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    thelonious monk

    Explore " thelonious monk" with insightful episodes like "Lift The Bandstand - Episode March 13, 2024", "Lift The Bandstand - Episode March 6, 2024", "Lift The Bandstand - Episode February 28, 2024", "Lift The Bandstand - Episode February 21, 2024" and "Lift The Bandstand - Episode February 14, 2024" from podcasts like ""Lift The Bandstand", "Lift The Bandstand", "Lift The Bandstand", "Lift The Bandstand" and "Lift The Bandstand"" and more!

    Episodes (27)

    Jazz vocalist Angela Bingham on storytelling through music, performing little-known lyrics, and creating intimacy with audiences

    Jazz vocalist Angela Bingham on storytelling through music, performing little-known lyrics, and creating intimacy with audiences

    Angela Bingham is a jazz vocalist, voiceover actress, and podcast co-host. 

    You can catch her next with the Jim Ketch Quintet on Friday, June 9, at the Sharp 9 Gallery in Durham. The show, entitled “There’s Lyrics for That,” will feature songs by Wayne Shorter, Freddie Hubbard, Jon Hendricks, and Thelonious Monk, among others. Buy tickets.

    Who’s on:

    • Angela Bingham, voice
    • Jim Ketch, trumpet
    • Andrew Berinson, piano*
    • Kenny Phelps-McKeown, bass
    • Donovan Cheatham, drums*
    • Dexter Moses, saxophone

    *Previous Six Count guest

    This summer, Angela is leading jazz vocal performance workshops through the Durham Jazz Workshop (housed at the Sharp 9). The next workshop begins July 31. She also teaches private lessons for students and adults.

    More about Angela 

    Angela has lived in North Carolina since 2011, performing regularly at the Pimiento Tea Room in Holly Springs, the Umstead Hotel and Bond Brothers Eastside in Cary, and the O.Henry Hotel in Greensboro, to name a few. 

    Originally from the San Francisco Bay Area, she studied jazz under Roger Letson at De Anza College in Cupertino, California. The vocalist launched her professional jazz career in Salt Lake City, Utah, in the late nineties.

    Outside of music, Angela is a voiceover artist specializing in e-learning, corporate narration, and commercial projects. A movie buff, she also co-hosts the movie-focused podcast Put Your Books Down with Natalie Sanderson. 

    Music credit

    This episode features the songs “Honeysuckle Rose” and “P.S. I Love You,” from the album The Night We Called It a Day, by Angela Bingham and David Halliday (2016), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. 

    This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. 

    How to listen

    You can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app! The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. 

    Support the show

    If you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.

    #129: Mira Martin-Gray

    #129: Mira Martin-Gray

    Very inviting thumbs, vanilla apologists, Monk's comeback. The Toronto-based experimental musician discusses three important albums.

    Mira's picks:

    Thelonious Monk Quartet With John Coltrane – At Carnegie Hall
    Owen Pallett (released as Final Fantasy) – Has A Good Home
    Koboku Senjû – Selektiv Hogst

    Mira's new album, Hen's Teeth, is out now on Rat-drifting. It's also on Mira's bandcamp. Her website is here.

    Donate to Crucial Listening on Ko-fi: https://ko-fi.com/cruciallistening



    87. It Started as a Giant Snow Day. Is it Now in ReMission? Andy Milne. Michigan, United States. 06/08/22

    87. It Started as a Giant Snow Day. Is it Now in ReMission? Andy Milne. Michigan, United States. 06/08/22

     Two time Jazz Juno Award winner Andy Milne compared the start of the pandemy to a giant snow day.  As we move into season three gatherings to celebrate and enjoy music are returning. Andy is excited to  welcome Jazz gatherings back to Toronto when be plays the main stage of the Toronto JazzFest June 28!  Andy plays song title in the form of a pandemy question inspired by Nardwuar the Human Serviette from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.

    Did you go Vertical on Opening Night of the pandemy?
    Did you make any pandemy Resolutions?
    What are you Sad to Say about the pandemy?
    Did the pandemy teach you Anything About Anything?

    Andy Milne

     
    Andy Milne Toronto JazzFest Tuesday, June 28 @ 6:15

    Thanks for joining us as we unite humanity through stories of hope, connection, and community in the face of the global pandemy. We are all in this together, and we’re glad you’re here together with us. Thanks for taking a moment to like and subscribe and follow the Pandemy Show on social media (Twitter, Insta, FB, and  TikTok). 

    Thanks to Giant Value for letting us know everything is going to be alright, Pieper for the art work, and Becky Nethery for copywriting and website design.

    Musicians: Mary Lou Williams

    Musicians: Mary Lou Williams

    Mary Lou Williams (1910-1981) had incredible musicality–in her performances, her arrangements, and her conversations–and helped shape the arc of jazz. Though she’s often left out of the history books, she belongs in the pantheon of musical greats.

    History classes can get a bad wrap, and sometimes for good reason. When we were students, we couldn’t help wondering... where were all the ladies at? Why were so many incredible stories missing from the typical curriculum? Enter, Womanica. On this Wonder Media Network podcast we explore the lives of inspiring women in history you may not know about, but definitely should.

    Every weekday, listeners explore the trials, tragedies, and triumphs of groundbreaking women throughout history who have dramatically shaped the world around us. In each 5 minute episode, we’ll dive into the story behind one woman listeners may or may not know–but definitely should. These diverse women from across space and time are grouped into easily accessible and engaging monthly themes like Educators, Villains, Indigenous Storytellers, Activists, and many more.  Womanica is hosted by WMN co-founder and award-winning journalist Jenny Kaplan. The bite-sized episodes pack painstakingly researched content into fun, entertaining, and addictive daily adventures. 

    Womanica was created by Liz Kaplan and Jenny Kaplan, executive produced by Jenny Kaplan, and produced by Liz Smith, Grace Lynch, Maddy Foley, Brittany Martinez, Edie Allard, Lindsey Kratochwill, Adesuwa Agbonile, Carmen Borca-Carrillo, Taylor Williamson, and Ale Tejeda. Special thanks to Shira Atkins.

    Original theme music composed by Miles Moran.

    We are offering free ad space on Wonder Media Network shows to organizations working towards social justice. For more information, please email Jenny at pod@wondermedianetwork.com.

    Listen to the accompanying playlist for this month here

    Follow Wonder Media Network:

    To take the Womanica listener survey, please visit: https://wondermedianetwork.com/survey 

    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    Jazz Bastard Podcast 228 - Got Live - Do You Want It?

    Jazz Bastard Podcast 228 - Got Live - Do You Want It?

    Four live records turn up on the boys' plates - of which do they happily partake?  The sessions range in recording dates from the late sixties to the 2010's, but three of the four came out in the last few months.  We talk about a listener-suggested album of "modern" stride piano, a scorching modal date that left the tape in tatters, a recently discovered live appearance from the dean of off-kilter piano and a series of charming duets by two musicians of more recent vintage who left us far too soon.  Which to pick up?  Just stay tuned.  Roy Hargrove & Mulgrew Miller – IN HARMONY; Roy Brooks – UNDERSTANDING; Stephanie Trick – LIVE; Monk – PALO ALTO.

    Jazz Bastard Podcast 225 - Striding Forward

    Jazz Bastard Podcast 225 - Striding Forward

    Time, the bastards decided, for a historical podcast - and this time, the focus is on stride.  Who started it?  Who perfected it?  Who blew it up?  Who deconstructed it?  Keep your left hand limber and the answers will follow.  Pop matters includes a brief look at chanteuse of the day Billie Eilish.  Fats Waller - COMPLETE VICTOR PIANO SOLOS – VOL 1; Art Tatum– SOLO MASTERPIECES VOL 1; Thelonious Monk -  THELONIOUS HIMSELF; James P. Johnson - THE ORIGINAL JAMES P. JOHNSON 1942-1945 PIANO SOLOS.

    The Back to School Edition

    The Back to School Edition

    On this week's episode of Whatever We Want with Jay & Kay co-hosts Jamal Sterling and Khalilah Elliott say goodbye to summer and talk about heading back to school in the age of Covid + the Delta Variant while looking back on the hot topics of the Olympics, Black athletes, and mental health. 

    The co-hosts also reflect on dating in secret vs. dating privately,  the current housing market craze, Black homeownership, and a full-on geek out over some recent, inspired casting choices on upcoming film projects.

    Spoiler Warning(!) as the duo also chops it up over the Marvel Cinematic Universe's foray into the multiverse and discuss that insane Loki season finale while pondering on how Black Widow, Scarlett Johansson, and the legal dispute brewing between the latter and Disney may unfold. 

    Follow the show!

    YouTube:
    @ChiefDisruptorProductions
    IG:@chiefdisruptorproductions
    FB: @chiefdisruptorproductions

    Omniaudience: Holy Ghosts, with Harmony Holiday

    Omniaudience: Holy Ghosts, with Harmony Holiday

    Harmony Holiday, a writer, dancer, and archivist, joins Nikita Gale and Alexander Provan to speak about Black performers whose songs and struggles reflect the ongoing trauma of the “African holocaust.” They discuss the pressure to pander to white audiences as well as the impulse to seek a form of expression (and of being) that is chosen and not imposed by force. They listen to songs written and recorded by Holiday’s father, the soul singer Jimmy Holiday, as well as to Albert Ayler, Thelonious Monk, Billie Holiday, Amiri Baraka, and Kanye West.

    Holiday's essay “The Black Catatonic Scream,” a meditation on Black silence, was published by Triple Canopy last year. Her book of poems on the “African holocaust,” naming, and erasure, Maafa, is being published by Fence Books in 2021. Holiday is currently working on a biography of the singer Abbey Lincoln and a collection of essays, Love Is War for Miles.

    In this episode, Holiday, Gale, and Provan speak about Fred Moten’s In the Break: The Aesthetics of the Black Radical Tradition (University of Minnesota Press, 2003); Édouard Glissant’s The Poetics of Relation, trans. Betsy Wing (University of Michigan Press, 1997); the writer and cultural theorist Sylvia Wynter, whose work is the subject of Katherine McKittrick’s Sylvia Wynter: On Being Human as Praxis (Duke University Press, 2014); Mack Hagood’s Hush: Media and Sonic Self-Control (Duke University Press, 2019); Amiri Baraka, the poet, author, and luminary of the Black Arts Movement, about whom Holiday has often written.

    In order of appearance, the music and other recordings played on this episode are: Sonny Sharrock, “Black Woman” (feat. Linda Sharrock), Black Woman (Vortex Records, 1969); a concert by Kanye West as part of his Saint Pablo Tour, 2016; West’s “Father Stretch My Hands, Pt. 1,” The Life of Pablo (Def Jam, 2016); Jimmy Holiday, “We Got a Good Thing Goin’,” Turning Point (Minit, 1966); Ray Charles, “Somebody Ought to Write a Book About It” (ABC Records, 1967); Thelonious Monk, “You Took the Words Right Out of My Heart,” Thelonious Alone in San Francisco (Riverside, 1959), James Brown, “The Payback,” The Payback (Polydor, 1973); Billie Holiday and Her Orchestra, “A Sailboat in the Moonlight” (Vocalion, 1937); Amiri Baraka reading “Black Art” on Sonny Murray’s Sonny’s Time Now (Jihad Productions, 1965); Albert Ayler, “Ghosts (Variation 2),” Spiritual Unity (ESP-Disk, 1964); an advertisement for Beats by Dre headphones featuring Colin Kaepernick, 2013. The title of this episode is taken from Albert Ayler’s Holy Ghost: Rare and Unissued Recordings (1962–70) (Revenant Records, 2004). 

    Medium Rotation is produced by Alexander Provan with Andrew Leland, and edited by Provan with Matt Frassica. Tashi Wada composed the theme music. Matt Mehlan acted as the audio engineer and contributed additional music.

    Medium Rotation is made possible through generous contributions from the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and Nicholas Harteau. This season of Medium Rotation is part of Triple Canopy’s twenty-sixth issue, Two Ears and One Mouth, which receives support from the Stolbun Collection, the Shelley & Donald Rubin Foundation, Agnes Gund, the National Endowment for the Arts, the New York State Council on the Arts, and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

    Zev Feldman

    Zev Feldman

    Support the Burning Ambulance podcast on Patreon: http://patreon.com/burningambulance

    Episode 27 of the Burning Ambulance podcast—the first episode of Year Two of the show—is the first one not to feature an interview with a musician. Instead, I’m talking to Zev Feldman, who’s a producer working primarily with the Resonance Records label.

    Resonance has been around for ten years and has mostly specialized in releasing archival music by legendary jazz artists. Their first big release was Echoes Of Indiana Avenue by guitarist Wes Montgomery—it featured some previously unheard early recordings. They’ve subsequently done several other albums of his music, including a live concert recorded on his only European tour in 1965. They’ve also put out albums by Stan Getz, Charles Lloyd, Bill Evans, Larry Young, and John Coltrane, among many others, and Zev is the guy who actually travels the world locating these lost recordings and putting in all the legwork to get them licensed, make sure they’ve got the rights, and do everything else that leads to the physical release. The thing that makes Resonance releases so great, by the way, is that they’re not just about throwing the music out there—they have really in-depth liner notes, tons of historical photographs, interviews with the surviving musicians or people connected to the recordings in some way, and beautiful packaging overall. They’re all about preserving the love of physical music formats. They do special releases for Record Store Day every year, putting out the vinyl versions before the CD edition and stuff like that.

    They don’t just release archival music, either—they also put out CDs by new artists, and Zev and I talk a little bit about that in this interview. We also discuss some of the non-Resonance work he’s done, like the Thelonious Monk record Les Liaisons Dangereuses 1960 and a big project he did the other year, reissuing 25 titles from Xanadu Records, a small '70s label that really deserves much more attention than it’s ever gotten.

    There's a lot more music in this episode than usual. Here's a full listing of everything you'll hear:

    Thelonious Monk, "Well You Needn't" (Les Liaisons Dangereuses 1960)

    Grant Green, "I Don't Want Nobody to Give Me Nothing" (Funk in France: From Paris to Antibes 1969-70)

    Wes Montgomery, "Full House" (In Paris: The Definitive ORTF Recording)

    Bill Evans, "Very Early" (Another Time: The Hilversum Concert)

    Larry Young, "Mean to Me" (In Paris: The ORTF Recordings)

    John Coltrane, "Crescent" (Offering: Live at Temple University)

    Andreas Varady, "Radiska" (The Quest)

    Jazz Bastard Podcast 144 - Butterfly Meat Wheel

    Jazz Bastard Podcast 144 - Butterfly Meat Wheel
    At Mike's suggestion we check out some lesser known - and lesser loved - projects by major jazz artists, from the MOR sellout of Bill Evans' "Plays VIPs" to Duke Ellington's fantasia on jazz history and domestic violence, "A Drum is a Woman." After the main event is over, stay tuned for half an hour of wide-ranging talk on the Lovecraftian rock opera "Dreams in the Witch House" - unless you fear for your SANITY. Thelonious Monk – MONK’S BLUES; Bill Evans - PLAYS THE THEME FROM V.I.P.'S AND OTHERS; Freddie Hubbard – SING ME A SONG OF SONGMY; Duke Ellington – A DRUM IS A WOMAN.

    Jazz Bastard Podcast 129 - Thelonious Business

    Jazz Bastard Podcast 129 - Thelonious Business
    Thelonious Sphere Monk turns one-hundred this year, which is approximately the number of albums based on his music released each year. Mike and Pat discuss the master's recently unearthed sound track to Dangerous Liaisons and three fairly recently tribute albums to his deathless music. Thelonious Monk - LES LIAISONS DANGEREUSES; (Plays Monk) – PLAYS MONK; John Beasley – MONK’ESTRA VOL. 1; Dave Zoller – EVIDENCE: MUSIC OF THELONIOUS MONK.