Sat 18 July
5pm - J to Z
Julian Joseph with live music from American pianist Carla Bley and her trio last October at the Stockholm Jazz Festival. Bley, now 84, has been a pivotal figure in free jazz since the 1960s when she worked with Don Cherry, Charlie Haden and many more, and recorded her celebrated jazz opera, Escalator over the Hill.
This programme is well worth listening out for the widow of Dexter Gordon, Maxine Gordon, reminiscing and introducing a Dexter Gordon track. Was she not featured in the Round Midnight fillum?
12midnight - Freeness
Corey Mwamba presents Adam Fairhall performing on keyboard instrument the dulcitone. Plus Tim Hill's quartet and Laura Cole with Metamorphic.
This is a repeat. I said a repeat.
Sun 19 July
4pm - Jazz Record Requests
Alyn Shipton with recordings by Louis Armstrong, saxophonist Don Weller - who died in May - and Bristol-born pianist Keith Tippett, who died last month.
Tues 21 July
9pm - The Jamie Cullum Show with Jazz
Spot the deliberate mistake there.
Singer Jamie Cullum returns to his 9pm slot with new and classic jazz recordings and guests, tonight featuring a performance from a recent session by Norah Jones, recorded at her home studio.
And on the Tee Vee:
Fri 24 July - BBC4
9pm - Rodney P's Jazz Funk
London-born rap veteran Rodney P explores the origins and development of jazz funk, the first home-grown black British music culture. The jazz funk scene, inspired by the avant-garde fusion of soul, funk and jazz in 1970s black America, forged new sounds around which new clubs and radio shows sprang up. Among those reminiscing are Imagination frontman Leee John, Kenny Wellington from Light of the World, producer Morgan Khan, DJ Carl Cox and broadcaster Robert Elms.
"The first home-grown black British music culture" - hmmm, hadn't thought about it quite like that - I suppose that is true. This programme seemed to belong as much here as on the Fusion etc thread, given the strong influence the "movement" had in part-shaping the upcoming generation of black British jazz in the 1980s. Very good write-up on the link page below:
Also item on P101 of RT.
5pm - J to Z
Julian Joseph with live music from American pianist Carla Bley and her trio last October at the Stockholm Jazz Festival. Bley, now 84, has been a pivotal figure in free jazz since the 1960s when she worked with Don Cherry, Charlie Haden and many more, and recorded her celebrated jazz opera, Escalator over the Hill.
This programme is well worth listening out for the widow of Dexter Gordon, Maxine Gordon, reminiscing and introducing a Dexter Gordon track. Was she not featured in the Round Midnight fillum?
12midnight - Freeness
Corey Mwamba presents Adam Fairhall performing on keyboard instrument the dulcitone. Plus Tim Hill's quartet and Laura Cole with Metamorphic.
This is a repeat. I said a repeat.
Sun 19 July
4pm - Jazz Record Requests
Alyn Shipton with recordings by Louis Armstrong, saxophonist Don Weller - who died in May - and Bristol-born pianist Keith Tippett, who died last month.
Tues 21 July
9pm - The Jamie Cullum Show with Jazz
Spot the deliberate mistake there.
Singer Jamie Cullum returns to his 9pm slot with new and classic jazz recordings and guests, tonight featuring a performance from a recent session by Norah Jones, recorded at her home studio.
And on the Tee Vee:
Fri 24 July - BBC4
9pm - Rodney P's Jazz Funk
London-born rap veteran Rodney P explores the origins and development of jazz funk, the first home-grown black British music culture. The jazz funk scene, inspired by the avant-garde fusion of soul, funk and jazz in 1970s black America, forged new sounds around which new clubs and radio shows sprang up. Among those reminiscing are Imagination frontman Leee John, Kenny Wellington from Light of the World, producer Morgan Khan, DJ Carl Cox and broadcaster Robert Elms.
"The first home-grown black British music culture" - hmmm, hadn't thought about it quite like that - I suppose that is true. This programme seemed to belong as much here as on the Fusion etc thread, given the strong influence the "movement" had in part-shaping the upcoming generation of black British jazz in the 1980s. Very good write-up on the link page below:
Also item on P101 of RT.
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