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jazz on the radio

Discussion in 'Music Forum' started by jazzbluescat, Jun 11, 2003.

  1. jazzbluescat

    jazzbluescat superstar...yo.

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    If anybody has even a passing interest in jazz, and is passing through the Fayetteville area on weekday afternoons, give yourself a treat and tune in to WFSS 91.9 FM at 3:00 to 4:00 PM.

    Monday--Nancy Wilson hosts a guest artist(they play, she talks a little)
    Tuesday--Marion McPartland hosts(had the Steely Dan guys on a few weeks ago)
    Wednesday--Tom Hennessey hosts his own jazz history show. This guy really knows his stuff, and is not boring.
    Thursday--Dee Dee Bridgewater hosts(artists' play, she talks a little)
    Friday--swing music--If you like swing, these guys dig deep for out of the ordinary stuff.

    You might can get these shows(sans Hennessey)on a local Charlotte NPR station, albeit at different times.

    Also, WSHA 88.9 FM out of Raleigh plays killer jazz non stop. They've recently increased their wattage to a wopping 50,000 watts. :D

    And, no, I'm not lobbying for a separate music thread, one way or the other.;)
     
  2. VOR

    VOR OnlyU CanPreventRelection

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    is nancy wilson the nancy wilson or some other broad named nancy wilson?
     
  3. magnus

    magnus Chump-proof

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    I'll have to check that out when around the way. Every third or fourth weekend or so we're in that area. Charlotte used to have good stuff on 90.3/90.7 but I'm far away enough that I couldn't tell you and I don't often have a radio handy.

    Hey, you haven't ever played at Bogarts, have you?
     
  4. PantherPaul

    PantherPaul Nap Enthusiasts

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    Hope it's the artist Nancy Wilson of Heart. :mushy:
     
  5. jazzbluescat

    jazzbluescat superstar...yo.

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    I haven't seen her driver's license, but, as far as I know: Of course she's Nancy freaking Wilson. Did I type Martha Stewart, Abbie Lincoln, Mortimer Snerd, etc.?
    She's the lady that's been around for quite some time, not a jazz singer, per se, more of a stylist. [She doesn't sing on this show.]
    :D

    Nay. A jazz club; where?
     
    Last edited: Jun 12, 2003
  6. Puttingood

    Puttingood Sensitive One

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    I think VOR meant "the Nancy Wilson" You would have to be our age to know who "the Nancy Wilson" was.;)
     
  7. jazzbluescat

    jazzbluescat superstar...yo.

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    Well, that certainly clears it up....:(
     
  8. Puttingood

    Puttingood Sensitive One

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    Maybe this will help you. She has been singing for 40 years :)
    Ever heard of Diana Ross?

    http://www.missnancywilson.com/


    In case you can't click--

    Nancy Wilson blurs the line between jazz singer and pop singer, preferring to be called a "song stylist." Born on February 20, 1937, she is younger than Elvis, Little Richard and Esther Phillips and only a year older than Etta James and Tina Turner. Yet, she is worlds away from these rhythm rocking contemporaries, stylistically speaking. Nancy is more like an earlier generation of vocalists, i.e. Nat Cole, Sarah Vaughan or Billy Eckstine. Yet, she is more modern.
    At 15 she won a talent show in Columbus, Ohio. The prize was her own twice-a-week television show, Skyline Melodies. A member of Rusty Bryant's band at the Carolyn Club, she also sat in with any band that would let her at other local clubs. One night it was Cannonball Adderley, who was so impressed that he told her to look him up if she ever came to New York. In 1959, the ambitious young singer did just that, which then led to her meeting her long-time manager John Levy who got her signed to Capitol Records. "What I heard that night," recalled Capitol A&R man Dave Cavanaugh, "was the nasal quality of Dinah [Washington] and the tear of Billie [Holiday]. I signed her immediately."

    An early single, 1961's "Guess Who I Saw Today," a marvel of sophistication given the teen tenor of the times, became a staple on jazz radio and in black juke box locations throughout urban America. An album with her discoverer, NANCY WILSON/CANNONBALL ADDERLEY, further raised her jazz profile in 1962 and provided her with a second juke box hit, an edited-for-45 version of Buddy Johnson's "Save Your Love For Me." She has also paid tribute to her idol, Little Jimmy Scott, with a much-loved version of "When Did You Leave Heaven." Nancy's highest charting Capitol singles, the GrammyÒ-winning "(You Don't Know) How Glad I Am" (#11 Pop, 1964) and "You're As Right As Rain" (#10 R&B, 1974), are highlights in the total of 20 Pop and/or R&B-charting singles for Capitol.


    The two albums which made Nancy Wilson a household name were BROADWAY MY WAY and HOLLYWOOD-MY WAY, which are just what the titles imply, current and old tunes from the Great White Way and Tinseltown. BROADWAY'S standout track was Irving Berlin's "You Can Have Him," from Miss Liberty. Nancy the actress wrings every drop of irony out of Berlin's heartbreakingly ironic lyric. The "hit" from HOLLYWOOD was, of course, the aforementioned "When Did You Leave Heaven," the Richard Whiting-Walter Bullock gem from the movie Sing Baby Sing. Both albums came out in 1963 and are part of an extraordinary output of 37 original albums total in her 20 years with the label.
    After countless television guest appearances, NBC gave Nancy her own network series, The Nancy Wilson Show, for which she won an EmmyÒ award for the 1967-68 season. She also performed on shows like The Andy Williams Show, The Carol Burnett Show, The Flip Wilson Show, and, over the years, either as herself or in the occasional acting role, on TV series like I Spy, Room 222, Hawaii Five-O, Police Story, The Cosby Show, New York Undercover and, lately, Moesha and The Parkers.

    After years with Capitol, during many of which she was second in sales only to the Beatles, surpassing even Sinatra, Peggy Lee, the Beach Boys and early idol Nat King Cole, the business had changed and Nancy felt a new label might bring about a fresh start. So she moved over to Columbia, where, despite her usual high aesthetic standards, she found it impossible to compete, sales-wise, with increasingly teen-oriented acts.

    One of her more interesting albums from her later period came about in 1991, when pop singer Barry Manilow was given a sheath full of lyrics written by the late Johnny Mercer which the great songwriter had never put to music. Manilow added melodies and chose Nancy to sing the resultant songs.

    When the NPR radio network was looking for an articulate voice with both name value and jazz credibility to host their series, Jazz Profiles, Nancy was the obvious choice. Not only does she know the music, but she knows the artists personally.

    Recently, Nancy has begun to talk about giving up the road and retiring to spend more time with her family and her grandchildren. Her fans will miss her, but with over sixty albums' worth of material, we've got plenty of listening and plenty of memories. With all that Nancy Wilson has given to the world of music, she's entitled.
     
    Last edited: Jun 12, 2003
  9. jazzbluescat

    jazzbluescat superstar...yo.

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    QUOTE]Originally posted by Puttingood
    I think VOR meant "the Nancy Wilson" You would have to be our age to know who "the Nancy Wilson" was.;) [/QUOTE]

    I know, I know. I wuz "confused" by the verbatim of your post;
    like: The way you got it worded "the Nancy Wilson"= "the Nancy Wilson" "equation" I took would mean the exact same person on both sides of the equal sign;
    however, beings I has a sixth grade education, I cypher you mean two different paples.

    [Maybe this will help you. She has been singing for 40 years


    I have her early 60s recording(on vinlyn)YESTERDAY'S LOVE SONGS-TODAY'S BLUES recording w/Gerald Wilson's orchestra that's guaranteed to make you loose control of yore male sex gland and soil yersef....man, the way she sings "Never Let Me Go"
    ...

    That bio you posted about her is right on.
     
  10. magnus

    magnus Chump-proof

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    >>Nay. A jazz club; where?

    Raleighwood, downtown. There was a jazz trio that used to play during dinner and a couple of times we played the club deal afterward. Freaking fire hazard.
     

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