Clean Up Your Act – 3-16-21

Another green innovation for Eco Lips.

Corridor Jazz Project 2021 is Off and Running!

After months of planning, the Corridor Jazz Project 2021 has begun. It’s a big project, even without a pandemic to complicate things. We launched the program on Feb. 18 at Mt. Vernon, where the Swinging’ STANGS performed with guest artist (and Mt. Vernon alum!) singer Amy Friedl Stoner.

It would have been far easier to just cancel the project for this year. But nearly all of the competitions and festivals that are a normal part of the jazz band calendar have fallen by the wayside. We felt strongly that if it were at all possible to provide this bit of normalcy for the students, particularly the seniors, we needed to make it happen. 

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So instead of bringing all the bands to a central recording location, we made the commitment to go to them, taking a portable recording setup to each participating school. There won’t be a Corridor Jazz concert this year. Instead, we’re partnering with GMixEast who is making a professional video of each recording. The videos will be a part of big online concert/party on May 7.

You can see from the pictures the extra precautions the school and our production team are taking to make this the safest experience possible. The band is spread out, wind instruments all have bell covers, and/or special masks to accommodate mouthpieces. The students did an exceptional job of re-masking when they weren’t playing, along with staying socially-distanced.

A project that usually takes just a couple of weeks will this year will extend to nearly 3 months by the time we are all done. But it’s worth it to give these dedicated students a chance to demonstrate their craft during a time when so much has been taken from them.

This Week In Jazz February 21 thru February 27


Hey, Jazz fans!!! Be sure to tune in this week as we celebrate the birthdays of pianist/composers Tadd Dameron and Michel Legrand, saxmen Flip Phillips, Dexter Gordon, Buddy Tate and Claire Daly, drummers Dave Bailey, Harvey Mason and Joe Labarbera and more!!! We’ll also mark the recording anniversaries of Clifford Brown/Max Roach’s “Study in Brown” (1955), Ornette Coleman’s “Tomorrow Is The Question!” (1959), Sathima Bea Benjamin’s “Morning in Paris” (1963), Abbey Lincoln & Stan Getz’ “You Gotta Pay the Band” (1991), Richie Cole’s “Latin Lover” (2017) and many more throughout the week and Mondays thru Fridays at noon on our JAZZ MASTERS ‘program on Jazz 88.3 KCCK.

Special Programs for February 22 thru February 27

Short List with Host Bob Naujoks

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

Short List: “The Hits”

The Short List continues its feature of great jazz in the popular mind. This week, host Bob Naujoks celebrates Louis Armstrong’s “What a Wonderful World,” and “Hello Dolly,”  Miles Davis’s “Bitches Brew,” and the Stan Getz/Joao Gilberto collaboration, “The Girl From Ipanema.” Hear the fascinating stories behind these immortal records.

 

 

 

Jazz Corner of the World with Host Craig Kessler

Mondays at 6:00 PM

Tribute to Stanley Cowell, Part Two   

Craig continues his salute to the recently departed Stanley Cowell. We’ll primarily hear Stanley leading his own groups, as well as some choice material featuring Cowell as a sideman. He is one of the truly underrated and overlooked jazz pianists and will be greatly missed!

 

 

 

The Wednesday Night Special

Wednesdays at 6:00 PM

Stefon Harris & Blackout

Stefon Harris is the modern master of the vibraphone, standing shoulder-to-shoulder with such greats as Lionel Hampton, Milt Jackson, and Gary Burton. He’s a brilliant composer and arranger, as well, and is equally comfortable on the classical stages as he is in a jazz club with Jacky Terrasson or, at his 2004 Iowa City Jazz Festival gig, with his band Blackout.

 

 

 

Jazz Night in America with host Christian McBride

Thursdays at 11:00 PM

Remembering Chick Corea  

Host Christian McBride remembers Chick Corea, a man he describes as, “a pianist, composer, force of nature, and my friend.” Corea died on February 9, 2021, and to pay tribute to his life, McBride, a long-time collaborator with Corea, shares an intimate conversation and a 2018 Chick Corea & Vigilette performance in Boston.

 

 

 

Jazz Corner of the World with Host Craig Kessle

Saturdays at 12:00 Noon

Tribute to Stanley Cowell, Part Two   

Craig continues his salute to the recently departed Stanley Cowell. We’ll primarily hear Stanley leading his own groups, as well as some choice material featuring Cowell as a sideman. He is one of the truly underrated and overlooked jazz pianists and will be greatly missed!

 

 

 

KCCK’s Midnight CD

Every Night at Midnight

Each night, KCCK gives you the chance to hear a new CD played start-to-finish.

Mazel Tov Kocktail! by Ira B. Liss Big Band Jazz Machine on Monday; Collecting Things by Mike Scott on Tuesday; Natural Lines by the David Sills Double Guitar Quintet on Wednesday; Bernstein Reimagined by the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra on Thursday; Wildroots Sessions, Volume 1 by Various Artists on Friday; Heart of Fire by Ally Venable on Saturday; Second Wave by Meridian Odyssey on Sunday

New Music Monday for February 22, 2021

     Listen to this week’s playlist on YouTube and Spotify
Doug MacDonald and Harvey Newmark
, two greatly in-demand players from Southern California, have worked together many times through the years, often in MacDonald’s groups which range from trios to his 13-piece ensemble the Jazz Coalition. Philly-native MacDonald has worked over the years with Trummy Young, Joe Williams, Carl Fontana and Jack Montrose, among others, while Newmark has collaborated with the likes of Bill Holman, Rosemary Clooney, Buddy Rich and Ray Charles. The pair perform a set of swinging jazz duets on “Toluca Lake Jazz.” Interpreting seven standards and six MacDonald originals, the duo creates an exquisite set of light-toned but hard-swinging music.

 

 

 

     Vocalist Roseanna Vitro—performer, recording artist, educator and journalist—reissues “Listen Here,” the 1982 debut album that launched her career. Featuring veteran pianist Kenny Barron, the project ushered into the spotlight a formidable new artist with chops and sensitivity in equal measure. Though this a first recording, Vitro shows herself a mature jazz singer. Esteemed jazz journalist Neil Tesser notes, “Roseanna can sing rings around half the vocalists you can name. Her warm, confident clarity of tone is immediately noticeable, but most startling is her boldness of phrasing.”

 

 

 

                  

                    

Also this week, “The Long Game” is the eleventh album from celebrated vocalist and songwriter Jacqui Naylor;

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

bassist Lee Smith, who is bassist Christian McBride’s father, gathers up an all-star band including Terell Stafford, Tim Warfield, Joe Magnarelli and Byron Landham among others for “Faith in the New Day”;

 

 

 

 

 

 

and saxophonist Adrian Cunningham presents the newest release from his band Professor Cunningham and his Old School, “The Lockdown Blues.”

 

 

 

 

     

Talking Pictures 2-17-21

Willy’s Wonderland (2021) and Titans (HBO Max) with Hollis Monroe, Phil Brown and Ron Adkins.

No Art in a Vacuum: Soundtrack to the Struggle

Ron and Hollis Writing Award

In 2018, Soundtrack to the Struggle won a Severeid Award from the Public Radio News Directors Association.

2021 marks KCCK’s fourth year airing Soundtrack to the Struggle, our on-going series celebrating jazz’s contributions to the fight for racial equality. We here at KCCK often say that, in jazz, every month is Black History month. The stories of jazz and Black America are inexorably joined, and those stories are endless. You can hear it all in the music – all the passion and pain and, yes, even joy.

KCCK’s Hollis Monroe and Ron Adkins produce new episodes each year; continuing to tell the story of how jazz prevails against inequity, violence, and systemic bigotry. Hollis and Ron agree that each new exploration opens their eyes and renews their commitment to the cause.

We asked Hollis, as a Black man who has traveled and performed across the country, and Ron, a White man born and raised in the Midwest, to talk about something they take away from their work on Soundtrack to the Struggle.

Hollis:

No art takes place in a vacuum.

Art reflects, informs and chronicles its time and place in history. When we set out to create “Soundtrack to the Struggle,” one of the most important questions we asked ourselves was, “Exactly what are we trying to accomplish here?”

What was our goal in creating this series? Was it to inform? To educate? To entertain? And, exactly, who was the audience at which this series was aimed?

The simple answers are, first: All of the Above.

We hoped that it would inform our listeners as to how this music was created by the crucible of events leading up to, and continuing through, the ongoing struggles encompassed by the Civil Rights Movement. We wanted to shine a spotlight on the famous, the infamous, the little known and the entirely forgotten figures in that struggle. And, of course, to do so in a way that would showcase the music and art created by these individuals during the course of their lives and careers.

Secondly, as to whom this series was aimed, again the answer is simple. Everyone.

We hoped that by offering these insights into the lives and struggles of those who helped shape and define jazz music that we provide a deeper understanding of what drove those artists who, in the face of bigotry and adversity, dared to create. Those who dared to cross the line. Those who fought within those boundaries and those who chose to create despite oppression.

In short, our audience for this series is anyone who appreciates a deeper understanding of jazz through understanding the courage, creativity and commitment of those who chose to live and make music, even in the face of segregation and, occasionally, horrendous abuse. We hope everyone gains a greater understanding of how these individuals, through their lives and music, influenced jazz and how artists continue to create change in our society and our world.

Ron:

All my life, I’ve wished to be colorblind. Growing up a White Iowan, that is a difficult wish to fulfill. The racial divide is often a study in sharp contrast.

I wish I could say that jazz makes me colorblind. But, since beginning my work with Soundtrack to the Struggle, I thankfully see the whole spectrum of jazz in the most vivid and unexpected ways. When listening, deeply listening, I see all the hues that Miles and Duke, Sweets and Cleanhead used to paint their masterpieces – all kinds of blues, greens like chimneys, reds like clouds of dust, black and tan fantasies.

In a perfect world, there should be no room for skin tones on that palate. But jazz has never been played in a perfect world. Not when a bomb explodes under “Fatha” Hines’s feet, or when Miles Davis is beaten by a cop on the streets of New York, or when Ella Fitzgerald is arrested for singing to a white audience. Or when any jazz musicians have to enter through the kitchen, or drive only roads deemed safe in the Green Book, or fear for their lives passing through a “sundown county.” That’s when Black and White are in sharp focus.

I study the stories of jazz, as a White man, and I become not just a better listener, but a better person. I hear, from my privileged balcony seat, what lies under the skin. Pain and anger and fear, but also great hope and unspeakable joy. And I see blood Reds, the Blues of a million tears, the dusty Browns of backroads, the radiant Yellows of love. In every note, there are anguished cries and jubilant hallelujahs. Beneath the skin, the soul is laid bare – the artists’ and my own.

Producing Soundtrack to the Struggle, I discovered that I must not close my eyes and ears to the contrasting Black and White. Both must be within the realm of my senses before I can hear the song being sung and the picture being painted.  

This Week In Jazz February 14 thru February 20


Hey, Jazz fans!!! Be sure to tune in this week as we celebrate the birthdays of composers Harold Arlen and Alec Wilder, percussionist/bandleader Machito, vocalists Irma Thomas, Randy Crawford and Dena DeRose, saxmen Maceo Parker, Pete Christlieb, Chad Eby and more!!! We’ll also mark the recording anniversaries of Duke Ellington & Johnny Hodges’ “Side by Side” (1959), Wynton Kelly’s “Kelly Blue” (1959), Freddie Redd Quartet’s “The Connection” (1960), Stan Getz Quartet’s “The Sockholm Concert” (1983), Pete Christlieb & Bob Cooper’s “Mosaic (LIVE) (1990) and many more throughout the week and Mondays thru Fridays at noon on our JAZZ MASTERS ‘program on Jazz 88.3 KCCK!!!