Jazz masters on this episode:
- Louis Armstrong and His Hot Five, Ory's Creole Trombone
- Louis Armstrong and His Hot Seven, Potato Head Blues
- Artie Shaw, At Sundown
- Sidney Bechet, Si tu vois ma mère
- Sidney Bechet - Martial Solal Quartet, I've Got A Right To Sing The Blues
- Billie Holiday and Her Orchestra, I Cover the Waterfront
- Billie Holiday & Lester Young, Fine and Mellow
- Gerry Mulligan & Paul Desmond, Line for Lyons
- Gerry Mulligan & Ben Webster, The Cat Walk
- Duke Ellington with Ella Fitzgerald, Drop Me Off in Harlem
- Ella Fitzgerald, Misty
- Duke Ellington, Mood Indigo
- Duke Ellington and His Orchestra & Oscar Peterson, Take the "A" Train
- Count Basie and His Orchestra, Basie - Straight Ahead
- Count Basie and His Orchestra, That Warm Feeling
|
|
|
Tue, 05/14/2024 - 3:00pm | Ned
Rerun from April 9, 2024.
|
On this epsiode of Meraki Radio, we discuss all things PIZZA. Bon appetit!
|
|
|
This week on High Country Music Radio are the Punch Brothers, Nora Brown, Late for the Train, Dom Flemons, Sister Sadie, Carling & Will, the Steep Canyon Rangers, The Honey Dewdrops, old school sounds with Ola Belle Reed, Bill Monroe & His Bluegrass Boys, Doc Watson and John Hartford.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Long before he flew four missions on the space shuttle, Steve Robinson was the first DJ of a now-vanished Davis commercial radio station, KYLO, in the late 1970s. Decades later, he’s a professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering at UC Davis, and director of its Center for Space Flight Research — and he will soon return to local radio as occasional fill-in host for Rod Moseanko, host of the station’s Silver Nine Volt Heart. (The photo shows Steve, left, and Rod in the KDRT studio May 11.)
Today on Davisville we enjoy a serious conversation about space flight, plus hear Steve’s memories of KYLO — including what happened when he told listeners he was running out of records to play — and learn what brought him to KDRT. After he returned Davis in 2012, Robinson said, “I was looking for some good radio,” and found it with Rod’s show. “I thought, ‘this kind of radio is still alive. It was very exciting to me.’ ”
|