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Producing a historical recording requires enormous patience, investigative powers like an investigative journalist. The journey is long, emotional, and exciting when the recordings are discovered, and the final package completed. This is what Zev Feldman does. He is the producer for and co-president of Resonance Records, a record label that releases archival recordings that are previously unissued. The Resonance catalogue includes John Coltrane, Bill Evans, Wes Montgomery, Freddie Hubbard, among many other legendary musicians. In this episode, Zev Feldman and I discuss his insights into his multifaceted career, how he got started in the music industry and his subsequent journey through various roles in sales, marketing, and ultimately producing rare jazz recordings. Feldman works with numerous other labels including Blue Note, Verve Label Group, Elemental Music as well as own his own labels, Jazz Detective and Deep Digs. Feldman spins many stories about his adventures in discovering music long forgotten. It's music that is not just good; it must be GREAT! Curating legacy music requires a sense of understanding about the elements of a dynamic recording, one that exceeds others in the quality of the performance, the importance of a certain date, and the historical aspect of the show or studio recording. Then there is the emotional involvement with the families of these jazz legends, many of whom become close friends, such as it has with the families of jazz guitar legend Wes Montgomery (Zev produced the first archival recording of Wes Montgomery for Resonance) and piano virtuoso Bill Evans as Feldman is just releasing his 13th archival recordings of Bill Evans. Then there is the importance of Record Store Day on April 12. Feldman highlights the significance of this little-known observed day in bringing these projects to life. This episode is rich with music, thanks to Zev Feldman and Resonance Records. There is more than 36 minutes of full tracks of music along with clips of recordings discussed. The playlist includes: Freddie Hubbard-On Fire, “True Colors-Breaking Point Closer” (13:32); Freddie Hubbard-trumpet, Bennie Maupin-tenor saxophone, Kenny Barron-piano, Herbie Lewis-bass, Freddie Waits-drums. Charles Mingus-Mingus in Argentina-The Buenos Aires Concerts, “Duke Ellington's Sound of Love” (9:32), Charles Mingus-bass, Ricky Ford tenor saxophone, Jack Walrath-trumpet, Robert Neloms -piano, and Dannie Richmond-drums. Kenny Dorham-Blue Bossa in the Bronx: Live from the Blue Morocco, “Blue Bossa”, (13:31), Kenny Dorham-trumpet, Sonny Red-alto sax, Cedar Walton-piano, Paul Chambers-bass and Denis Charles-drums. Short music clips: Charles Mingus-"Pork Pie Hat", Freddie Hubbard-"Crisis", Kenny Dorham-Blue Friday, Bill Evans-"Ro(u)nd Midnight". Thank you for listening to this podcast. I know you have many others to listen to, but you chose Strictly Jazz Sounds. When you subscribe you become one of the first to hear new episodes, read articles, see new photos, and learn of my annual “Best of” list. Soon, I will introduce a Patreon opportunity, your way of saying thanks to me for spending the more than 25 hours per episode to bring it to you. Photo by Zak Shelby-Szyszko
Tiger Talk Podcast by Northeast Mississippi Community College
After taking a week off following the 200th TigerTalk episode, Northeast president Dr. Ricky Ford returns with a quick 9 1/2 minute podcast to update all listeners on everything Northeast Mississippi Community College. Ford announces that the college is looking at renovating its residential housing for students and will start with new air conditioning/dehumidifying units in Yarber and Murphy halls, as well as taking a deeper look at how the residence halls can be renovated to play an even more critical role in the recruiting process of the college. In addition to renovating the dorms, Ford talks about the ongoing Outdoor Classroom project, changes to the Gaye Roden Carr Aquatic Center, and a new roof at Northeast at New Albany as the college continues to look for ways to make the college more appealing to students. Ford also discusses the significant changes to the Student Success Center in Wright Hall and how the changes will make the space more user-friendly. In addition to extra staff, the Student Success Center will also house the newly-founded Employee Development Center. Ford also announced that the college is running ahead of enrollment numbers from the Fall 2021 and Fall 2020 numbers, with the college experiencing an almost 400-student jump in Fall 2022 numbers as compared to Fall 2021 enrollment at the same time. Ford talks about the need to continue pushing enrollment for the fall and reminds those who have not paid their fees to do so and those who are looking to come back to school...to call the Financial Aid Department and find out when the deadlines for applying are. Ford announces a $40,000 grant that will help health science students remove barriers from their lives and help them obtain their educational goals. In a discussion about the recent spike in COVID numbers, Ford talks about what the college is doing to mitigate the spread of COVID, the plans for the fall and how each person can help stop the spread of COVID.
This content is for Members only. Come and join us by subscribing here In the meantime, here's some more details about the show: It's a warm welcome then to the man himself: Dr. Brad Stone - the JazzWeek Programmer of the Year 2017, who's here every Thursday to present The Creative Source - a two hour show, highlighting jazz-fusion and progressive jazz flavours from back then, the here and now, plus occasional forays into the future. Please feel free to get in touch with Brad with any comments or suggestions you might have; he'll be more than happy to hear from you: brad@soulandjazz.com or follow him via Facebook or Twitter. Enjoy! The Creative Source 19th May 2022 Artist - Track - Album - Year Hendrik Meurkens The WDR Big Band A Night in Jakarta Samba Jazz Odyssey 2022 Ben Sidran Lullaby of the Leaves Swing State 2022 Chicago Soul Jazz Collective Meets Dee Alexander On the Way to Be Free On the Way to Be Free 2022 Caeser Frazier Dat Dere Tenacity: As We Speak 2022 Hard Bop Messengers Roof Top View Live at the Last Hotel 2022 Ricky Ford The Stockholm Stomp The Wailing Sounds of Ricky Ford: Paul's Scene 2022 The U.S. Air Force Band "Airmen of Note" Life Cycles (feat. Sean Jones) The 2022 Jazz Heritage Series 2022 Jeremy Pelt Be the Light Soundtrack 2022 Joey Alexander Remembering Origin 2022 Lynne Arriale Trio The Notorious RBG The Light's Are Always On 2022 Will Bernard Pond Life Pond Life 2022 Alternative Guitar Summit Joyous Lake (feat. Nir Felder and Oz Noy) Honoring Pat Martino, Vol. 1 2022 Harry Skoler Goodbye Pork Pie Hat Living Sound: The Music of Charles Mingus 2022 Marcello Carelli Distractions The Era 2022 Steve Davis Bedford Strolle Bluesthetic 2022 Yelena Eckemoff The Wine of Astonishment I Am a Stranger Here Myself 2022 Ches Smith Morbid Interpret It Well 2022 The post The Creative Source (#CreativeSource) – 19th May 2022 appeared first on SoulandJazz.com | Stereo, not stereotypical ®.
Cody talks about Robert Glasper's "Covered", Rupa's "Disco Jazz", Godfingaz' "Revenge of the Fingaz", and Ricky Ford's "Tenor for the Times". --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/cody-hollifield/message
Co-hosts Paul J. Heney and Aimee Kalnoskas, editors with R&D World magazine, are day drinking — in the name of science! On this fascinating episode, they delve into a 2020 R&D 100 Award winner, Persedo, which has developed an innovative technology that produces an ultra-premium spirit at a much lower cost than standard methods. Paul and Aimee not only hear from Persedo's Ricky Ford and Greg George on the genesis of this technology, but they try before and after samples of distilled spirits that have gone through the process.
In this episode, we bring you Ricky Woodard, Ricky Ford and Rahsaan Roland Kirk. Some may find this a bit modern, but it's very listenable with great talent.
The Governor extends his mask mandate and provides guidance for high school activities.Then, one Mississippi community college has hundreds of students quarantined after an outbreak. We check in with the college's President.Plus, some 19th century painters are making an "impression" at the Mississippi Museum of Art.Segment 1:Governor Tate Reeves is extending his executive orders, which include a statewide mask mandate and social distancing, until the end of August. Reeves made the announcement last week during a press briefing. He says he is encouraged by the decline in daily cases over the last week, and encourages residents to remain diligent. Reeves also sees the downward trend as a promising sign for high school and college athletics. He says many students need sports or activities as a motivator to maintain grades and succeed. Segment 2:Hundreds of students at a community college in North Mississippi are quarantined after a coronavirus outbreak during the first week of school. Nearly 300 students who began in-person classes at Northeast Mississippi Community College in Booneville last week are now quarantined after at least nine cases of COVID-19 were confirmed on campus. Also in quarantine are more than 25 employees. College President Dr. Ricky Ford, tells our Ashley Norwood the high number in quarantine are result of the response measures the college has put in place to limit transmission.Segment 3:After briefly closing during the early months of the pandemic, the Mississippi Museum of Art is back - welcoming patrons to a variety of galleries. On view now through January 10 - Van Gogh, Monet, Degas, and Their Times: The Mellon Collection of French Art from the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts showcases major schools of French art including Romanticism, Impressionism, and Cubism spanning 150 years. Betsy Bradley is Director of the Museum. She says the beauty and color of the new exhibit is a great way to welcome visitors back. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Persedo. Ricky Ford, President.Traditional distillation and barrel aging deliver great spirits. And we respect tradition. But consumption habits are changing. Your customers demand smooth and more approachable tastes, with less burn; the kind of taste you can only get with premium and super-premium spirits. To deliver that premium quality of aged spirits quickly and cost-effectively, you must remove certain inferior alcohols and create desired esters (before or after barreling) without the loss of volume from ever-extended barrel time. To produce a premium vodka or gin from neutral spirits, additional distillation and filtration is the standard protocol today. Instead, you can realize 20% more volume, use less energy and reach premium quality much faster using the Persedo Polishing Technology. Topics:YouTube ads of 100 top brands fund climate misinformation – study | Technology | The GuardianGary Starkweather, Inventor of the Laser Printer, Dies at 81 – The New York TimesDRAM breakthrough puts us one step closer to instant-on PCs | PC GamerFor full show notes, check out ComputerAmerica.com!
Jack Hersch - Writer, Persedo President - Ricky Ford’ turning bottom shelf liquors into top shelf and also John Hodge, Managing Partner, Americas at Miramar Global,SBD
Jack Hersch - Writer, Persedo President - Ricky Ford’ turning bottom shelf liquors into top shelf and also John Hodge, Managing Partner, Americas at Miramar Global,SBD
Meet the cocktail pros at The Monarch Bar in Kansas City who just won "Best Cocktail Bar in America" award + Secrets of Alcohol w Ricky Ford CEO of www.persedo.com
Bottom-shelf liquor is hard for a lot of people to swallow (literally), but premium brands are too tough on the pocketbook for many people.Now – like magic – Texas-based spirits technology company Persedo has a solution: a way for both craft distillers and major producers to create vodkas, gins and other spirits that taste like special reserve or super premium products without the high price tag.For more information visit:https://www.persedo.com/https://twitter.com/persedo1https://www.linkedin.com/company/persedo-llc/about/
Tiger Talk Podcast by Northeast Mississippi Community College
In episode 88, host Will Kollmeyer welcomes three guests for in-the-field interviews from the Northeast at Ripley groundbreaking -- Northeast president Dr. Ricky Ford, the Chairman of the Board for The Peoples Bank of Ripley Bobby Martin and Chief Architect Rud Robison, Jr. of PryorMorrow. During his portion of the interview, Ford talks about the benefits for not only the college but the city of Ripley and people of Tippah County with the addition of the Ripley center. Martin echoes Ford's remarks and reminisces about the changes that Ripley and Northeast have seen over the past 60 years and how a Northeast at Ripley center will be used. Robison, a NEMCC graduate, gives the finish date for the center and also talks about how Northeast prepared him for becoming one of the top architects in the South. In the second half of the podcast, diesel power technology instructor Jonathan Alexander stops by to talk about two important events involving his program. First, the dedication of Gayle T. Davis Hall (the old Ryder building on North Second Street) and the Higher Education Achieves Demonstrative Skills (HEADS) Festival. Alexander's diesel power technology program will be relocating to Gayle T. Davis Hall soon and will give up their home in Vo-Tech Building #3 for a new, spacious learning environment and will celebrate the naming of the building at 2:30 p.m. on Tuesday, October 8. During the HEADS Festival, Northeast will welcome over 3,000 ninth through twelfth-grade students to campus for a one-day event that showcases our career and technical education programs. Between the segments, Kollmeyer gives a rundown of events that are happening in the next 10 days and also mentions a few events to be on the lookout for later in the month. Don't forget that we have also started a YouTube account, http://bit.ly/NEMCCTigerTalkYouTube , and we will be putting all our podcasts on our YouTube channel as time allows. Future guests on the podcast, do not fret; this is an audio-only YouTube account with the video produced by the Headliner App. As always, if you have any podcast ideas or want to be a guest on the podcast, drop us a line and we can get you set up to be on an upcoming episode of TigerTalk.
Tiger Talk Podcast by Northeast Mississippi Community College
The summer is over and the TigerTalk podcast returns to its weekly scheduled time with Northeast president Dr. Ricky Ford and host Will Kollmeyer discussing a myriad of topics about the college from Ford's expectations for the 2019-2020 school year to what is next for the college as it concerns technology and also a brief discussion on athletics, the Showband from Tigerland and where the president would like to see the college in the next year to five years. Between the segments, Will Kollmeyer gives a rundown of all the events that are happening on campus before the beginning of the school year and some major dates that people need to know about when they return to campus. Don't forget that we have also started a YouTube account, http://bit.ly/NEMCCTigerTalkYouTube , and we will be putting all our podcasts on our YouTube channel as time allows. Future guests on the podcast, do not fret; this is an audio-only YouTube account with the video produced by the Headliner App. As always, if you have any podcast ideas or want to be a guest on the podcast, drop us a line and we can get you set up to be on an upcoming episode of TigerTalk.
Tiger Talk Podcast by Northeast Mississippi Community College
As with the summer podcast schedule, the TigerTalk podcast is trying something different and delivering news, events and interviews every two weeks instead of weekly during the summer months of June and July. However, so that listeners feel like they are getting their monies worth from the podcast, this week includes three guests with events and happenings scattered throughout the podcast. So, be listening for those events between interviews. In the first part of the three-part podcast, Beth Benson joins the podcast to talk about everything that recruiting is doing the summer and how they are preparing for the fall. Benson talks about being one of the first faces that prospective students sees -- whether it is on campus, in a high school or at a recruiting event -- and the need to have a positive and caring attitude. Benson also talks about how important the Tiger Ambassadors are the recruiting office and their official roles as they welcome prospective students to campus and give them tours alongside Georgie Carroll, Rochelle Jenkins and Benson in the recruiting office and...Benson gives a brief look at the fall schedule as the recruiting office gears up for its annual treks to area high schools and also the Northeast NOW recruiting events. In the middle portion of the podcast, Randy Baxter stops in for a chat about the Northeast Police Department and the role it plays on campus. Baxter reminds students about the premium parking on the boulevard and that it is actually cheaper to pay for premium parking than to rack up parking tickets. However, Baxter also focuses on other aspects of college life that many do not know the police department officers such as flat tire fixes, vehicle unlocks and jumpstarts for dead vehicles. In addition to being good community servants, Baxter relays some important safety tips to not just students but employees and reminds people of the importance of being aware of their surroundings at all times. In the final portion of the three-part podcast, Robbie Coleman chats about her first few days as the new division head for the division of social, behavioral and applied sciences and her transition from being an adjunct accounting teacher to in the classroom and now to the division head. Coleman also talks about her first experience at Northeast and how Northeast has shaped her life. Coleman, who played for Northeast president Ricky Ford, recalls her time on the basketball court and also how the Northeast family came to her aid after a National Tournament injury and how she tries to continue that Northeast Family connection with this generation of students. Between the interviews, Will Kollmeyer gives a rundown on the camps that will be happening at the college throughout the summer, traffic updates and everything that will be happening on the Northeast campus in the next two weeks. Along with changing the format of the podcast, for the ones that have a YouTube accounts, we have also started a YouTube account, http://bit.ly/NEMCCTigerTalkYouTube , and we will be putting all our podcasts on our YouTube channel as time allows. Future guests on the podcast, do not fret; this is an audio-only YouTube account with the video produced by the Headliner App. As always, if you have any podcast ideas or want to be a guest on the podcast, drop me or Will a line and we can get you set up….but with the new system of only three guests per show, every two weeks…slots are limited…so get your requests in early.****
Carmen Lundy, ha sido comparada con Aretha Franklin, Ella Fitzgerald y Sarah Vaughan. Es hermana del bajista Curtis Lundy. En 1980 formó su propio trío, actuando con pianistas de la talla de John Hicks y Onaje Gumbs. También ha tocado con Walter Bishop Jr., Don Pullen, Mulgrew Miller, Billy Childs, Terri Lyne Carrington, Kip Hanrahan, Courtney Pine, Marian McPartland, y la banda Quasimode. Lundy ha compuesto y publicado más de cuarenta canciones. Sus composiciones han sido grabadas por artistas como Kenny Barron (“Momentos de silencio”), Ernie Watts (“Al Final de Mi Cuerda”), y Straight Ahead (“Never Gonna Let you Go”). Su primer álbum, Good Morning Kiss (1985) mostró varias composiciones originales, y fue reeditado en el año 2002. Su segundo álbum fue Night and Day (1986), y contó con músicos como Kenny Kirkland (piano), Alex Blake (bajo), Curtis Lundy (bajo), Victor Lewis (batería), Rodney Jones (guitarra), Ricky Ford (saxo tenor). Carmen Lundy desempeñó el papel principal en la gira Europea del musical de Broadway, Damas Sofisticadas con música de Duke Ellington. En la escena Off-Broadway ella retrató a Billie Holiday en la obra de Lawrence Holder They Were All Gardenias. Hizo su debut televisivo en la CBS con Shangri-La Plaza (1990), en el papel de Ginebra.
14e émission de la 41e émission... Cette semaine, départ en hard bop, jazz moderne et avant-jazz! En musique: Ricky Ford sur l'album Manhattan Plaza (Muse, 1978); Cory Weeds Quintet sur l'album Live at Frankie's Jazz Club (Cellar Live, 2019); Matthias Spillman Trio sur l'album Live at the Bird's Eye Jazz Club (Clean feed, 2019); Kendrick Scott Oracle sur l'album A Wall Becomes a Bridge (Blue Note, 2019); Maddison Carter Quintet sur l'album Elbow Room (Indépendant, 2019); Ratchet Orchestra sur l'album Coco Swirl (Ambiances Magnétiques, 2019)...
14e émission de la 41e émission... Cette semaine, départ en hard bop, jazz moderne et avant-jazz! En musique: Ricky Ford sur l'album Manhattan Plaza (Muse, 1978); Cory Weeds Quintet sur l'album Live at Frankie's Jazz Club (Cellar Live, 2019); Matthias Spillman Trio sur l'album Live at the Bird's Eye Jazz Club (Clean feed, 2019); Kendrick Scott Oracle sur l'album A Wall Becomes a Bridge (Blue Note, 2019); Maddison Carter Quintet sur l'album Elbow Room (Indépendant, 2019); Ratchet Orchestra sur l'album Coco Swirl (Ambiances Magnétiques, 2019)...
This Hot Box is a retrospective of music by the late Roy Hargrove, who died on November 2nd 2018 aged just 49. Roy Hargrove was a hard bop-oriented musician (and acclaimed "Young Lion") who became one of America's premier trumpeters during the late '80s and beyond. A fine, straight-ahead player who spent his childhood years in Texas, Hargrove met trumpet virtuoso Wynton Marsalis in 1987, when the latter musician visited Hargrove's high school in Dallas. Impressed with the student's sound, Marsalis allowed Hargrove to sit in with his band and helped him secure additional work with major players, including Bobby Watson, Ricky Ford, Carl Allen, and the group Superblue. Hargrove attended Berklee for one year (1988-1989) before decamping to New York City, where his studio career took flight.
Tiger Talk Podcast by Northeast Mississippi Community College
In this fifty-fourth (54th) edition of the TigerTalk podcast presented by Northeast Mississippi Community College, host Will Kollmeyer welcomes NEMCC president Ricky Ford back to the podcast as he stops in for the first time since the initial podcast over a year ago. Ford hits on a wide range of topics in his interview including the success of Northeast in the national spotlight, the rankings the college has received in the past year, the dedication of the court inside Bonner Arnold Coliseum and technology advancements at the college.
Tiger Talk Podcast by Northeast Mississippi Community College
We are rolling into Year Two of the TigerTalk Podcast at Northeast Mississippi Community College and last week's episode kicked off Year Two, this week's episode helps us celebrate reaching the 50-episode milestone. Thanks to all of our wonderful guests and listeners who have been on this trek together along the way. So without further ado, in this fiftieth (50th) episode of the TigerTalk podcast presented by Northeast Mississippi Community College, host Will Kollmeyer welcomes Lady Tiger head basketball coach Brenda Mayes to the studio to not only talk about the Lady Tigers and how they have faired in preseason competition this year against some top-ranked talent in Missouri and at the East Central Jamboree but to give us a preview of the 2018-19 season along with in-depth analysis and player breakdowns on each one of the Lady Tigers. Mayes also talks about the upcoming court dedication on Tuesday, November 27 where the court in the Bonner Arnold Coliseum will be renamed in honor of long-time Lady Tiger head coach and current Northeast president Ricky Ford. In the second half of this week's program, Kollmeyer welcomes Zowee Shanks to the podcast to talk about her advocacy group on campus that has enabled 35 Northeast students to be leaders on campus in a Northeast FLIP campaign. In addition to talking about what they are doing on campus, Shanks gives us insight into a major event happening on Saturday, November 3 when Survivor: Season 29 finalist Missy Payne comes to campus to give her experience to youth 12-18 and also help them in some Survivor-type games on the lawn in front of the Ramsey Student Services Building from 1-3 p.m. Payne's speech starts at 10 a.m. that day. Kollmeyer wraps up the podcast with a new addition to the publication -- an extended version of what is coming up on campus that details events happening on and around the Northeast campus in a daily breakdown. It contains one of the most comprehensive lists of events and happenings on campus -- so if you have an event or happening on campus and want it mentioned on the podcast, please reach out. If you haven't subscribed to the podcast, now would be a good time to subscribe to stay up-to-date on all the happenings on the Northeast campuses and hear in-depth interviews with guests each week.
Tiger Talk Podcast by Northeast Mississippi Community College
In this initial episode of the Tiger Talk podcast, host Will Kollmeyer welcomes Northeast president Ricky Ford to the show, vice president of institutional advancement and executive director of the development foundation and alumni association Patrick Eaton, associate vice president for career technical programs/division head of Business and Engineering Technology Jason Mattox along with the weekly spotlight of what is coming up at Northeast with Kenny Paul Geno.
The music of Abdullah Ibrahim is always intriguing and impressive and this band of his called "Ekaya" (South African for "home") reflects his compositional skills over his magnificent piano playing. He takes on the role that Duke Ellington did with his band....leading and accompanying rather than featuring his piano stylings. The band consists of a whole raft of great players beginning with trombonist Dick Griffin, alto saxophonist and flutist, Carlos Ward, tenor saxophonist Ricky Ford and baritone saxophone great, Charles Davis. The rhythm is provided by bassist David Williams and drummer Ben Riley. There are 8 compositions by Ibrahim all reflecting his South African heritage and the set begins with the magnificent and majestic "Mandela". This album is perhaps the very best set that Ekaya released and it's called "Water From an Ancient Well" It's an important document that reflects just one side of the great Abdullah Ibrahim.
This is arguably Charles Mingus' last great recording. It was done at two separate sessions. One composition was done in 1976 with his working band of the time with Jack Walrath (trumpet), George Adams (tenor saxophone), Danny Mixon (piano) and of course Dannie Richmond on drums and Mingus on bass. The band was augmented by some fine Italian musicans as well. The piece was to be used in a film called "Todo Modo" but alas for a variety of complex reasons it wasn't used in the film but we have the music. That is the first selection. The second called "Cumbia and Jazz Fusion" was recorded the following year (1977) and the first indications of ALS (undiagnosed) was happening to Mingus. Regardless, the composition showed Mingus' appreciation for what we now call "world music". It features his last regular band with Walrath, Richmond and Ricky Ford (tenor saxophone), Bob Neloms (piano) augmented by a few others like Jimmy Knepper on trombone etc. It's a fascinating musical excursion into the mind of Mingus and the music ranges from exotic to straight swing with some satire, politics and ribald humor and anger all rolled into one piece. Mingus' music continues to be some of the most compelling in American Jazz and this is one of his last great statements. Mingus died on January 5, 1979.