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WHAT I’M LISTENING TO WHILE ON HIATUS – REDUX

8 Aug

I’m still on summer hiatus for a couple more weeks, but I’ve been listening to some interesting music lately, some from singers I’ve known for a while but two I’ve never heard of before. 

  • Cyrille Aimee  –  “It’s A Good Day”  – This is not your typical Cyrille Aimee CD, although it’s getting harder to define what typical is for her. She’s recorded previously with the Chicago Jazz Orchestra, with her own combo, with solo guitar, and now, with two guitars, bass, and drums. She is turning out to be a jazz chameleon, though with much prettier skin and no evidence (that I can tell) of a tail the length of her body.  She sings (and sometimes coos) standards with really interesting rhythmic twists, she sings originals (though I don’t  think writing is her strength yet), and she gives her fabulous guitarists plenty of room to be, well, fabulous. Best surprise for me: The shifting, lightning tempo of “Love Me Or Leave Me” and the verse at the end of the song.
  • Freda Payne  –  “Come Back To Me Love” – With a long career, with hits and high points, with awards and adulation, what does Freda Payne have to prove? Who cares. I’m glad, at 72, she went back into a studio to record again in front of a big band arranged by pianist, Bill Cunliffe. The standards are great. The CD has more original songs written by Gretchen Valade, than standards. But the original songs suit Freda’s voice and temperament, though I think they lure her more into her soul and R&B side than her jazz side. Best surprise for me: What she does with the opening song, “You’d Be So Nice To Come Home To,” is astonishing – and I haven’t even started to hyperbolize.  
  • Paul Jost  –  “Breaking Through”  –  Looking for the newest crooner? Looking for a soft and soothing voice? It’s not Paul Jost. What he may lack in the pretty voice category, he more than compensates for with his raw passion and vocal musicianship. His arrangements defy the expected, his scatting is effortless, not tedious, and his energy would challenge any accompany musicians, but his band is up to the challenge. Best surprise for me: the really strange arrangement of “The Days Of Wine And Roses,” complete with SFX of kids playing on the street and Paul’s own body percussion. 
  • Julia Karosi  –  “Hidden Roots  –  Julia is a Hungarian jazz singer who writes original tunes and adapts Hungarian folk songs, including such familiar sing-along ditties as “Edesanyan Rozsafaja,” and “Imhol Kerekedik.” Julia has also written lyrics for other melodies, including one song in English. For the most part – and I think the best parts – Julia is just a voice, and a lovely one, adding vocalise seamlessly with her trio. Best surprise for me: Hungarian jazz may not have much connection with the Blues, but its connection to driving swing with a few added dashes of Hungarian musical inflections and tonalities make for an exciting CD.

My summer hiatus is nearly over and Turntable For One returns to the air on Saturday, August 30th at 10:00 PM (E.D.T.) on WMNR Fine Arts Radio and streaming live at wmnr.org. I hope you’re as excited about my return as I am. If you’re not, just keep it to yourself. There’s enough negativity in the world already, don’t you think?

Need to remind yourself about how much fun it is to listen to Turntable For One?  How about a Turntable For One podcast on PRX, the Public Radio Exchange? Just click on the link below.  

http://www.prx.org/series/33284-turntable-for-one

WHAT I’M LISTENING TO WHILE ON HIATUS

15 Jul

I noticed that I have a number of new “Tribute” CDs on my desk and I finally started listening to them instead of using them to build very unstable and loud houses of cards. I’ll tell you what I think, but you should listen to them and decide for yourselves. Let me know what you’re listening to these days, ok?

  • Diane Schuur – I Remember You – This is a tribute CD to Sinatra and Stan Getz with songs associated with one or the other or both. Diane may not be the lyric interpreter that Sinatra was, but she is every bit the inventive and indefatigable musician Getz was. She blends perfectly as another instrument with the band and it’s a very solid band, too. Best surprise for me: Diane’s unadorned, unembellished title track – just singing from her heart.
  •  Wendy Moten – Timeless: Wendy Moten Sings Richard Whiting – Most of these songs were written in the 1920s and 1930s, but you couldn’t guess that from listening to this CD. It swings, it’s tender, it’s sexy, it’s bluesy. Wendy Moten has been a back-up singer here and there; she has a few CDs under her own name, some in Contemporary R&B mode. But she’s very comfortable with jazz and ballads. There are lots of Whiting chestnuts – My Ideal, Miss Brown To You, He’s Funny That Way.  Best surprise for me: a couple of cute songs I didn’t know – It’s A Long Time Between Kisses and I Wanna Go Places And Do Things. I’ll be interested to see if she does.
  •  Janet Planet – Janet Planet Sings The Bob Dylan Songbook, Vol. 1 – Okay, I admit I cracked the cellophane on this CD with trepidation. However, this story has a (mostly) happy ending. In many of Dylan’s most powerful songs, the drone of the repeated melody forces you to pay attention to the lyrics. I find those songs proved to be too limited and confining for this jazz setting. But in songs with a stronger melody line, Janet Planet adeptly, intelligently goes to work, weaving interesting designs with her lovely voice and considerable talent for embellishing. She has moxie and takes chances and I’ll be playing her a lot when Turntable For One returns in the Fall…maybe not so often from this interesting CD.
  • Mark Winkler – The Laura Nyro Project  — Anyone paying tribute to Laura Nyro gets points from me from the start. And when the tribute CD is sincere, affectionate, and swinging — as this one is — bonus points galore! The songs, all favorites for any Laura Nyro fan, range from the slight and ethereal to the raucous and rowdy. And just about all of them really do work with a solid jazz combo  and this West Coast hipster singer. Okay, his straight-ahead jazz version of Save The Country obscures the point of this anthem which, it seems to me, has even more meaning now than when Laura Nyro wrote it about 50 years ago. But, boy, does Mark Winkler understand ballads and heartbreak! His version of Billy’s Blues haunts me every time I listen to it.  Best surprise for me: an incredibly clever mash-up of the song Time And Love and Ahmad Jamal’s classic instrumental version of Moonlight In Vermont. 

Turntable For One returns to the air on Saturday, August 30th at 10:00 PM  (E.D.T.)

Can’t wait that long? Why not listen to a Turntable For One podcast. Better yet: invite a crowd to listen!

http://www.prx.org/series/33284-turntable-for-one

HINT FOR THIS SATURDAY NIGHT’S THEME (4.19.14)

15 Apr

HINT:

I’ve uncovered a plot hidden deep in the Great American Songbook to upend reality as we know it and make us believe in things which can’t possibly be true. Either you’re part of the solution or part of the problem. Guess which one I’m going to be this Saturday night. 

Turntable For One   Jazz Vocals and Live Radio

Saturday Night   10:00 PM (E.D.T.)

WMNR FIne Arts Radio and streaming on wmnr.org

There’s another new Turntable For One podcast on PRX, the Public Radio Exchange.,”Finding My Religion: A Soul-Searching Hour.” It’s probably a serious discussion of the Mind-Body problem as it pertains to current theological tenets, right? You might want to think again. 

http://www.prx.org/series/33284-turntable-for-one

ME, MY-SELFIE, AND I PHOTO GALLERY

12 Apr

Let the Selfies begin!! Click on the photos for a better view.

Here I am leaving a little surprise in Will Duchon's mailbox at WMNR. A water balloon is funnier than the time I left a kitten in  his mailbox, right?

Here I am leaving a little surprise in Will Duchon’s mailbox at WMNR. A water balloon is funnier than the time I left a kitten in his mailbox, right?

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This is the way I think the audience sees me.

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At that hour and after a couple drinks, this is the way the audience really sees me.

 

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The closest I’ll ever come to holding a world record…

 

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Dan Lenore, host of “On The Record.”Is it fair that he gets to have more hair AND more beard than I do?

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Mark Morton, who keeps WMNR on the air, sent this from the nerve center of the radio station and I think he had a lot of nerve putting a promotional poster in the background.

 

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Me introducing the Mystery Vocalist – you keep the mystery your way and I’ll keep it mine, ok?

HERE’S AN UPDATE FROM THE TURNTABLE FOR ONE SPORTSDESK (12.14.13)

14 Dec

Looks like the final score tonight is going to be Storm Elektra 1 – Turntable For One – 0. The winter storm in the Northeast means I won’t get to the station tonight and we’ll be playing a show from the archive – an interesting show, nevertheless. I invited a special guest-host to join me, plus the CD players revolt and play what they want, and hilarity, as you might expect, ensues.

While we’re on the subject of Winter Storm Elektra…when did we start naming winter storms? Aren’t they just a lot of snow and wind? They don’t have personalities, hopes, desires, foibles or Facebook pages. Do we really need to anthropomorphize everything? Next companies will start paying to sponsor winter storms as they name arenas and stadiums (although Winter Storm Bank Of America sort of has a ring of truth to it.) But if we are going to name winter storms, isn’t that something we could reasonably ask Kanye and Kim to handle?

Something to think about…though not for very long. As you can tell, I didn’t.

Talk to you next week, unless Winter Storm Ford Fusion moves in.

OOPS! CHANGE OF PLANS (11.23.13)

21 Nov

Sorry gang, but I can’t do a live show this Saturday night. Instead we’ll be playing an archived show from last year, although I’ll probably do what you do every week – not listen.

I’ll be back November 30th for The Fourth Annual Turntable For One Music To Be Thankful For show with guests and surprises.

Talk to you then. 

Turntable For One    Jazz Vocals and Live Radio

Saturday Nights   10:00 PM   WMNR Fine Arts Radio and streaming on wmnr.org

UH-OH

4 Oct

Because of the government shutdown, Turntable For One has been furloughed this week as non-essential. That’s their story. My story is I’m under the weather and won’t be going into the station this week. 

Enjoy a show from the archives this Saturday night and I’ll talk to you next week. 

 

Turntable For One   Jazz Vocals and Live Radio 

Saturday Night   10:00 PM  WMNR Fine Arts Radio and streaming on wmnr.org

HINT FOR THIS SATURDAY NIGHT’S THEME. (9.14.13)

11 Sep

HINT:

Think Turntable For One has been too irreverent? This week’s show may be the answer to all your prayers!

 

Turntable For One   Jazz Vocals and Live Radio 

Saturday Night   10:00 PM   WMNR Fine Arts Radio and wmnr.org

IN JUST ONE WEEK!!

21 Aug

August 31st at 10:00 PM. Is this date circled on your calendar? Great. I hope you’ve circled it to remind yourself to listen to the season premiere of Turntable For One and not for all of the other reasons you might have for circling that date on your calendar.  (Spare me the details!)

I’m coming back with another hour of all of the features you’ve come to expect from Turntable For One  — baseless allegations, careless innuendo, and unwarranted character assassinations — Oh, wait, that’s C-SPAN.  My bad. What I meant was, listen to Turntable For One for a brand new season of quirky musical themes, great jazz vocals, and a weekly mystery vocalist.  

What will I choose for the theme of the first show of the season? Look for a hint here next Wednesday. And tune in  on August 31st at 10:00 PM (E.S.T.)

Turntable For One   Live Radio and Jazz Vocals

Saturday Night   10:00 PM  WMNR Fine Arts Radio and streaming on wmnr.org

IN ONLY TWO WEEKS!

10 Aug

Saturday, August 31 at 10:00 PM (E.S.T.) Turntable For One returns for a new season bursting with exciting new singers, provocative new themes, and (you supply the adjective of your choice  ___________) new mystery vocalists. I can’t wait!

I’ve also been trying to think of new ways to get more people to listen to Turntable For One. Lots of people have been telling me to post photos of my junk because everyone is doing it and it’s a great way to get attention.

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Gotta say, I’m not sure why people are interested in stuff in my basement, but there you go.

Watch this space for more news about the season premiere of Turntable For One and I’ll talk to you on August 31st!

Turntable For One  Live Radio And Jazz Vocals

Saturday Night   10:00 PM  WMNR Fine Arts Radio & wmnr.org