Short List with Bob Naujoks
Monday – Friday at 8:35 AM and Saturday at 7 AM
The Short List: Jazz Clubs Live (new Series)
The Short List series begins programs on the more famous jazz clubs, both past and present. The first segments are about Birdland in New York City. The neon sign said “The Jazz Corner of the World” and the awning still does. The original Birdland club was organized and opened in December 1949 and named to associate the place with the high-flying jazz artist, Charlie Parker. For a time he would be their main headliner. There were three versions of the club over the years before it finally closed in the mid-1960s. Aside from Bird, all the great players of three decades appeared there.
Jazz Profiles with Nancy Wilson
Monday at 6:00 PM
Erroll Garner: ‘The Joy of a Genius’
Erroll Garner was one of the most original, intuitive, and purely exciting pianists to emerge during the modern jazz era. Although he is perhaps best known as the composer of “Misty,” Garner’s significance as a jazz innovator easily rivals his status as a successful songwriter. His approaches to melody, harmony, and especially rhythm are as fresh and inventive today as when he first introduced them in the mid ’40s. Interviewees include Steve Allen, Linton Garner, Martha Glaser, John Levy, Marian McPartland, and Dr. Billy Taylor.
Jazz Corner of the World with Craig Kessler
Monday, 7:00 PM – 11:00 PM (follows Jazz Profiles)
“John Coltrane — The Prestige Years – 1955 to 1958”
For this year’s annual John Coltrane ‘birth week’ celebration, Craig takes us on a tour of the Prestige recording sessions that ‘TRANE’ was involved with, both as a leader and as a sideman with folks like Red Garland, Miles Davis, Mal Waldron, Paul Quinichette, and others, during the years of 1955 and 1958. We’ll hear Trane’s first appearance on the label for a Miles Davis date that took place 11/16/55, all the way through to his last appearance on the label for his own recording date that took place 12/26/58!
New Orleans Calling with George Ingmire
Tuesday at 6:00 PM
“Stomp in the Name of Love”
The wedding reception of New Orleans anesthesiologist and avid record collector, Ira “Dr. Ike” Padnos in 2000 was so amazing—featuring blues acts ranging from Magic Slim and the Teardrops to R.L. Burnside—that his friends persuaded him to put on another show like it. And another. And another. Now in its twelfth official year, the Ponderosa Stomp festival remains devoted to celebrating and revitalizing the careers of long-lost rock, soul, R & B, rockabilly, country, blues, and garage musicians. Dr. Ike and his small staff (known as The Mystic Knights of the Mau Mau, an homage to Screamin’ Jay Hawkins’s “Feast of the Mau Mau”) bring recognition to forgotten artists still roaming the Earth through both the festival and their multifaceted nonprofit organization, the Ponderosa Stomp Foundation. Host George Ingmire talks with “Dr. Ike” about the festival’s history and sample music from some of the musicians appearing at this year’s event Oct. 1-3 in New Orleans.
Jazz Night in America with Christian McBride
Wednesday at 6:00 PM
Wayne’s World: Wayne Shorter at Jazz at Lincoln Center
Wayne Shorter revisits some of his most career-defining work in this rare opportunity to hear a true jazz master exploring his back catalog. Joined by the Jazz At Lincoln Center Orchestra, Shorter touches on a lifetime of brilliance and trail-blazing in this special episode of Jazz Night In America.
Wednesday Night Special
7:00 PM (Follows Jazz Night in America)
Howard Levy with the CR Jazz Band
Multiple Grammy- Award Winner Howard Levy is an acknowledged master of the diatonic harmonica, a superb pianist, innovative composer, recording artist, bandleader, teacher, producer, and Chicago area resident. His musical travels have taken him all over the geographical world and the musical map. Equally at home in Jazz, Classical music, Rock, Folk, Latin, and World Music, he brings a fresh lyrical approach to whatever he plays. This has made him a favorite with audiences worldwide, and a recording artist sought after by the likes of Kenny Loggins, Dolly Parton, Paquito D’Rivera, Styx, Donald Fagen, and Paul Simon. As a sideman, Howard has appeared on hundreds of CDs and played on many movie soundtracks. He is perhaps best known for the four CD’s he recorded with Bela Fleck and The Flecktones, a unique band that set the musical world on its ear back in the early 1990’s. This performance, airing for the first time on KCCK, is from the Spring 2015 Kirkwood Big Band Concert. Al Naylor directs the CR Jazz Band
Piano Jazz with Marian McPartland
Thursday at 6:00 PM
Joe Lovano and Dave Holland
Saxophonist Joe Lovano and bassist Dave Holland first recorded together in 1992 on the album From the Soul. Lovano toured with the Woody Herman Thundering Herd in the 1970s and went on to join the John Scofield Quartet. Holland was part of the London jazz scene of the late ’60s before playing with Miles Davis’ band. On this Piano Jazz from 2000, Lovano and Holland share their dynamic energy with host McPartland in a trio collaboration.
Jazz Corner of the World with Craig Kessler
Saturday, Noon – 4:00 PM and Monday, 7:00 PM – 11:00 PM
Craig travels back 50 years to look in on some of the nearly FORTY recording sessions done by Bob Weinstock and his crew at the PRESTIGE RECORDS jazz label back in 1965. We’ll hear a variety of top-notch jazz records by giants such as Jack McDuff, Lucky Thompson, Jaki Byard, Bobby Timmons, Chet Baker, and many others. This is classic modern jazz, laying the groundwork for exciting things to come!!
Riverwalk Jazz
Sunday at 5:00 PM
Bing and Louis: A Pocketful of Dreams with Author Gary Giddins
Louis Armstrong called Bing Crosby a “natural genius.” Bing, in return, referred to Armstrong as “the greatest pop singer in the world.” Author Gary Giddins joins host David Holt to discuss the long friendship between two of America’s celebrated musical icons, as The Jim Cullum Jazz Band performs music of Armstrong and Crosby.
Tropical Heat with Kpoti Accoh
Sunday, 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM
Featured Album: Toumani & Sidiki
Artists: Toumani Diabaté & Sidiki Diabaté
Website: http://www.toumaniandsidiki.com/
Overview: Described as “the finest Toumani collaboration since his classic work with Ali Farka Touré” (The Guardian) ‘Toumani & Sidiki’ is a dialogue conducted through the kora, the 21-string West African harp which the Diabaté dynasty has elevated into the most iconic of African instruments. Father-and-son collaborations are rare enough but the ties binding Toumani and Sidiki Diabaté are particularly profound and evocative. Descended from a line of griots – custodians of the ancient oral traditions of West Africa’s Mandé people stretching back seven hundred years – the names Toumani and Sidiki are significant names in the annals of African music.
KCCK’s Midnight CD
The Monday – Sunday Midnight CD for this week can be found at:
http://www.kcck.org/midnight-cd/