiting our website www.themusicpodcastforkids.com ***Classroom and Homeschool Teachers*** Find our digital resource to help enhance your classroom HERE! Like us on Facebook! Check out the YouTube Channel! Mr. Fite Check out original fun and educational music from Mr. Fite at www.brucefite.com Mr. Henry Are you looking for affordable piano lessons for your 6-10-year-old? Start the music journey with Mr. Henry by taking a sneak peek into the Premier Membership with the free mini-piano course! https://www.mrhenrysmusicworld.com/piano Quiz Answers: Which style of jazz? Dixieland Jazz Free Jazz Jazz Fusion Bebop Jazz
This recording by Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers was not released until 2021 even though it was recorded in 1959. It is tonight's Jazz Feature and the theme of the five Mondays in the month of October will be albums that were never issued at the time of their recording. This marvelous Blakey album was never issued by Blue Note Records because the band, 6 weeks after this session was recorded, went into Blrdland, New York's leading Jazz club then and it was decided to record there in front of a great audience. Two volumes of music was issued and this session was therefore moot and shelved and forgotten. Tonight we hear this first session. The band includes the young 20 herald of the trumpet Lee Morgan in top form, Hank Mobley on tenor saxophone making a return to the band. Bobby Timmons is on piano and Jymie Merritt is on bass along side the great firestoker Art Blakey. Mobley wrote 3 of the 6 tunes and Timmons wrote 2. One good standard is heard as well. This is an important discovery of a long lost session by one of the great bands in Jazz History. The album is called "Just Coolin'" and is tonight's Jazz Feature.
This episode of Big Blend Radio's 4th Thursday "Jefferson Highway" Show focuses on the jazz history and current jazz scene along the historic Jefferson Highway. Created by the Jefferson Highway Association which was originally founded in 1915, the Jefferson Highway is an international highway, also known as "The Pines to the Palms Highway," that runs from Winnipeg, Canada to New Orleans, Louisiana. Learn more at: https://jeffersonhighway.org/ Featured guests include: - Roger Bell - President of the Jefferson Highway Association - Cynthia M. Ammerman - Historian & Humanities Strategist at the Latin Jazz Institute - Perry Huntoon - Jazz scholar, enthusiast, and writer Featured music on the show is "Bottom of the Bayou" by Jon Roniger and the Good for Nothin' Band in New Orleans. More: http://www.thegoodfornothinband.com/ Special thanks to the Natchitoches Convention and Visitors Bureau who represent Louisiana's Oldest City, which is also on the Jefferson Highway. See: https://www.natchitoches.com/
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• We started off the show by ranking the top 5 individual seasons in Jazz history. Where do the newer Jazz players rank among the great seasons of Stockton and Malone? Let us know your list! • We then broke down the All-NBA teams and talked about why Donovan and Rudy did not receive enough votes • We ended by forecasting who some of the toughest teams in the West will be for the Jazz --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/thehivesports/support
Alyn Shipton is a writer, publisher, broadcaster, and jazz double bassist. He has broadcast about jazz since 1989, and currently hosts BBC Radio 3's long-running and much-loved programmed Jazz Record Requests. His biographies of Dizzy Gillespie (1999) and singer-songwriter Harry Nilsson (2013) both won Association for Record Sound Collections (ARSC) Awards for Excellence; and Nilsson also gained an American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) Foundation Deems Taylor/Virgil Thompson Award. His New History of Jazz (2001) was the Jazz Journalists' Association (JJA) book of the year' by the Jazz Institute of Chicago. His most recent work, The Art of Jazz: A Visual History (2020), was described as ‘indispensable' by Publishers Weekly. He co-leads the Buck Clayton Legacy Band, and is a research fellow of the Royal Academy of Music in London (where he teaches Jazz History to Emma Rawicz). In this episode, Alyn shares his background, education, and musical journey. If you enjoyed this episode please make sure to subscribe, follow, rate, and/or review this podcast on Spotify, Apple Podcast, Google Podcast, ect. Connect with us on all social media platforms and at www.improvexchange.com
For as long as there's been jazz music, there's been jazz music in Montclair. Long before the DLV Lounge was a venue for jazz music, it was a welcome home for musicians, and for the Black community as Montclair lived its own struggles and triumphs with integration. The lounge celebrated its 50th anniversary this month. Owner George Marable, 83, and jazz historian Bruce Tyler sat down with Shane Paul Neil for the latest edition of "Our Montclair," Montclair Local's video and podcast series exploring the art, activism, culture and lived experience of Montclair. See the video and read the story @ Montclair Local: https://www.montclairlocal.news/jazz-music-black-community-and-50-years-of-montclairs-dlv-lounge-our-montclair/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week in Part 2 of our examination of Women in Jazz History who are no longer with us. We'll listen to classic songs by Ella, Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday, Blossom Dearie, Susannah McCorkle and Betty Carter among others. So join me this week as we celebrate Women in History Month on Jazz Unlimited with Paul Anthony.
This week and for the rest of the month we'll be paying tribute to Women's History Month with some great jazz performers. This first part features those living singers including Roseanna Vitro, Cassandra Wilson, Cecile McLorin Salvant, Patricia Barber, Roberta Gamborini and youngsters like 27 year old Veronica Swift, and 30 year old Jazzmeia Horn among others. Help us celebrate Women's History Month by featuring a few of the outstanding women who perform in this very demanding medium of jazz on Jazz Unlimited with Paul Anthony
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/09/08/arts/music/phil-schaap-dead.html?campaign_id=2&emc=edit_th_20210909&instance_id=39958&nl=todaysheadlines®i_id=13091549&segment_id=68457&user_id=ed9a06ca65538cc83bce8255ddb90265 Today's guest has won six Grammy awards and eight Grammy nominations including an award for , “Best Album Notes for Bird - The Complete Charlie Parker On Verve. Frank Foster has called him "a walking jazz history book". Early in his career he managed the Basie alumni band, The Countsmen and for 17 years ran the Jazz at The West End jazz room on Broadway at 114th St in New York City. He attended Columbia University and during his freshman year began broadcasting jazz on the Columbia University radio station, WKCR-FM, and he has been a radio broadcaster ever since.The jazz critic Stanley Crouch once wrote that, “There is no person in America more dedicated to any art form than today's guest is to jazz. He is the Mr. Memory of jazz, and, as with the Mister memory character in “The Thirty-Nine Steps,” the Hitchcock movie, there are those who think he ought to be shot. He can get on your nerves, but, then, you can get on his.” It is my honor to introduce today's guest, Phil Schaap. Welcome to the show Phil.
Adam Silver held a call with the NBA players and touched on many of the main items on the return to play plan. David Locke, the radio voice of the Utah Jazz and NBA Insider, talks through those notes and what it means for the NBA. The theme of the week is What if in Jazz history. The famed non Rony Seikaly trade and if it would have made a difference for the Utah Jazz. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
David Locke, radio voice of the Utah Jazz and Jazz NBA Insider, shares being on a call with Matt Delvadova and Scott O'Neil, CEO of the 76ers and what he learned about the NBA returning and how the game would be different. Then Tony Parks joins the show to go down memory lane of forgotten great Jazz games. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Utah Jazz Dennis Lindsey spoke to the media about Rudy Gobert and Donovan Mitchell. Hear what he had to say. David Locke, the radio voice of the Utah Jazz and Jazz NBA insider takes a listen and shares his thoughts on what is taking place. Then Locke looks at why he hopes we don't watch Korean baseball and the all the players that were the next Michael Jordan's. The next installment of the greatest games in Utah Jazz history is Carlos Boozer's game 7 v. the Houston Rockets with his 35 points and 14 rebounds. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
David Locke, the radio voice of the Utah Jazz and Jazz NBA Insider, builds off comments he has been making about optimism about the NBA season based on comments from Woj on SVP on ESPN last night. Then the series on biggest wins in franchise history continues with a look back to 1984 and the Jazz first ever playoff series win. Then are the 1996-97 Utah Jazz team really the best team to not win a title. Locke thinks it might have been the Rockets with Chris Paul. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Sports were played this weekend, David Locke the radio voice of the Utah Jazz and Jazz NBA Insider, takes a look at a sporting event that actually happened. Then a few thoughts on the Last Dance, episodes 3 and 4 before moving to the final of the best 5 wins this year by the Jazz and then starting a series on best wins in Jazz history Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
David Locke, radio voice of the Utah Jazz and Jazz NBA Insider is joined by Mike Snarr, 28 year veteran from the Utah Jazz business side and author of Long Shots and Layups. They go back through some Jazz history as well as stories about Larry H Miller, Gail Miller, Hot Rod Hundley, the evolution of the organization and of course the NBA Finals.Locke opens the show with some great respect for Rudy Gobert and then looks at two players he suspects will have a strong close to the season.Locked on Jazz is brought to you by Murdock Hyundai and Slow the Flow Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices