jazz
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Jimmie Lunceford Orchestra: 'Taint What Ya Do'
Sax man Jimmy Lunceford and his Orchestra dating back to 1939 titled “Taint What Ya Do” a popular song also recorded during the same period by singer Ella Fitzgerald and others. Continue reading
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Jimmie Lunceford Orchestra: ‘Taint What Ya Do’
Sax man Jimmy Lunceford and his Orchestra dating back to 1939 titled “Taint What Ya Do” a popular song also recorded during the same period by singer Ella Fitzgerald and others. Continue reading
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Wayne Shorter ' Speak No Evil' Blue Note Session
24 August 2011 — Mosaic Records 1964 was a momentous year for the indefatigably creative Wayne Shorter, culminating with the Christmas Eve recording of his classic “Speak No Evil,” a bold statement as a composer and as an improviser. Continue reading
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Francis Wolff Blue Note Photos – John Coltrane 'Blue Train'
24 August 2011 — Mosaic Records The very first Coltrane album I bought! ‘Blue Train’. It blew me away. Wore that damn album out. The changes still resonate in my head. Check out the rest of Francis Wolff’s fabulous photography for those early Blue Note Albums on the Mosaic site. Continue reading
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New Atlantis – Part Two: How musicians rebuilt New Orleans
More from the interview with jazz writer John Swenson. How jazz musicians pulled together to save New Orleans the city after the federal levee failures. Includes footage from one of the first big second line parades after the flood, a memorial parade for a murdered artist, and musician Glen David Andrews speaking at the Silence… Continue reading
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Video: New Atlantis – Part One: How musicians rebuilt New Orleans
24 August 2011 — Jazz on the Tube Continue reading
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Charles Mingus Trio 'Summertime'
This recording of Mingus’s version of the George Gershwin classic “Summertime” was made in New York City on July 9, 1957 with Charles Mingus on bass; Hampton Haws piano; and Danny Richmond on drums. Continue reading
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Bill Evans 'Very Early/Times Remembered / My Bells'
16 August 2011 — Jazz on the Tube Continue reading
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Video: 'OW!' James Moody, Dizzy Gillespie
Jazzfestival Bern, Switzerland 1985, Dizzy Gillespie (tp), James Moody (ts), Gene Harris (p), Ray Brown (b), Grady Tate (d) Continue reading
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The Subject Is Jazz – The Future of Jazz – Art Farmer & Billy Taylor
Billy Taylor’s’ 1958 TV show, “The Subject Is Jazz,” featuring Bill Evans, Tony Scott, Art Farmer, Jimmy Cleveland, Doc Severinsen, Ed Thigpen, Mundell Lowe, Eddie Safranski and George Russell. Continue reading
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Abbey Lincoln: “Throw it away”
The amazing and totally under-rated Abbey Lincoln (and wife of drummer Max Roach) on a later version (2007) of ‘Throw it Away’. Continue reading
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McCoy Tyner ‘Giant Steps’
McCoy Tyner’s solo piano work is an all-too-rare confined to opening numbers at some concerts and the occasional solo album. This 1996 Hamburg appearance features his mentor John Coltrane’s classic “Giant Steps.” Continue reading
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Jimmie Lunceford and His Dance Orchestra 1936
A Vitaphone short subject which is important for being the only real glimpse we have of this dynamic big band filmed in NYC July 1936. Willie Smith, Joe Thomas, Paul Webster and Jimmy Crawford are among the band members featured which also includes spots for vocalist Myra Johnson and the dance team of the Three… Continue reading
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Herbie Hancock ‘Chan’s Song’
Herbie Hancock (piano), with Karreim Riggins (drums) and Christain McBride (bass) perform “Chan’s Song” on the show “Spectacle” Continue reading
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27 May 2011 Jazz on the Tube Israel…
Israel “Cachao” Lopez performs along with Jimmy Bosch, Nelson Gonzales, Andy Garcia, Orestes Vilato, and others. Continue reading
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Happy Birthday Miles – ‘So What’ with John Coltrane
Miles Dewey Davis III was born on May 26, 1926 in Alton, Illinois. Miles’ mother was a blues pianist though she kept this hidden from him and his father a dentist. Davis began studying trumpet at the age of thirteen with local musician Elwood Buchanan and Buchanan would always stress to Miles to play without… Continue reading
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Michel Camilo ‘Blue Bossa’
23 May 2011 — Jazz on the Tube Continue reading
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Cannonball Adderley ‘Straight, no chaser’
1974 concert in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, Cannonball Adderley (alto sax), Nat Adderley (trumpet), George Duke (piano), Walter Booker (bass) and Roy McCurdy (drums) Continue reading
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Jazz genius Zim Ngqawana dies at 52 By Matthew Burbidge
South African musician Zim Ngqawana has died in the Charlotte Maxeke Johannesburg Hospital after suffering a stroke on Monday. He was 52. Continue reading
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Johnny Hodges and The Duke Ellington Orchestra ‘On The Sunny Side of the Street’
Johnny Hodges plays “On the Sunny Side of the Street” with the Duke Ellington Orchestra in Italy, 1966. Continue reading