Podcast appearances and mentions of jeremy harmon

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Best podcasts about jeremy harmon

Latest podcast episodes about jeremy harmon

PuroJazz
Puro Jazz 01 noviembre

PuroJazz

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 58:08


RUFUS REID CELEBRATION  - New York, September 15 & 16, 2019 Celebration, Cedar's blues, Tranescape Steve Allee (p) Rufus Reid (b) Duduka Da Fonseca (d) + Sirius String Quartet: Fung Chern Hwei, Gregor Huebner (vln) Ron Lawrence (viola) Jeremy Harmon (cello) NEIL SWAINSON 49TH PARALLEL  - Toronto, ON, Canada, May 2 & 3, 1987 49th parallel, Port of Spain, Homestretch (1) Woody Shaw (tp) Joe Henderson (ts-1) Gary Williamson (p) Neil Swainson (b) Jerry Fuller (d) PJ Noviembre 2023 GRACHAN MONCUR, III NEW AFRICA  - Paris, France, August 11, 1969 Queen Taman, New Africa, Black call, Ethiopian market Grachan Moncur, III (tb) Roscoe Mitchell (as,pic) Archie Shepp (ts-1) Dave Burrell (p) Alan Silva (b) Andrew Cyrille (d)

For the Greater Groove: The Future of Strings

A chat with my good friends in the Sirius Quartet, Chern Hwei and Gregor Huebner, violins, Ron Lawrence, viola and Jeremy Harmon, cello. They were in the studio on a lunch break, so I took advantage of the opportunity to get this globe-trotting foursome in the same room at the same time. We talk about arranging for string quartet, their influences from the non-classical world and then I quiz the Sirius Quartet about...Sirius Black from Harry Potter.

Speak Your Piece: a podcast about Utah's history
Season 2, Ep. 18: Utah's Story - 150 Years of Photography from the Salt Lake Tribune

Speak Your Piece: a podcast about Utah's history

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2021 53:45


April 12, 2021 (Season 2, Episode 18: 53:46 minutes). Click here for the Utah Department of Culture & Community Engagement show notes for this Speak Your Piece episode. The show notes includes additional links and sources.  Podcast Content:In celebration of the Salt Lake Tribune's 150th anniversary (1870-2020) as continuous newspaper published in Salt Lake City the “Trib” published in 2020, Utah's Story 150 Years of Photography from the Salt Lake Tribune, a collection of historical photographs and stories by Tribune photojournalists, taken from the 1890s to the present (photographs, actually a photomechanical reproduction of photographs, did not appeared in newsprint until the mid-1880s). See “Topics Discussed in Time” listed below.   Salt Lake Tribune's senior reporter and project editor Matt Canham, and then director of photography Jeremy Harmon, who is now director of photography and visuals at The Tennessean and USA TODAY's South Region, discusses both SYP staff picks and their own favorite images, from the hundreds of remarkable images published in Utah's Story. Canham and Harmon also discuss the Tribune's recent transition from profit to a not-for-profit newspaper entity (see “In historic shift…”)The impactful and timeless images found in Utah's Story 150 Years of Photography from the Salt Lake Tribune, cover a range of topics, events and communities, such as Utah's own late 19th and early 20th centuries industrial revolution and urban expansion, to the 2002 Utah Winter Olympics, to the 1983 controlled flood down SLC's State Street, to the 2020 social justice protests and the first half of the COVID-19 Pandemic.. Each photograph presented in this work was created by dedicated photojournalists intent on connecting and telling important current events to the SLC community and beyond.Speaker BiosMatt Canham is a senior reporter and project editor for the Salt Lake Tribune. Matt joined the agency in 2002 and has been with the Trib for 19 years. He has covered topics in politics and investigative projects with PBS Frontline. Matt was also a Washington Correspondent for 6 years, reporting on the federal government and Utah's members of congress.Jeremy Harmon was the director of photography at the Salt Lake Tribune for 13 years. As of spring 2021 Jeremy became director of photography and visuals for The Tennessean (Nashville) and USA TODAY's South Region. Harmon was also a key contributor to the Salt Lake Tribune's website “The Legacy of Joe Hill”. Jeremy has many interests which include the preservation and use of the Tribune's immense photographic archives (both analogue and digital).Additional Resources and Readings:Utah's Story 150 Years of Photography from the Salt Lake Tribune -- to buy a copy click here.

Interviews with Technical People
Ep 3: Jeremy Harmon: Island Hopping in Maine with a Plane

Interviews with Technical People

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2020 61:34


We are joined by Jeremy Harmon, a commercial pilot who flies to islands on the coast of Maine, and also a certified flight instructor specializing in tail wheel and float planes. Jeremy owns and operates a flight school called "Higher Ground Aviation", and also flies for Penobscot Island Air. We discuss a wide range of aviation topic related to small planes, flying in Maine, and the evolution of aviation techniques. Bonus conversation about how to find aviation fuel for your float plane on Maine lakes!More info on Jeremy's Flight School can be found at:http://highergroundaviationllc.com/andhttps://www.facebook.com/highergroundaviationAfter you have listened, please take our brief survey to provide feedback and help us improve the show going forward.

This Week with David Rovics
Discussion with Jeremy Harmon: Salt Lake City radicals

This Week with David Rovics

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2020 66:00


I spend the hour with Salt Lake Tribune photojournalist who has written extensively about Joe Hill, Ammon Hennacy and other notable radicals in Utah's sordid history, Jeremy Harmon.

Speak Your Piece: a podcast about Utah's history
Season 1, Ep. 12 (Part 2): Jeremy Harmon shares new insights about Joe Hill

Speak Your Piece: a podcast about Utah's history

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2020 27:12


Guest BioJeremy Harmon, Salt Lake Tribune Director of Photography (since 2007) has many interests, including the preservation and use of the Tribune's immense photographic holdings (both analogue and digital), which he oversees on a day-to-day basis.Harmon has also developed during the last six years a keen interest—following the well-established (but not so often followed in the digital world) journalistic tradition—of investigating and tracking down hard evidence. Harmon, and other Salt Lake Tribune reporters, have tracked down newspaper accounts, personal correspondence, police records, prison records, federal records and union records, all concerning Joe Hill (Swedish-American labor activist, songwriter, and member of the Industrial Workers of the World), who met his death in the Utah.Harmon was a key contributor to the Salt Lake Tribune's website “The Legacy of Joe Hill” and is passionate about Salt Lake City's untold stories.  SummaryHarmon describes the back drop of early 20th century industries, the vast world of immigrant workers (Hill was a Swedish immigrant), how they came to work on the railroads, and in Utah's mines and smelters. He describes the growth of unions in the West, especially the IWW or Wobblies, who maintained offices in Salt Lake City. Harmon then describes the killing of another immigrant some two weeks prior, by a Salt Lake police officer, which offers new insight into the Joe Hill story. Harmon then describes the crime (the murder of a grocer and his son on 773 South West Temple), Hill's arrest, his trial and his execution at Utah's State Penitentiary (now Sugarhouse Park).In segment two Harmon and “Speak Your Piece” host Brad Westwood, discuss the best history books to read on Hill, and the Salt Lake Tribune's website “The Legacy of Joe Hill” (all listed below). Harmon urges listeners not to read Pulitzer Prize winner Wallace Stegner's book Joe Hill (1969, described as a “biographical novel”) which Harmon thinks has done much harm for evidentiary-based history; notwithstanding the book's literary value. Harmon finally describes the most recently discovered primary sources, his and other's hypotheses regarding why Hill did not defend himself, and who he may have been protecting (a married women, his Swedish and labor union friends).URLs (book purchase links, associated exhibit, products, video links, etc.)The Salt Lake Tribunes “The Legacy of Joe Hill,” website includes a most assessable collection of accounts, primary sources, photographs, renditions of Hill's labor songs, and much more.Harmon's Pics: Buy them on-line or order a copy from your local bookstore.Franklin Rosemont, Joe Hill: The IWW and the Making of a Revolutionary Working Class Counterculture; Chicago: Charles H Kerr, 2003. ISBN: 9780882862644.William M. Adler,  The Man Who Never Died: The Life, Times, and Legacy of Joe Hill, American Labor Icon; New York: Bloomsbury, 2011. ISBN: 1596916966. Gibbs M Smith, Labor Martyr: Joe Hill; Layton, Utah: Peregrine Smith Books, 1969. ISBN: 0448011417. 

Speak Your Piece: a podcast about Utah's history
Season 1, Ep. 12 (Part 1): Jeremy Harmon shares new insights about Joe Hill

Speak Your Piece: a podcast about Utah's history

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2020 36:41


Guest BioJeremy Harmon, Salt Lake Tribune Director of Photography (since 2007) has many interests, including the preservation and use of the Tribune's immense photographic holdings (both analogue and digital), which he oversees on a day-to-day basis.Harmon has also developed during the last six years a keen interest—following the well-established (but not so often followed in the digital world) journalistic tradition—of investigating and tracking down hard evidence. Harmon, and other Salt Lake Tribune reporters, have tracked down newspaper accounts, personal correspondence, police records, prison records, federal records and union records, all concerning Joe Hill (Swedish-American labor activist, songwriter, and member of the Industrial Workers of the World), who met his death in the Utah.Harmon was a key contributor to the Salt Lake Tribune's website “The Legacy of Joe Hill” and is passionate about Salt Lake City's untold stories.  SummaryHarmon describes the back drop of early 20th century industries, the vast world of immigrant workers (Hill was a Swedish immigrant), how they came to work on the railroads, and in Utah's mines and smelters. He describes the growth of unions in the West, especially the IWW or Wobblies, who maintained offices in Salt Lake City. Harmon then describes the killing of another immigrant some two weeks prior, by a Salt Lake police officer, which offers new insight into the Joe Hill story. Harmon then describes the crime (the murder of a grocer and his son on 773 South West Temple), Hill's arrest, his trial and his execution at Utah's State Penitentiary (now Sugarhouse Park).In segment two Harmon and “Speak Your Piece” host Brad Westwood, discuss the best history books to read on Hill, and the Salt Lake Tribune's website “The Legacy of Joe Hill” (all listed below). Harmon urges listeners not to read Pulitzer Prize winner Wallace Stegner's book Joe Hill (1969, described as a “biographical novel”) which Harmon thinks has done much harm for evidentiary-based history; notwithstanding the book's literary value. Harmon finally describes the most recently discovered primary sources, his and other's hypotheses regarding why Hill did not defend himself, and who he may have been protecting (a married women, his Swedish and labor union friends).URLs (book purchase links, associated exhibit, products, video links, etc.)The Salt Lake Tribunes “The Legacy of Joe Hill,” website includes a most assessable collection of accounts, primary sources, photographs, renditions of Hill's labor songs, and much more.Harmon's Pics: Buy them on-line or order a copy from your local bookstore.Franklin Rosemont, Joe Hill: The IWW and the Making of a Revolutionary Working Class Counterculture; Chicago: Charles H Kerr, 2003. ISBN: 9780882862644.William M. Adler,  The Man Who Never Died: The Life, Times, and Legacy of Joe Hill, American Labor Icon; New York: Bloomsbury, 2011. ISBN: 1596916966. Gibbs M Smith, Labor Martyr: Joe Hill; Layton, Utah: Peregrine Smith Books, 1969. ISBN: 0448011417. 

Trib Talk
The NAACP is celebrating 100 years in Utah, but it’s history is just now being written | Episode 46

Trib Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2019 26:23


The NAACP is celebrating its 100th anniversary in Utah and an amazing — at times horrifying — journey it’s been. The civil-rights organization that aims to transform and unite communities began in the state in response to an act of violence. On this week’s episode of “Trib Talk,” Jeanetta Williams, longtime leader of the Salt Lake Chapter of the NAACP, Salt Lake Tribune reporter Courtney Tanner and Tribune director of photography Jeremy Harmon join Dan Harrie to explore the group’s fascinating history and continuing crucial role in our community, Listeners can also subscribe to “Trib Talk” on SoundCloud, iTunes and Apple Podcasts, Google Play, Stitcher, Spotify and other major podcast platforms. “Trib Talk” is produced by Sara Weber. Comments and feedback can be sent to tribtalk@sltrib.com, or to @danattrib or @tribtalk on Twitter.

Bourbon and BS Podcast
Bourbon and BS Episode 19

Bourbon and BS Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 15, 2018 147:36


Jake and Steve sit down with Jeremy Harmon and Dustin this week over some good conversation about music.  We sip on a budget bottle of Evan Williams Bottled in Bond while smoking something from our new sponsor, Altadis. Lighting up a H.Upmann Nicaragua by AJ Fernandez and discussing the importance of music in our lives.  Sit down, pour a drink, light up, and join us in the garage.

bond lighting bourbon aj fernandez evan williams bottled altadis jeremy harmon
Thanks For Giving A Damn
Episode 124: Joe Hill

Thanks For Giving A Damn

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2015 44:23


Jeremy Harmon of the Salt Lake Tribune talks about the life, death and legacy of iconic folk singer, Joe Hill.