Discovering Jazz открытые
[search 0]
Больше
Download the App!
show episodes
 
Loading …
show series
 
People make fun of them. But when I researched jazz accordionists I found so many great ones that it was a challenge to 'squeeze-box' them into one episode. Names like Ben Rosenblum, Art Van Damme, Tommy Gumina, Richard Galliano, Mat Mathews, and David Lange are heralded musicians who play great jazz. And on this episode I also play a few who are '…
  continue reading
 
Last week I played a few Canadian jazz albums that I either really like or have made the Jazzweek charts---or, in most cases, both! Three of these albums are led by musicians who play regularly at The Yardbird Suite in Edmonton, where I live. They include records by Joel Jeschke, Brett Hansen,and The Way Back Whens. Also featured are new recordings…
  continue reading
 
I've noticed a lot of albums by Canadians on this year's JazzWeek charts. And there are some new ones that, surprisingly, haven't made those charts. I've taken some time to listen to some of those albums and play tracks that stand out for me. And what a variety! Enought great quality recordings for two episodes. Some of the artists you'll hear this…
  continue reading
 
This episode includes some great versions of ridiculous television themes and some crazier versions of great ones! A lot of it is pretty weird But the jazz is all first rate. Some of what you'll hear: -Did you know that Sun Ra did an early album on a children's label? From that you'll hear a very familiar theme. -A theme where one of the criteria f…
  continue reading
 
Lot of great jazz renditions of Television themes in this episode. I talk about the very first tv program I ever remember watching---the first day television came to Edmonton, Alberta. And I play interesting jazz renditions of the Jack Benny theme (a medley of Love in Bloom and Hooray for Hollywood). You'll also hear music by three of the great tv …
  continue reading
 
Television themes have been a popular musical genre for jazz interpretation. For Part 1 of this 3 part series I talk briefly about the following programs, play excerpts from the original themes of some of them, then find some jazz oriented recordings of each one. The TV series featured in this episode are Dragnet, Ben Casey, Dr. Kildare, Game of Th…
  continue reading
 
Part 3 of some of the best albums from 2017-2023. This one truly illustrates the versatility of this musical genre we call 'jazz'. It turns out that most of the ones I play are from last year--2023. And wow! They are all so listenable and so interesting. You'll hear: a track from the Charles Lloyd album that was the #1 selection on this year's Crit…
  continue reading
 
Part 2 of albums that caught my attention over the past 7 years---as well as the attention of some critics and reviewers. This episode includes three tracks that are generally too long to be played on most jazz radio stations. They are by: Martin Kuchen's Angles--an eight piece group out of Sweden. Wayne Shorter's last album--a triple disc where he…
  continue reading
 
I'm starting a three part series going through some albums that I had noted over the past seven years. These are also albums that various reviewers (sometimes several, sometimes one) put on their lists of favourites from that particular year. For this episode there end up being lots of piano led ensembles. They include Vijay Iyer, Billy CHilds, Rob…
  continue reading
 
I've re-discovered a few old mix cassette tapes I made over the years. And I'm playing them. This episode was inspired by one tape of mostly jazz vocalists--and mostly female, which I put together in 1988. What I realized in listening to it many years later is that it wasn't just the singing and even the song that made me want to record it onto the…
  continue reading
 
For the concluding episode of this series, I play recordings of more tunes that I so often hear at the jazz jams at Edmonton's Yardbird Suite. I also reveal some of my own struggles in trying to follow them without getting lost. Some are a lot harder than others. I talk about two of the most simple tunes that get played. And also one of the most co…
  continue reading
 
I've selected six tunes that I commonly hear at the Tuesday night jam sessions at Edmonton's Yardbird Suite jazz club. And I've added one that I wish would get played---as it's the only tune in the oft use Real Book Vol. 1 Sixth Edition written by a woman. And one of the very few written by a Canadian. So here they are: Dexterity In A Mellotone (so…
  continue reading
 
I play different versions of tunes I keep hearing at jam sessions I go to at The Yardbird Suite in Edmonton. On Part 1 of this 3-part series you'll hear Alone Together, Ornithology, The Days of Wine and Roses, Tenor Madnes (aka Rue Chaptal), Softly As In a Morning Sunrise, and I'll Remember April. Artists performing them include Bud Powell, Michael…
  continue reading
 
This is the last of my three part series all about Cole Porter and his music---and why jazz musicians love him. I was inspired for this episode by Ted Gioa's delightful boook, The Jazz Standards, where he gives us stories behind the songs and recommends some of the most interesting versions. You'll hear: All Of You, by Miles Davis. You'd Be So Easy…
  continue reading
 
Saxophone legend Charlie Parker's last recording session was an album of Cole Porter tunes. I start this episode with two tracks from that great album. Other great players playing Cole Porter tunes include Dizzy Gillespie, Matthew Shipp, Toronto guitarist Jocelyn Gould, and trumpeter Tom Harrell. Harrell plays with singer Mark Murphy and their dram…
  continue reading
 
Some of my favourite songs, whether played by jazz or non-jazz musicians, turn out to be Cole Porter compositions. What makes those songs so great, and so amenable to jazz improvisation and reharmonization? I talk a bit about Cole Porter's life. Did you know that he wrote a complete operetta--words and music---at age 10? And for this episode I play…
  continue reading
 
On this episode I play and talk about: -Joe Locke (vibraphone solo)-Hagood Hardy, playing vibes on a Herbie Mann classic)-Montreal's Jean Vanesse and Miroslav Vitous (spectacular!)-Two tracks from The Red Norvo Trio with Charles Mingus and Tal Farlow-26 year old Sasha Berliner-Marjorie Hyams with Mary Lou Williams-Toronto's Michael Davidson playing…
  continue reading
 
This is the last of my New Aquisitions series----lp's and cd's I recently found. It include three artists from my hometown, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. They are:-Saxophonist PJ Perry playing with the #1 jazz pianist according to Downbeat critics' polls---Kenny Barron.-The Edmonton Jazz Ensemble from 1989, led by Sean McNally, performing a fascinatin…
  continue reading
 
The hilight for me on this week's podcast is a brand new cd (their first) by Moneka Arabic Jazz---led by Toronto's (via Iraq) Ahmed Moneka. I play two tracks from that album. I also play some more typical jazz recordings---with outstanding playing! Three of them are on the Pablo lable recorded in the mid 1970's. They include: -a track from the Quad…
  continue reading
 
There were over five weeks where my podcast was out of commission due to the host having disappeared. Now I have a new host and I've been posting some new Discovering Jazz programs. During that no-activity period I was still buying cd's and records---waiting the time I could play some of them on my show. Well folks! That time has come! Most of thes…
  continue reading
 
I like to 'prepare' to go to Jazz Festival concerts (even if I don't actually go to many of them) as an excuse to 'discover' new jazz artists. And there are some great ones playing at this year's Edmonton Jazz Fest going on this week (June 25-30). And many of them are also on tour playing elsewhere in Western and Eastern Canada and the U.S., as wel…
  continue reading
 
More great recent recordings utilizing bebop, hardbop, and swing as selected by soul/jazz singer and pianist, Cliff Beach. We start again with a great Duke Ellington composition from Cliff's latest album, You Showed Me The Way. And follow it with Ella Fitzgerald singing that same Duke Ellington song with what Cliff describes as a "James Brown sound…
  continue reading
 
Ella Fitzgerald representing jazz fusion? You have to be kidding! Well, just give a listen to the opening track of this episode where Los Angeles jazz/soul singer Cliff Beach introduces to a later 'funky' Ella! Somone said that if Ella Fitzgerald and Stevie Wonder had a love child, it would be Cliff! You can hear this influence on his latest album …
  continue reading
 
Cliff Beach's latest album is called You Showed Me The Way. He credits Ella Fitzgerald with showing him the way through traditional sgin and bebop and through the path of modern jazz. On this episode we play some Ella, as well as an outstanding track from Cliff's latest album. Then Cliff talks about how the more traditional swing, bebop, and blues …
  continue reading
 
The podcasts are back! Thanks to the assistance of Maxime at FeedPress. After posting three new episodes on what makes a great jazz solo (Episodes 269-271), I thought I'd go into the archives and also include the original ones I put together a few year ago. These were inspired by a Jazz Times article where a number of famous jazz musicians and writ…
  continue reading
 
I explore the controversies related to Tommy Flanagan's solo on Coltrane's Giant steps, plus Cannonball Adderley's solo in Milestones. One jazz writer stated "With Giant steps Coltrane supplanted Cherokee as the litmus test for aspiring improvisers, packing so many harmonic substitutions into one progression that at first blush, consummate pianist …
  continue reading
 
You just finished listening to Part 4, 5, and 6 of The Jazz Solo. Now as I take a bit of a break, let's go back five years and hear Parts 1, 2, and 3. In part 1 you'll learn why we don't all say 'so what' to Miles Davis's most highly renowned jazz solo. Or to the other great solos in that piece of work as well. Then there's Louis Armstrong's and Jo…
  continue reading
 
This week I start with a solo by Charlie Parker---talking about what has been termed "the famous alto break". Then I move onto John Coltrane--and playing that sounds like its either "all composed or all improvised". The episode ends with Jaco Pastorius and his bass and percussion recording of Donna Lee, followed by a Sonny Stitt and Sonny Rollins '…
  continue reading
 
Part 4, you ask? But where are Parts 1, 2, and 3? Answer: Way back five years to Episodes 52 to 54. The goal? To get a greater sense of the difference between a jazz solo that is considered 'great' versus solos that are just 'good'...and sometimes not even that. I reach out to 'experts to get some opinions. And I play some of tha tmusic with those …
  continue reading
 
I start by talking about and playing a great track by Wes Montgomery and Wynton Kelly--fraom newly discovered recordings released last year. And I finish with the great Rashaan Roland Kirk--focusing on hs amazing resilience as he kept playing despite a debilitating stroke. Another amazingly resilient musicians who arried on despited physical diffic…
  continue reading
 
I've heard and read many stories of jazz artists who have left us due to drugs, violence, and sudden accidents. The next 3 episodes talk about some of them. But rather than just focusing on their deaths, I talk about how they lived and how they inspired us. And most importantly, I play their music! The first episodes starts off with later-life John…
  continue reading
 
Re-releases, remastered recordings, or newly discovered vintage recordings released in 2023. From Bill Evans Trio to Nina Simone. Also features a live Dave Brubeck Quartet track recorded four months before the legendary Time Out album. You'll also hear Ahmad Jamal, Art Ensemble of Chicago, Geri Allen & Kurt Rosenwinkel, Don Thompson and Rob Piltch,…
  continue reading
 
You'll hear a track from John Zorn: Homenaje A Remedios Varo, just one of 14 releases Zorn put out in 2023. And something from pianist Noah Haidu's Standards album. He has another Standards album coming out in 2024. Benny Benack II, trumpeter and singer's 3rd album called Third Time's The Charm. Audrey Ochoa, Edmonton trombonist, and Head of a Mous…
  continue reading
 
This is Part 6 of my 8 part series of the Best of 2023 according to jazz aficionados. And I take the liberty for this episode of playing tracks from 9 of my own personal favourites. And it turns out that one of the albums is even a 2024 grammy winner. Who’d have thought? I’m interested in hearing how any of them resonate with you, the listener. I a…
  continue reading
 
Last week I played tracks from the albums that were chosen for the ‘best of 2023’ lists by the most reviewers. This week I’ve picked few albums chosen by only one or two reviewers. But they are ones that were definitely worth my time and energy!I talk about and play a track from the following great jazz albums: -Thunder by Stephan Micus =The Senato…
  continue reading
 
For this 4th episode of the Best of 2023 According to Experts, I’m posting the titles of 27 albums that were selected by the most reviewers as part of their top albums of last year. And I’ll do a countdown of sorts—finishing with the album that was selected by the greatest number of reviewers. If you want to be surprised, don’t read the rest of thi…
  continue reading
 
This is Part 3 of some of the jazz albums that critics and reviewers believe are worth our attention. And I do too—for the ones I’m choosing to spotlight on this series of podcasts. You’ll hear a track from the latest recordings of the following great artists: Shakti (w. John McLaughlin) Billy Valentine Joshua Redman with Gabrielle CavassaAline Hom…
  continue reading
 
One skill we can develop when putting together radio shows, podcasts, or ‘mix-tapes’ is a way of allowing the energy to build. I think that, just like a great jazz solo, this episode seems to have a nice ‘arc’. It starts fairly low key and builds up in speed and intensity….ending with a sort of sweet sadness. Here are ten albums that have been on t…
  continue reading
 
It was a busy December! I searched for all the ‘best jazz of 2023’ articles online and tried to listen to at least part of many of the albums. And there were lots! In fact, so far, I’ve found 85 different lists. And a total of 573 albums. And that doesn’t even include the historical albums and re-releases. I picked and chose which ones to listen to…
  continue reading
 
This is a podcast I put together in 2020 when living in Victoria. It’s NOT Christmas music (although it starts with one of my favourite Christmas songs). It celebrates a few winter holidays: Kwanzaa, Diwali, Channukah, Winter Solstice, New Years, Lohri, Mardi-Gras, and Posada. Lots of very interesting music—different from what you’d normally hear i…
  continue reading
 
And I really do mean the greats! There are the ones you all know like Louis Armstrong, John Coltrane, Bill Evans, Diana Krall, Dave Brubeck, Oscar Peterson, Sarah Vaughan Artie Shaw, Phil Woods, Earl Hines, and Tony Bennett. But I also include Toronto pianist Robi Botos, and the wonderful jazz couple of singer Jennifer Scott and bassist Rene Worst.…
  continue reading
 
This week the recordings I play with awesome intros are: -Nardis, by the 1980 version of the Bill Evans Trio, recorded shortly before Evans died. -Jeanine by the Dave Young Terry Promane Octet out of Toronto. -All The Things You Are, where I play a version that uses BOTH the Rachmaninoff inspired Charlie Parker intro and the original ‘verse’ introd…
  continue reading
 
We are approaching the end of one year and the beginning of a next. That’s a good time to talk about beginnings and endings of jazz recordings. I asked for ideas from a few jazz sites, and received great response from jazz fans and musicians from JAzzWorld and Canadian Jazz Recordings. In this episode I play some of their suggestions. Some have rem…
  continue reading
 
This week I play tracks from: =Bill Evans classic Sunday At the Village Vanguard. Two compositions by Scott Lafaro. -Jane Bunnett’s first album, In Dew Time—the title referring to the presence of the great tenor saxophonist, Dewey Redman. -Paul Winter Consort. The Icarus album. Ralph Towner’s Sunwheel. -The amazing accordionist, Art Van Damme. -a W…
  continue reading
 
Modern Jazz Quartet, Julie London, Teddy Wilson, Erroll Garner, Nina Simone, Nellie Lutcher, Lalo Schifrin, Paul Horn, Gene Bertoncini w. Michael Moore, Jim McHarg w. Lonnie Johnson. Those are records I dug from my storage locker: great albums I played for myself this week.. And I found at least one track from each I wanted to play for you! I also …
  continue reading
 
I haven’t had much chance over the past few years to play many of the lp records I have stored in my storage locker. This series of episodes remedies some of that. I’m listening to a few of them and digitalizing some favoured cuts so I can play them on this podcast. This week’s episodes starts and ends with Sarah Vaughan and some amazing vocals wit…
  continue reading
 
More on the Edmonton Jazz scene, including a call out to CKUA radio. Also more on the thriving Yardbird Suite jazz club, including Marc Vasey’s story of how he discovered and secured their current venue. Great music too! You’ll hear Rubim de Toledo, J.J. Johnson, Pepper Adams Quartet, Bill Frisell, Doug Organ, Audrey Ochoa, Sheila Jordan, and John …
  continue reading
 
Loading …

Краткое руководство