On tonight's show:
- Red Norvo, Remember
- Count Basie and His Orchestra, Tickle Toe (78rpm Version)
- Bennie Moten, Moten Swing
- Ziggy Elman, I Have Everything to Live For
- Dinah Washington, John Coltrane, I Can't Remember
- Ella Fitzgerald, So Rare
- Helen O'Connell, Bye Bye Blues
- Jimmy Smith, One O'Clock Jump
- Duke Ellington, Moonbow
- Miles Davis, Miles Runs the Voodoo Down (45-RPM Single Edit)
- Hugh Masekela, Inner Crisis
- Count Basie, Mean to me
- Count Basie, Blues for Joe Turner
- Al Di Meola, Coral
- Fraser MacPherson Quartet, Come Sunday
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Mon, 03/02/2026 - 10:11am | Ned
Davis Senior High School is getting ready to put on a production of Urinteown! Several of the cast members came by The Monday Morning Show to hang out for a couple of hours. Director Chad Fisk, along with Anna, Charlotte, and Matthew, joined Ned in the studio to talk about music, putting on shows, and how we might embarass Chad in front of his students. They even performed a few numbers! If you missed it live, listen anytime via KDRT.org.
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Today, the News Cycle focuses on the upcoming CA-04 House race, speaking to candidates Mike Thompson and Eric Jones.
Hosted and produced by Sam Ochsner-Hembrow. Music by Daniel Ruiz Jimenez.
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This week on The Electric Compost Heap, host Dug Deep spins songs about warmer weather and all the possibilities of the impending vernal equinox. He'll also feature new songs from older Compost Heap fave, King Tuff, The Bevis Frond, and blues artists Tinsley Ellis and Li'l Ed & the Blues Imperials! They all have new records out or coming out soon. Hope you can join us tonight at KDRT 95.7fm + KDRT.org. Listen anytime via the podcasts!
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Just like the spring flowers, there are sooo many great live shows popping up in the Davis - Sacramento area in March. There were so many that we aren't able to preview them all in one hour, but we hit some of the highlights with selections from CAKE, Neko Case, Black Viiolet, BJM, Margo Price, Jessica Malone and more!
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Transitions of care from hospital to home are some of the riskiest moments in a person’s healthcare journey. Medication lists change, high‑risk medications require careful monitoring, and patients often deal with overwhelming amounts of instructions. Linda Graudins tells us how pharmacists help people on complex medication regimens navigate these challenges safely. We’ll look at a process called medication reconciliation which is a bit like medication detective work and helps pharmacists keep those potentially dangerous transitions from home to hospital and back to your home, smooth and safe.
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