Sat. 5 pm. Clifford Brown was a phenomenal bop trumpeter and composer who died in a car accident at age 25. His bandmate Bennie Golson wrote a tune called “I Remember Clifford” which became a jazz standard, and the show will start with the Modern Jazz Quartet’s version. John Lewis’s piano and Milt Jackson’s vibraphone blend and riff seamlessly. After that we’ve got …….11/03/2018

Clifford Brown was a phenomenal bop trumpeter and composer who died in a car accident at age 25. His bandmate Bennie Golson wrote a tune called "I Remember Clifford" which became a jazz standard, and the show will start with the Modern Jazz Quartet's version. John Lewis's piano and Milt Jackson's vibraphone blend and riff seamlessly. After that we've got Eric Satie's Sonatine Bureaucratique, Roger Eno's recollections of winter, and John Williams' guitar version of De Falla's music on a short life. There's more of Monica Williams on the flute, and a little Paul Simon too. All of this, some of the usual suspects, and P. T.'s musings on autumn salt life. Join us.

Clifford Brown was a phenomenal bop trumpeter and composer who died in a car accident at age 25. His bandmate Bennie Golson wrote a tune called "I Remember Clifford" which became a jazz standard, and the show will start with the Modern Jazz Quartet's version. John Lewis's piano and Milt Jackson's vibraphone blend and riff seamlessly. After that we've got Eric Satie's Sonatine Bureaucratique, Roger Eno's recollections of winter, and John Williams' guitar version of De Falla's music on a short life. There's more of Monica Williams on the flute, and a little Paul Simon too. All of this, some of the usual suspects, and P. T.'s musings on autumn salt life. Join us.Clifford Brown was a phenomenal bop trumpeter and composer who died in a car accident at age 25.  His bandmate Bennie Golson wrote a tune called “I Remember Clifford” which became a jazz standard, and the show will start with the Modern Jazz Quartet’s version.  John Lewis’s piano and Milt Jackson’s vibraphone blend and riff seamlessly.

After that we’ve got Eric Satie’s Sonatine Bureaucratique, Roger Eno’s recollections of winter, and John Williams’ guitar version of De Falla’s music on a short life.  There’s more of Monica Williams on the flute, and a little Paul Simon too.  All of this, some of the usual suspects, and P. T.’s musings on autumn salt life.

Join us.

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