Sat 30 Apr
5pm - J to Z
Kevin LeGendre with new and classic jazz. Plus guests, today with UK saxophonist Trish Clowes playing music from her latest album A View with a Room.
Looks as if Trish has been casing us for ideas for punning titles!
10pm - New Music Show
Starts off with The Moon Has Become Unnamed, performed by jazz ensemble? Or maybe the Unnamed Jazz Ensemble? Either consult the french frank pedantics guide for recommendations on comma placements - or, check the programme website below . BTW the other interesting-looking works include one by Toby Young - surely not the right-wing sh... sorry, "political commentator"?
12midnight - Freeness
South African drummer, activist and cultural worker Asher Gamedze talks about his latest release, and Heavy Lifting and Graham Dunnin present an improvised collaboration of free electronic hedonism, layering fractals of textured sound and melodies. Plus, a re-release of adventurous 1970s era recordings from Japanese guitarist Masayuki Takayanagi. Presented by Corey Mwamba.
Sun 1 May
4pm - Jazz Record Requests
This looks possibly to be of interest:
Mayday Bank Holiday
10.45pm - The Essay: New Generation Thinkers 2021
A Brazilian Soprano in Jazz-Age Paris
Adjoa Osei traces Brazilian singer Elsie Houston's (1902-43) connections with surrealist artists and writers, and looks at how she used her mixed heritage to navigate her way through society and speak out for African-inspired arts.
Meanwhile, on the Box:
Sat 30 Apr - BBC2
10pm - Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool
The work of jazz pioneer Miles Davis continues to have huge influence today. The restless determination to break boundaries and live life on his own terms made him a star, but it also created a person who was notoriously difficult to live with. In music and in life, Davis broke with tradition - and when he thought his work had come to represent a new convention, he changed again. It was this constant thirst for new experiences that made him such an inspiring collaborator. Archive footage and studio out-takes help illustrate the life of a singular talent.
And two repeats:
Fri 6 May - BBC4
9pm - Nina Simone and Me with Laura Mvula
9.30pm - Billie: in Search of Billie Holiday.
As they say in Yorkshire: that'll do.
5pm - J to Z
Kevin LeGendre with new and classic jazz. Plus guests, today with UK saxophonist Trish Clowes playing music from her latest album A View with a Room.
Looks as if Trish has been casing us for ideas for punning titles!
10pm - New Music Show
Starts off with The Moon Has Become Unnamed, performed by jazz ensemble? Or maybe the Unnamed Jazz Ensemble? Either consult the french frank pedantics guide for recommendations on comma placements - or, check the programme website below . BTW the other interesting-looking works include one by Toby Young - surely not the right-wing sh... sorry, "political commentator"?
12midnight - Freeness
South African drummer, activist and cultural worker Asher Gamedze talks about his latest release, and Heavy Lifting and Graham Dunnin present an improvised collaboration of free electronic hedonism, layering fractals of textured sound and melodies. Plus, a re-release of adventurous 1970s era recordings from Japanese guitarist Masayuki Takayanagi. Presented by Corey Mwamba.
Sun 1 May
4pm - Jazz Record Requests
This looks possibly to be of interest:
Mayday Bank Holiday
10.45pm - The Essay: New Generation Thinkers 2021
A Brazilian Soprano in Jazz-Age Paris
Adjoa Osei traces Brazilian singer Elsie Houston's (1902-43) connections with surrealist artists and writers, and looks at how she used her mixed heritage to navigate her way through society and speak out for African-inspired arts.
Meanwhile, on the Box:
Sat 30 Apr - BBC2
10pm - Miles Davis: Birth of the Cool
The work of jazz pioneer Miles Davis continues to have huge influence today. The restless determination to break boundaries and live life on his own terms made him a star, but it also created a person who was notoriously difficult to live with. In music and in life, Davis broke with tradition - and when he thought his work had come to represent a new convention, he changed again. It was this constant thirst for new experiences that made him such an inspiring collaborator. Archive footage and studio out-takes help illustrate the life of a singular talent.
And two repeats:
Fri 6 May - BBC4
9pm - Nina Simone and Me with Laura Mvula
9.30pm - Billie: in Search of Billie Holiday.
As they say in Yorkshire: that'll do.
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