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David Husom

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Return to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 21: Miles Davis For Beginners. Part One, The Electric Years.Think you are not a fan of jazz, think Miles Davis has nothing to offer you? Davis, during his 45 plus year career, released at least 60 studio albums and 39 live albums, as well as 46 compilation albums, 27 box sets, and 4 soundtrack albums. He reinvented himself almost as often as he changed his socks (well at least every few years anyway). Starting in the 1940s there was a move away from big band swing with Be Bop. He then moved on to cool jazz - he was there for the birth of the cool. Then in 1959 he redefined jazz, moving from chord...2025-07-1443 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 20: Stax Blues Singer Johnnie Taylor Had The First Platinum Record With 2 Million Sales. And it Was A Disco Song.Memphis based Stax recording star soul singer Johnnie Taylor is probably best remembered today for his R&B hits. But very few crossed over to top 40 radio. So unless you are an in-depth fan of Stax records hits from the 1960s or perhaps a follower of vintage disco you probably do not know much of his catalog of soul and blues and his dance disco hit. It is odd sometimes that artists are remembered for just one or two things when they had relatively successful lifetime careers. There is no doubt that Taylor was a talented singer. He was...2025-06-1743 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 19. Nina Simone. The Accidental Singer Who Became A Voice Of The Civil Rights Movement.If you know anything about the American singer Nina Simone it is probably her deep rich voice singing jazz, blues, soul and popular songs. She often wrote and sang songs for, and about, the civil rights movement. But she also took old standards and popular songs of the day and managed to turn those into civil right anthems as well. But she never studied voice and she never really sang publicly until she turned professional and got her first gig playing piano in a casino-bar. Her wish was to became a classical pianist. She started playing and s...2025-05-1041 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 18: Bob Wills. The Man Who Put Western in Country Western Drew From Jazz and Blues. And He Is Still The King.Even if you are not a country western fan you probably know who Waylon Jennings is and very well might know his song "Bob Wills Is Still The King." So who was Bob Willis you may wonder? He played violin and lead the group Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys. He was known as the king of Western Swing which birthed the Western side of Country Western. And that Western Swing music is rooted in the blues and in jazz. Even Ornette Coleman played with him early on. Yes the Bebop player and founder of the free jazz played...2025-04-0447 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 17: Mavis Staples and The Staple Singers. Gospel, Folk, Funk or Soul. Or All Of The Above.So what is gospel music? Google’s AI says that gospel music is a style of Christian music that originated in African American communities. It’s characterized by rhythmic, spiritual melodies and harmonies. Gospel music often includes call-and-response, group singing, and refrains. Oxford dictionary adds that gospel music is about the teachings of Jesus,According to the Smithsonian, the great Mahalia Jackson was known as the “Queen of Gospel Music.” One of Mahalia Jackson’ earliest recordings Move On Up A Little Higher from 1947 is in the National Recording Registry. Meaning it is seen as a significant song and recordin...2025-03-1246 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 16: The Dave Brubeck Trio Featuring Gerry Mulligan – When Returning To The Old Is New And Exactly What Are The Blues Anyway?I think when most people hit the jackpot, they go out and buy their lottery dream-home and live happily ever after. Well we know from studies that winning the lottery or striking it rich does not always end up well down the road. But you get the point. You win and you are free to do absolutely nothing. Why work when you don’t have it. However, for many if not most artists, no matter how successful they get, they don’t stop —they keep on working and keep pushing boundaries even it means more pressure and yes, more work...2025-02-2546 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 15: Bonnie Raitt, ­Living It On Her terms: Blues, Rock and StorytellingThere are some musicians and artists who regularly reinvent themselves. The Beatles did it right up to their final album. Bob Dylan has done it so many times that in I’m Not There the 2007 film inspired by his life and music, six different actors played his various periods. The reality is that most artists are lucky to get one hit during their career. So what about those that sustain themselves year after year and have careers that last not just weeks or months but decades? Artist’s early in their career need to have a portfolio with multiple ideas...2025-02-0336 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 14: Winter In America—Gil Scott Heron, The Singing Poet Who Confronted Power With Music and PoetryIn the 1960s and 70s thanks to the explosion in new FM radio stations and the popularity of records, political songs that might have been too controversial for Top 40 radio became part of the soundtrack for a generation. But sometimes what are seen as political songs, and even so called protest songs, really weren’t meant to be political to begin with. Some songs that were meant to be political were not seen as such when they were popular. And songs like Yankee Doodle, Dixie, or This Land Is Your Land that once were very political as time passes become...2025-01-2037 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 13: Booker T. & The M.G.s, Cooking With More Than Just Green Onions. If it was on Stax Records they were there.The song Green Onions by Booker T and the MGs is without doubt one of the major rock and soul instrumentals to come out of the 1960s. According to a review on AllMusic.Com it is “one of the most popular instrumental rock and soul songs ever.” The song is based on a classic twelve-bar blues progression fused with jazz and features Booker T. Jones on Hammond organ, Al Jackson Jr. on drums, Steve Cropper on Fender Telecaster guitar and Lewis Steinberg on bass guitar. The four, particularly once Donald "Duck" Dunn took over bass duties, they were the classi...2025-01-0639 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsReturn To Vinyls Season 2Return To Vinyls Season Two is coming in January with more R&B, more soul and more musicians that defied easy categories. And of course more great stories behind the music and the creative music makers. Look for us on your favorite podcast host. 2024-12-2801 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 12: Without her there would be no Elvis or even Chuck Berry. Sister Rosetta Tharpe sang gospel but her electric guitar ignited the flames of rock an roll.She’s been called the godmother of rock and roll. Rolling Stone Magazine named her the 6th greatest guitarist of all time in 2023. If you saw the Elvis movie. Yep, she was in there. The British singer Yola played her singing Strange Things Are Happening Every Day at a club. Elvis was a fan, as the movie depicted. Keith Richards of the band the Rolling Stones has talked about how her European concert tours in the early 1960s influenced British guitarists. She was often called the Swinger of Spirituals — yes she did gospel songs. But it was her electric guit...2024-11-1739 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 11: There is Music About Outer Space, But Only One Musician Is From Outer Space. Sun Ra. He's From Saturn and Plays Disney Songs. Really...Humans have been transfixed by the night sky, well, since the beginning of human existence. There’s ancient rock art and cave art that depicts celestial events and structures that align with the solstices or equinoxes. The stars in the sky tell stories from the American Indian and Australian Aborigine oral traditions, to the ancient myths from Greek, Roman and Arab cultures. They at times overlap from cultures separated by thousands of years and thousands of miles.  There are monsters, Cassiopeia, a queen held captive by the sea god Poseidon, her daughter Andromeda was chained to a roc...2024-11-0136 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 10. Ramsey Lewis and the In Crowd. Jazz, R&B, Rock or Popular? Yes! And Fun Too.Do you ever wonder why a particular song becomes a hit? Or a best selling book, blockbuster movie, or why a newly emerged visual artist will have work on display or one person shows at major museums all around the world at the same time? As you might guess people have studied that phenomenon.  If you are going to study creative success, music is a good place to begin and we will look at a recent study that does just that. There are a known number of record companies that have produced hits. There are databases like D...2024-10-1430 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 9. When Jazz Went to College and Symphonic Music Halls. It wasn't always easy. Two new albums from Dave BrubeckAs WWII was drawing to a close in the mid 1940s America’s musical taste was changing and along with it musical venues were going through an upheaval. Dance halls and ballrooms saw audiences abandon once crowded dance floors for a listening experience. But by the 1950s music and venues were changing again. Music in general, and jazz in particular was seen as more sophisticated thanks in part to magazines like Esquire. Therefore jazz stated moving to college campuses and even the most discerning and storied classical music halls. The jazz pianist Dave Brubeck an...2024-09-3033 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 8: Remembering Sergio Mendes. Before His Breakout Recordings With Brasil 66 there was Brasil 65The Late Brazilian jazz pianist and band leader Sergio Mendes, who passed away this month, was best known for fronting the Bossa Nova group Brazil 66 who had there first big hit with the Brazilian song Mais Que Nada sung in Portuguese it more or less translates as "Much of Nothing." It was great to see and hear all the tributes to Sergio Mendes and his music. But I was flummoxed that there was never any mention of his truly breakthrough group Brasil 65. Yes before Brasil 66 there was Brasil 65 and for me they were the most exciting and authentic musicians...2024-09-1124 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 7: Jazz Meets Art and Meets Nature. Artful Jazz From Matthew Halsall and an Ever Changing ViewYou need to look no further than the album cover from a new release from British jazz musician Matthew Halsall to know that art and nature both play a critical part in his work. His LP An Ever Changing View has to be one of the most beautiful vinyl packages ever produced. The two record set doesn't stop there, it also contains some really interesting music as well.  Along with art his other non-musical influence is the natural world. His music is a blend of jazz and deeply meditative influences that’s in tune with the natural world...2024-09-0121 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 6: Yet Another Beatles Songs Album? Yes! Your Mother Should Know: Brad Mehldau Plays The BeatlesDo we need yet one more album of someone playing their favorite Beatles hits? When it is Brad Mehldau yes we do. One of the world's top jazz pianists — rated among the top five  on National Public Radio and winner of the Downbeat Magazine Reader's Poll eight times, has delved into a few Beatles songs in the past. But this time he jumps in with both feet and the results will surprise and impress you. So what is it about the Beatles and their songs anyway? We will find out from someone who was there. At least in front of...2024-08-1133 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 5: Two Classic R&B Artists. One you know and one you probably don't but should. Marvin Gaye and David PorterMarvin Gaye is certainly a well known Motown star. You may know a bit about the tragic story of his life and death. But you probably do not know all the details and the struggles he went through. Nor the vast catalogue of his many hit records. Add to that all the changes Gaye’s music went through as American society changed in the 1960s and 1970s.  And I bet you have never heard any of R&B singer David Porter’s albums on Stax records. Which is amazing because you no doubt do know his songs. But t...2024-07-2730 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 4: Lost In The Archives: Dave Brubeck’s Time OuttakesThis episode looks at Time Outtakes‚ a Vinyl, CD and download from Brubeck Editions of just that - outtakes of the famous Dave Brubeck Quartet Time Out sessions. The album comes from an earlier recording session where they were still ironing out the details that would become Time Out and Take Five. It is a chance to look further at the process of building the album and explore and compare the original release with this release of alternative outtakes. It is an interesting dive into the creative process of four masterful musicians. 2024-07-1430 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 3: Colourful Jazz From Emma Rawicz, Up and Coming British SaxophonistColor may not be the first thing you think of with music. But it is there hiding in plain site. Western music is based on the Chromatic Scale from the Greek, chrôma, meaning color. Think of a piano with white and black keys. If you follow through both the white and black keys (the flats and sharps) you get 12 equal pitches — that is the Chromatic Scale. The term Chromatic goes back to the Greeks and was refined in the Renaissance.  Or the notion of color in music can be used in the sense that visual colors, like...2024-06-3019 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 2: When R&B Got Soul and Entered the Mainstream. Two new Wilson Picket LPsRhythm and Blues, or R&B as it is normally referred to, emerged on the music scene in the early 1950s. By the early 1960s R&B, particularly that coming out of Detroit from Barry Gordy’s Tabla and Motown labels was popular across a broad spectrum of music. But as the Beatles and British invasion music begin to dominate the pop charts, R&B took a turn from the heavily orchestrated Motown sound of groups like the Supremes and Temptations to deeper soul music. Wilson Pickett was one of the singers who both rode that new wave and he...2024-06-1527 minReturn to VinylsReturn to VinylsEP 1: The Jazz Album That Almost Wasn’t. The Story of Dave Brubeck’s Time Out.The thing about a great work of art, a true masterpiece, be it music, visual art or literature is that the person or the people who created it generally had no idea that it would take on a life of its own. The song Take Five and the Dave Brubeck jazz album Time Out were both huge commercial hits. Released in December of 1959 Time Out was the number two selling album in the country in November 1961. Why the almost two year gap? That's what we are here to find out. It is a fascinating story.2024-06-0328 min