This Week’s Shows – Week of August 31

Short List with Bob Naujoks

Monday – Friday at 8:35 AM and Saturday at 7 AM

Jazz and the Spoken Word: Dan Jaffe w Mike Melvoin / Rich Herstek w Pierre Hurel

“Jazz and the Spoke51FYJWNCTHL._SY467_BO1,204,203,200_n Word” Short List series is about a small group of writers and musicians who have worked to blend the rhythm of jazz with the rhythm of poetry and the spoken word. The series reveals some of the best attempts at combining the two art forms during the past 90 years. On The Short List this week we’ll hear more from writer Dan Jaffee and pianist Mike Melvoin as they explore the jazz music and ambience of Kansas City through poetry. Then a poetic fling by a man whose career was in advertising and promotion, Rich Herstek. His deep rich voice is pared up with the Julliard trained French pianist, Pierre Hurel, to great effect.

 

Jazz Profiles with Nancy Wilson

Monday at 6:00 PM

Remembering Max Roach, Rhythmic Innovator   Max Roach         

An innovative drummer, bandleader, composer, and educator, Max Roach is a musical renaissance man. He was Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie’s drummer of choice as they developed bebop in the ’40s, and his innovations forever changed the way drums are played. In the ’50s he co-led (with trumpeter Clifford Brown) one of the seminal groups of jazz, bringing bebop to new levels of sophistication. In the ’60s, he created a range of compositions reflecting the struggle for civil rights.

 

Jazz Corner of the World with Craig Kessler

Monday, 7:00 PM – 11:00 PM (follows Jazz Profiles)

“Celebration of The Music Of Charles Christopher Parker, Jr.”            

Craig celebrates Bird’s birthday (8/29) by playing from a variety of records that feature music from the most important soloist in the history of modern jazz. We’ll hear music from Bird’s years in Kansas City in the early 1940s, through his early demise in 1955.

 

New Orleans Calling with George Ingmire    

Tuesday at 6:00 PM 

Remembering Katrina – 10 Years Later  BBkoocK  

Hurricane Katrina devastated New Orleans on August 29, 2005 and changed countless lives forever. One of the remarkable stories from that fateful day and its aftermath was the loss and ultimate resurrection of New Orleans Public Radio Station WWOZ. Host George Ingmire shares this tale of how hundreds of people including WWOZ staff, volunteers, listeners, friends and community activists came together to help reclaim the airwaves for this public institution.

 

Jazz Night in America with Christian McBride

Wednesday at 6:00 PM

Up and Down the Mississippi with Bill Frisell    images        

For the past two years, guitarist Bill Frisell has curated Jazz at Lincoln Center’s Roots of Americana series. For the final performance of the series, he takes us back to the Mississippi River Delta, the great incubator of American music, with a performance entitled Up and Down the Mississippi, Traveling Highway 61. Frisell explores music from New Orleans jazz to Delta blues and Bob Dylan to Bix Beiderbecke.

  

Wednesday Night Special               

7:00 PM (Follows Jazz Night in America)   

Christopher’s Very Happy Band at Opus Concert Café   url          

Christopher’s Very Happy Band is led by saxophonist Chris Merz, Professor of Jazz Studies and Director of Jazz Band I at the University of Northern Iowa. Chris has toured four continents with Dave Brubeck and other members of the Brubeck family and played lead alto saxophone with several East Coast groups, including the Cecil Bridgewater Big Band, the New England Jazz Ensemble, and the Jeff Holmes Big Band. Locally, Chris has led the X-tet, a 12-piece big band and was a member of Equilateral. The Very Happy band plays mostly all original compositions and also features Michael Conrad on piano & keyboard, Drew Morton on bass, and Dave Tiede on drums. This performance was originally broadcast live on KCCK May 1st as part of the “First Friday Jazz” series at Opus Concert Café in downtown Cedar Rapids.

 

Piano Jazz with Marian McPartland     

Thursday at 6:00 PM

Ernestine Anderson Ernestine Anderson       

Born in Houston in 1928, Ernestine Anderson hit the jazz scene in the 1940s and has captivated audiences with her vocal warmth and rich intensity ever since. Anderson has performed at prestigious venues worldwide, including Carnegie Hall and the Kennedy Center, and has recorded with Hank Jones, Ray Brown, and Monty Alexander. In this Piano Jazz session from 1996, Anderson joins McPartland to perform “Our Love is Here to Stay” and “In a Mellow Tone.”

 

Jazz Corner of the World with Craig Kessler  

Saturday, Noon – 4:00 PM and Monday, 7:00 PM – 11:00 PM

“The Music of Eric Dolphy — Part Two”   Eric Dolphy 3         

Craig gives us the 2nd of 2 looks at the career of genius reedman, ERIC ALLAN DOLPHY, JR.   In part two, we’ll look at the final half of his career  —  1961 to 1964.  We’ll hear from his later recordings for Prestige/New Jazz, his appearances with other jazz greats such as John Coltrane and Charles Mingus, as well as a variety of other recordings that he made in the 1960s.  Dolphy has always been a very influential cog in the advancement of modern jazz, and his music continues to stand as ‘extremely important’ in jazz literature!

 

Riverwalk Jazz

Sunday at 5:00 PM

Crescent City Stomp: Mardi Gras Celebration   noc_047_160x100            

They call New Orleans “the Cradle of Jazz.” And as the saying goes, “The hand that rocks the cradle, rocks the nation” — in this case, the world. The Jim Cullum Jazz Band presents a concert honoring the music and musicians of New Orleans, past and present.

 

 

KCCK’s Midnight CD

The Monday – Sunday Midnight CD for this week can be found at:

http://www.kcck.org/onair/midnight_cd.php