Sat 11 Aug
4pm - Jazz Record Requests
Alyn Shipton with listeners' requests across the full spectrum of jazz, today including tracks from The Cosmic Scene - the 1958 release by Duke Ellington's small group the Spacemen.
5pm - J to Z
Kevin Le Gendre celebrates old and new jazz, today featuring London-born singer and lyricist Norma Winstone. Plus tracks that have inspired New York pianist Fred Hersch.
Norma was in fact born and brought up in Dagenham, as had been Dudley Moore, who was at the same school - they don't make 'em as good there any more. She has collaborated and recorded with Fred Hersch, in case this is not mentioned in the programme.
12midnight - Geoffrey Smith's Jazz
Geoffrey Smith showcases Both Directions at Once - the recently discovered lost album which saxophonist John Coltrane recorded in March 1963, the day before recording his now-classic duo album with singer Johnny Hartman.
Mon 13 Aug
11pm - Jazz Now
Soweto Kinch presents A Change is Gonna Come - a programme of music celebrating human rights, named after Sam Cooke's 1964 song, curated by American singer Carleen Anderson, and recorded earlier this year in Birmingham Town Hall. With vocals from Anderson and lyrics by rapper Speech Debelle, the band also includes rising saxophone star Nubya Garcia, pianist Nikki Yeoh, bassist Renell Shaw and drummer Rod Youngs. And Soweto meets veteran composer, arranger and bandleader Mike Gibbs.
Tues 14 Aug
10pm - King Kong - the Township Jazz Musical
Soweto Kinch tells the story of King Kong - a musical collaboration between black and white people that took place in apartheid-torn South Africa and was inspired by the life and tragic death of heavyweight-boxing champion Ezekiel Diamini (1921-57). First broadcast February 2017.
I went to one of the performances of this remarkable show when it came to London. Several of the participants went on to make The Smoke their home, though they never attained the prominence of Louis Moholo and the other Blue Notes on the domestic scene: pianist/composer Joonas Gwangwa ("Cry Freedom"), flautist Robert Sithole, Model/singer Princes Patience*, trombonist Churchill Jolobe and singer Sonti Mdelebe being featured in a heartrending 1988 British documentary "South African Blues", pre-post-apartheid (obviously), talking about exile. Jolobe's band performed at the mega Mandela gathering at Wembley in April 1990.
*I was later shocked to read that Princess Patience had been murdered, though I have never been able to find the story behind this.
4pm - Jazz Record Requests
Alyn Shipton with listeners' requests across the full spectrum of jazz, today including tracks from The Cosmic Scene - the 1958 release by Duke Ellington's small group the Spacemen.
5pm - J to Z
Kevin Le Gendre celebrates old and new jazz, today featuring London-born singer and lyricist Norma Winstone. Plus tracks that have inspired New York pianist Fred Hersch.
Norma was in fact born and brought up in Dagenham, as had been Dudley Moore, who was at the same school - they don't make 'em as good there any more. She has collaborated and recorded with Fred Hersch, in case this is not mentioned in the programme.
12midnight - Geoffrey Smith's Jazz
Geoffrey Smith showcases Both Directions at Once - the recently discovered lost album which saxophonist John Coltrane recorded in March 1963, the day before recording his now-classic duo album with singer Johnny Hartman.
Mon 13 Aug
11pm - Jazz Now
Soweto Kinch presents A Change is Gonna Come - a programme of music celebrating human rights, named after Sam Cooke's 1964 song, curated by American singer Carleen Anderson, and recorded earlier this year in Birmingham Town Hall. With vocals from Anderson and lyrics by rapper Speech Debelle, the band also includes rising saxophone star Nubya Garcia, pianist Nikki Yeoh, bassist Renell Shaw and drummer Rod Youngs. And Soweto meets veteran composer, arranger and bandleader Mike Gibbs.
Tues 14 Aug
10pm - King Kong - the Township Jazz Musical
Soweto Kinch tells the story of King Kong - a musical collaboration between black and white people that took place in apartheid-torn South Africa and was inspired by the life and tragic death of heavyweight-boxing champion Ezekiel Diamini (1921-57). First broadcast February 2017.
I went to one of the performances of this remarkable show when it came to London. Several of the participants went on to make The Smoke their home, though they never attained the prominence of Louis Moholo and the other Blue Notes on the domestic scene: pianist/composer Joonas Gwangwa ("Cry Freedom"), flautist Robert Sithole, Model/singer Princes Patience*, trombonist Churchill Jolobe and singer Sonti Mdelebe being featured in a heartrending 1988 British documentary "South African Blues", pre-post-apartheid (obviously), talking about exile. Jolobe's band performed at the mega Mandela gathering at Wembley in April 1990.
*I was later shocked to read that Princess Patience had been murdered, though I have never been able to find the story behind this.
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