This Week In Jazz March 3 thru February March 9

Hey, Jazz fans! Be sure to tune in this week as we celebrate the birthdays of a BEVY of trumpeters including Howard McGhee, Palle Mikkelborg, Charles Tolliver, Bobby Shew, Ralph Alessi and Orbert Davis, saxophonists George Coleman and Ricky Ford, guitarist Wes Montgomery, singers Flora Purim and Carol Sloane, pianist Lou Levy and more. We’ll also mark the recording anniversaries of Sonny Rollins’ “Way Out West” (1957), Miles Davis’ “Someday My Prince Will Come” (1961), Pat Martino’s “Desperado” (1970), Stan Getz’ “Voyage” (1986), Carol Sloane’s “The Songs Sinatra Sang” (1996), The Godfathers of Groove’s “3” (2008) and many others, Mondays thru Fridays at noon on on Jazz 88.3 KCCK.   

Culture Crawl 896 “Magic and Wrestling-Who Knew?”

History of magic meets professional wrestling in Jackson Green’s upcoming magic show, put on by Deb Kennedy’s TKM Theatrical Productions, March 15, 7pm @ Amana Performing Arts Center. Bring the whole family for a night that will surely blue thunder bomb your mind. 

Tickets and more info at www.tkmtheatricalproductions.com 

Subscribe to The Culture Crawl at www.kcck.org/culture or search “Culture Crawl” in your favorite podcast player. Listen Live at 10:30am most weekdays on Iowa’s Jazz station. 88.3 FM or www.kcck.org/listen.

 

Chris Ott – Huntertones

Chris Ott, trombone player for The Huntertones, stopped by KCCK prior to the band’s performance at Coe College on March 1.

Kirkwood Board of Trustees to meet March 7, 2024

The regular meeting of the Kirkwood Board of Trustees will take place March 7, 2024.  Time, place, and meeting agenda can be found at this link.

New Music Monday for March 4, 2024

Listen to this week’s playlist on YouTube and Spotify
In recent years, pianist Lynne Arriale’s compositions and albums have reflected current social issues, highlighting the worldwide immigration crises and the life-changing events wrought by Covid-19. On “Being Human,” her 17th album as a leader, Ms. Arriale presents a suite of 10 original compositions celebrating the ways that our lives are enriched by acts of passion, courage, love, persistence, heart, soul, curiosity, faith and joy. Many of the songs are dedicated to people who’ve inspired her, including climate activist Greta Thunberg, National Youth Poet Laureate Amanda Gorman and Nobel Laureate Malala Yousafzai.

When South African-born bassist Yosef-Gutman Levitt made the journey to Boston to study at Berklee College of Music, he encountered a number of likeminded souls there, including guitarist Lionel Loueke, who had come to Berklee from his West African home of Benin via Paris. After moving to New York, the two continued to nourish their musical bond with a weekly gig in Brooklyn. Their paths then diverged: Loueke became one of the most sought-after musicians of his time, signing to Blue Note Records and joining the bands of Terence Blanchard and Herbie Hancock among others. Levitt left the music business, eventually moving to Jerusalem in 2009 following a spiritual rebirth. By 2018, he returned to music and began to refine a distinctive voice on the five-string acoustic bass guitar. Reuniting after many years, Levitt is excited to share his new album with Loueke, “Soul Song.”

                                                           

Also this week, Daggerboard returns with “Escapement,” featuring a legendary lineup including Mike Clark, Gregory Howe, Erik Jekebson and Henry ‘The Skipper’ Franklin; “Gin” is pianist Jill McCarron’s second release as a leader, featuring her three-part “The Gin Suite” along with arrangements of select jazz classics from Horace Silver, Bill Evans, Kenny Dorham and others; and Toronto-based composer, arranger and bassist Mike Downes, whom Pat Metheny cites as one of his favorite bass players, presents “The Way In,” his first recording for piano, guitar and bass trio.

 

News Digest 3-1-24

President Biden and former President Trump criticized each other over their immigration policies in separate events at the southern border…a plan to change the state’s area education agencies has the cleared the Iowa House.

KCCK’s Featured Album for March 2024

The KCCK Featured Album for March is “Lotta Livin'” froBetty Bryant. The Kansas City-born vocalist, pianist and songwriter was dubbed ‘Cool Miss B’ by her fellow musicians. Ms. Bryant began her career in her hometown where she was mentored by the great Jay McShann. She moved to the west coast in 1955 and quickly became a popular attraction. She has performed internationally as well, and for many years was a regular on the Tokyo jazz scene. At age 94, her singing and playing show the depth and assurance that comes when natural talent is enhanced by great experience. “Lotta Livin'” is from Bry-Mar Music. Purchase

News Digest 2-29-24

Mitch McConnell says he’ll step down as Senate Minority Leader later this year…the Iowa House passes a bill to make it easier for teachers to carry guns.