The Fire Without

The final part of this week’s proGram had the heat turning up whether inside or out.

Studio Perspective- Daggerboard & Erik Jekabson Orchestra
Solstice Blues- Daggerboard & Erik Jekabson Orchestra
Prayer- Harold Vick
Senor Zamora- Harold Vick


***pre-recorded conversation with Mr. Branford Marsalis***
The Windup- Branford Marsalis Quartet


Pinball Number Count- Thomas Marriott Ft. Orrin Evans, Robert Hurst & Mark Whitfield Jr
Earl’s World- Charles Tolliver All Stars Ft. Gary Bartz, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and Joe Chambers


New York Three Four Blues- The Quantum Blues Quartet
Umoja Suite- Shamek Farrah

Those Blooms Do

The middle part of this week’s proGram had to believe.

You Are My Sunshine- Joe Alterman Ft. Houston Person
Bloom- José Luiz Martins Ft. Alex Hamburger & John Lee
Don’t Act Like- José Luiz Martins Ft. Nakama., Tyrone Allen II & Florian Haas


Alex “Apolo” Ayala Agonia Suite – Reckoning Ft. The Bámbula Project
Bob’s Your Uncle- Phil Brown
Samba Dois-Cinco- Phil Brown
Easy Money- Nanami Haruta Ft. Xavier Davis & Ulysses Owens Jr
Algonquin- Nanami Haruta Ft. Michael Dease, Xavier Davis, Rodney Whitaker & Ulysses Owens Jr.


Naaj- Billy Hart Quartet
The Watergate Bliues- The Heath Brothers Ft. Stanley Cowell
Get With It- Billy Parker’s Fourth World Ft. Dee Dee Bridgewater

Smoke And Petals

The first part of this week’s proGram watched the collision.

Montrose Forest- Butcher Brown Ft. Nicholas Payton
I Remember- Butcher Brown Ft. Yaya Bey


The Crisis Knows No Borders- Gustavo Cortiñas
Certified Organic- Sean Imboden Large Ensemble


Biskit- The New York Bass Violin Choir
Koko/Cherokee/Band Intros- Charles Mingus (live in Argentina)
Fables Of Foubus- Charles Mingus (live in Argentina)
Moose The Mooche- Triology Ft. Scott Hamilton


**pre-recorded conversation with Arun Ramamurthy**
Bangalore to Brooklyn- Arun Ramamurthy Trio

Stick Up!- Sharel Cassity
Happy Faces- The Dave Robbins Big Band Ft. Fraser Macpherson

Arun Ramamurthy Trio: A Feeling Experience

Arun Ramamurthy is a violinist, composer & educator based in Brooklyn, NY. Rooted in South Indian classical Carnatic music, Arun is a versatile musician, performing internationally in both traditional Carnatic & Hindustani settings, as well as blurring genres with his own innovative projects like the acclaimed Arun Ramamurthy Trio & Nakshatra duo with violinist Trina Basu. Arun studied under the celebrated violinist brothers, Sri Mysore Nagaraj & Dr. Mysore Manjunath, the distinguished violinist Sri. Ananthakrishnan as well as many early years with western classical violinist Jim Mate. He has shared the stage with luminaries like Dr. M. Balamuralikrishna, Sudha Ragunathan, Reggie Workman, Kenny Werner, Jamey Haddad, Amir ElSaffar, Hamid Drake, Martha Redbone, Yacouba Sissoko, Adam Rudolph, Lizz Wright, Subhankar Banerjee, Mashkoor Ali Khan, Awa Sangho, Roman Diaz, Melvis Santa and many more. Arun’s music has brought him stages like Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, Celebrate Brooklyn and many other celebrated venues. He leads the Arun Ramamurthy Trio, an ensemble that brings a fresh approach to Carnatic classical repertoire and features Arun’s original composition work. Praised by All About Jazz as “a beautiful, exotic, ear-opening listening experience” ART released their 2nd studio album ‘New Moon’ in September 2024 through Greenleaf Music. He also co-leads a violin duo project with wife & violinist Trina Basu, reimagining string chamber music through the lens of Carnatic, western chamber music and jazz. The duo released their debut studio album “Nakshatra” in January 2022. As a composer, Arun has created new works for his Trio (ART) & duo project with Trina Basu, scores for theatrical productions such as Tom Stoppard’s Indian Ink, for Indian classical dance, and for the pioneering musician’s collective Brooklyn Raga Massive. Arun received Chamber Music America’s New Jazz Works grant to compose his Trio’s upcoming release New Moon. He was also commissioned through New Music USA to compose original work for Malini Srinivasan’s ‘Appeasing Radhika’, an ambitious project investigating Devadasi lives in Indian Classical performing arts. Arun is a co-founder of Brooklyn Raga Massive, a genre-bending musicians’ nonprofit rooted-in and inspired-by the classical music of South Asia. In 2010, Arun created and produced Carnatic Sundays, a traditional and cross-genre concert series at the iconic West Village haunt, Cornelia Street Cafe. Throughout his career, Arun has curated and performed in hundreds of concerts bringing together music from all over the world. Arun also is a dedicated educator, teaching Carnatic music privately to children and adult students, professional string players and instrumentalists from various genres. He conducts workshops and has held teaching-artist residencies working with student ensembles at Oberlin Conservatory of Music, Brooklyn College’s Jazz & Big Band program, NYU, Yale University, Sarah Lawrence University, and many others.

I had the chance to catch up with Arun ahead of the trio landing in Madison on May 3rd along with woodwind sound designer Pawan Benjamin at the North Street Cabaret. We get right into what one in attendance should be ready for while Arun shares what makes the trio a sonic brotherhood with percussionist and friend of the proGram, Sameer Gupta, and electric bassist Damon Banks. Arun walks us thru the development of the latest album, ‘New Moon’ and I would be remiss if I did not give him a chance to shout out the all that Brooklyn Raga Massive really is (besides a something that has opened many more doors for me to explore into). This will go down as one of those shows I will recall for a lifetime.

No Noodling Around With Branford Marsalis

Branford Marsalis continues to thrill audiences around the world while racking up achievements across diverse musical platforms, even after 4 decades in the international spotlight. From his initial recognition as a young jazz lion, he has expanded his vision as an instrumentalist, composer, bandleader & educator, crossing stylistic boundaries while maintaining an unwavering creative integrity. In the process, he has become an avatar of contemporary artistic excellence winning 3 Grammy Awards, a Tony nomination for his work as a composer on Broadway, a citation by the National Endowment for the Arts as Jazz Master, and a 2021 Primetime EMMY nomination for the score he composed for the Tulsa Burning documentary. His first instrument, the clarinet, gave way to the alto and then the tenor & soprano saxophones when the teenage Branford began working in local bands. A growing fascination with jazz as he entered college gave him the basic tools to obtain his 1st major jobs, with trumpet legend Clark Terry and alongside Wynton in Art Blakey’s legendary Jazz Messengers. When the brothers left to form the Wynton Marsalis Quintet, the world of uncompromising acoustic jazz was invigorated. Branford formed his own quartet in 1986 and it remains his primary performance vehicle. The Quartet has established a rare breadth of stylistic range, known for the telepathic communication among its uncommonly consistent personnel, its deep book of original music replete with expressive melodies and provocative forms, and an unrivaled spirit in both live & recorded performances, the Branford Marsalis Quartet has long been recognized as the standard to which other ensembles of its kind must be measured. Branford formed the Marsalis Music label in 2002, and under his direction it has documented his own music, talented stars such as Miguel Zenón, and un-heralded older masters including one of Branford’s teachers, the late Alvin Batiste. Branford has also shared his knowledge as an educator. He enjoys working with students and has formed an extended relationship with North Carolina Central University where he has been teaching for the past eighteen years. He has also taught at Michigan State University and San Francisco State University and continues to conduct workshops throughout the world. As for other public stages, Branford spent a period touring with Sting, collaborated with the Grateful Dead & Bruce Hornsby, served as Musical Director of The Tonight Show Starring Jay Leno and hosted NPR’s widely syndicated Jazz Set. The range and quality of these diverse activities established Branford as a familiar presence beyond the worlds of jazz & classical music, while his efforts to help heal and rebuild New Orleans in the wake of Hurricane Katrina mark him as an artist with an uncommonly effective social vision. Together with Harry Connick, Jr. and New Orleans Habitat for Humanity, Branford conceived and helped to realize The Musicians’ Village, a community in the Upper Ninth Ward that provides homes to the displaced families of musicians and other local residents. The centerpiece of the Village is the Ellis Marsalis Center for Music, honoring Branford’s father. The Center uses music as the focal point of a holistic strategy to build a healthy community and to deliver a broad range of services to underserved children, youth and musicians from neighborhoods battling poverty and social injustice. In January 2024, following in his father’s footsteps, Branford was appointed Artistic Director at the Center and in this capacity, he will shape the artistic trajectory and steer the organization’s creative vision for the future.

I had the complete honor of spending a little time chatting it up with Mr. Branford Marsalis. We dive head first into the upcoming event in Madison on May 1st at the Wisconsin Union Theater. We talk about what people with hear & see at this shared encounter, including the spontaneous interactions. The Quartet gets introduced to us as well so we now know a little more about those folks spending the time with us. They also have a new alum out on Blue Note Records titled ‘Belonging‘, it is an interpretation of Keith Jarret’s 1974 ECM release. Mr. Marsalis shares how this music hits and how it shapes from the original and how the quartet works as students of music, with a slight reminisce of their John Coltrane ‘Love Supreme’ experience years ago. While talking about the tune, ‘The Windup’, we end up talkin’ baseball, sharing our unlove for one particular NY team and I would have been remiss not to try and learn more about his work with the Grateful Dead’s ‘Eyes Of The World’. Note to self, no noodling! Man, I appreciate how this cat does things the way he does things.

3rd Set of Vinylthon

The final part of the Record Store day vinylthon proGram started with several furries gathered together and ended with the big run. Always fun to take SUM of the old records out for a spin.

Set the Controls for the Heart of the Sun- Pink Floyd
A Saucerful of Secrets- Pink Floyd
I. “Something Else” (3:22) II. “Syncopated Pandemonium” (2:52) III. “Storm Signal” (0:58) IV. “Celestial Voices

Polk Salad Annie- Elvis Presley with The Imperial’s Quartet (Live)
Hypnotize- Kingfish
Keep On- Big Brother & The Holding Company
Don’t Keep Me Wondering- Allman Brothers Band
Black Hearted Woman- Allman Brothers Band

European Son- The Velvet Underground & Nico
Run Run Run- The Velvet Underground & Nico

Record Store Day Vinylthon Pt. 2

The middle part of the vinylthon proGram reminded me of many sounds and words that helped form the shapes around me.

…And the Gods Made Love- The Jimi Hendrix Experience
Have You Ever Been (to Electric Ladyland)- The Jimi Hendrix Experience

Visions of Johanna- Bob Dylan
Sad-Eyed Lady of the Lowlands- Bob Dylan

Everybody’s Got to Change Sometime- Taj Mahal
Rain- The Beatles
Miss You (live 1978)- The Rolling Stones

Ballrooms of Mars- T Rex
The Width of a Circle- David Bowie
Buick Buick- T Rex
Daddy Daddy Daddy- Frank Zappa w/The Mothers of Invention & The Royal Philharmonic Orch.

Vinylthon For Record Store Day Pt.1

I am not someone who adds to their record collection I have what I have and sometimes people send some over. Otherwise, there’s a lot of albums that are true collection pieces (luckily I do have two copies of many of those) so Iit is fun to ‘spin some’ for three hours to honor the medium. Here’s the first hour.

Contender- Supreme Beings Of Leisure
The Other Side- Supreme Beings Of Leisure

Being Courageous- Yungchen Lhamo
Dedication to My Teacher- Yungchen Lhamo

Jammin- Hu Vibrational
Secret Ending- Vibraharp

Big Dismal- Julien Kasper
Many a Mile to Freedom- Traffic
Stella Blue- Grateful Dead (live)

Inside The Wash

The final part of this week’s proGram could drink or bath in it.

Adjust Like Dat (Vocal Mix)- Joseph Malik ft. Mike Keat + Jo Wallace
merlot & gricio- Yaya Bey Ft. Father Philis
Mother Earth is Dying- Doodlebug & 80 Empire Ft. Michole White & DJ Skillspinz
Stand Well Well (Grand Stand Version)- Seun Kuti & Egypt 80 Ft. Pos of De La Soul


Thums Up (Kahani Remix)- Red Baraat
You Are I- Kenya Eugene
Ojos Secos- Adrian Quesada Ft. Cuco
Je ne t’aime plus- Eric Hilton Ft. Natalia Clavier


Kapina on kuumaa- Vimma
Cakal Cokerten Zeybegi- Ozan Baysal


Moon Shadows- Billy Yfantis

Cosmo- Blazing Redheads
31. Bleep (01)- corto.alto
The Bruz of AD2- Leon Anderson

With A Viewed

The middle part of the proGram walked and looked.

Yo I Surrender- Oliver Wood Ft. Steve Berlin
**pre-recorded conversation with Oliver Wood**
One More Day- The Wood Brothers

Make Them Dance- Johnny Rawls
Hard To Be Mad At You- The Love Dogs


UFO- Daniel Bambaata Marley
Homo Rudolfenis- Sendelica
Borderline- Kris Barras’ ‘Hollow Souls Ft. Jared James Nichols
Gloria- Cocktail Slippers (Live)


Sunchaser- Arc De Soleil
Year Of The Snake- BALTHVS
Prisms- Lance Ferguson & The Bamboos
Take Me- Analog Son
Shake- RETI

Morning Walk On

The first part of this week’s proGram took time to see it and believe it.

Clock and Speedometer- LoveSeat
Granite Mills- Alison Krauss & Union Station
Buckets- Eric Schmitt
One Taco at a Time- Jefferson Ross


I Can’t Dance- Steve Marriner
Dance With The Devil- Domenic Cicala


The Same Love That Made Me Laugh- Seth Walker
***pre-recorded conversation with Seth Walker***
Take Me To The River- Seth Walke
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Keep Going- Reverend Stomp
greenarrowradio promo- Dudley Taft
Wanted Man- Dudley Taft
Uptown Downtown- Jon Cleary & The Absolute Monster Gentlemen
Found A Friend In You- Southern Avenue
Back To What Feels Right- Southern Avenue
Stratcat Boogie- Stratcat Willie & the Strays

Family Time With Oliver Wood

Whenever Oliver Wood isn’t touring with The Wood Brothers, the Grammy-nominated roots trio that he co-founded in 2006, he typically begins his mornings the same way: in Nashville, at home, with a coffee cup in his hand and a notebook in his lap, sitting in a chair in front of the window. Many of the songs from his latest solo effort ‘Fat Cat Silhouette’ began taking shape in that chair. Produced by his Wood Brothers’ bandmate Jano Rix, it’s an album of unexpected twists & turns. Longtime fans will recognize the earnest, elastic voice that has always anchored the Wood Brothers’ mix of forward-looking folk and southern country-funk, but Fat Cat Silhouette doesn’t spend much time looking backward. Instead, it abandons convention, breaks a few rules, and positions Oliver Wood as a roots-music innovator who’s every bit as interested in the process as the product. Oliver wanted to step out of the norm on this one. On the album’s opener, “Light and Sweet,” he matches an imaginative storyline with a melody that leaps from ground level into the stratosphere. Eight songs later, he brings things to a close with “Fortune Drives the Bus,” which he recorded on an iPhone in his own backyard. While tracking the rest of the album to analog tape, Wood pushed himself to keep things weird. Wood’s years of experience have left him with a wide circle of collaborators, and ‘Fat Cat Silhouette’ features performances from guests like Los Lobos’ Steve Berlin (whose saxophone can be heard on the groove-heavy numbers “Whom I Adore” and “Yo I Surrender”), Ted Pecchio who handles bass duties throughout the collection and Marcus Henderson (who contributes flute & fife to “Whom I Adore”). Co-writers like Sean McConnell, Seth Walker, & Ric Robertson lend their help, too, while Katie Pruitt tackles a verse on the heartbroken soul ballad “Have You No Shame,” which was written by one of Wood’s mentors, the legendary Atlanta musician and songwriter Donnie McCormick. Jano even pulls double-duty as producer & musician, anchoring the album’s mix of mystery & melody with his percussion & keyboards. Despite the stacked guest list, some of Fat Cat Silhouette‘s best moments find Wood and Rix working together as a duo. On “Little Worries,” Wood sketches a picture of a reflective morning in his armchair, a cat in the window, pancakes in the skillet, anxieties crossing and leaving his mind — over Rix’s inventive pulse. Later, when time constraints prevented them from adding horns to “Star in the Corner,” they chose to sing the horn parts instead. A little less typical, indeed. That might as well be Fat Cat Silhouette’s mission statement. This is an album that finds the art in the unexpected, and Oliver Wood, whose songwriting & vocal chops remain as sharp as ever, at his most adventurous.

It has been a long time that Oliver Wood and I have been catching up about what is going on. I have had his brother Chris on a few times as well to talk Wood Brothers, but t s typically Oliver who plays catch-up. He is going to be at the Stoughton Opera House on April 30th with Dave & Dave of Trampled By Turtles, and Seth Walker. We north marveled over the possibilities of what his night could be bringing and then got into what a solo set of his could shape up into. He reminded us a little about how his most recent release, ‘Fat Cat Silhouette’ went down and we even got into a little bit about his work on Seth Walker’s new album which dropped on April 4th. It’s always nice to hear his voice on the other end of the phone, not quite as great as hearing it singing songs, but I am thinking this treat we will be getting at the Opera House is going to be one of those that is hard to forGet.

Photo-by: Alysse Gafkjen

Seth Walker Asks Why The Worry?

In the midst of recording his 12th album, wavering in his resolve to finish what he’d started, Seth Walker came to a realization. No album is trapped in amber, no song is set in stone. Distance colors compositions over the years and each album is left as a reflection of its own period in time. This idea played a big part in shaping ‘Why The Worry’. Now, the other half of knowing is letting go; letting go of the worry about perception, the worry of over-preparation, and the worry that seeps in constantly from the news and noise of everyday life. The new album finds Walker reunited with old friends and familiar names. Once again Jano Rix steps behind the boards, co-producing the album with Seth & engineer Brook Sutton. In the producer’s 5th outing he’s become an invaluable sounding board, the kind who knows what’s missing and, just as importantly, what needs to be taken away. Oliver Wood (The Wood Brothers) lends a pen to the title track, and Seth’s classically trained father Scott adds strings to “I’m Getting Ready,” a song penned by Walker’s contemporary Michael Kiwanuka. Mostly, though, the record was shepherded into shape by Walker’s trio, rounded out by longtime confidants Rhees Williams (Guitar, Piano) & Mark Raudabaugh (Drums). The 3 let the studio guide them, entering without agenda, set straight by the title’s mantra to stop worrying where they’d end up. But worry always tries to creep in. It’s inevitable, isn’t it? The album was just about finished when Hurricane Helene hit Walker’s region in the mountains around Asheville, and as a result, the record almost didn’t see light. As catastrophe took shape and literal bridges were broken, the album’s importance wavered in Seth’s mind until the central theme came back into view. The worry wouldn’t undo any damage, and there was still service in song. There’s a telling nod in the album closing with Bobby Charles’ seminal ode “I Must Be In a Good Place Now.” Why The Worry is a spiritual reset, watching the sunrise over the mountains. It soaks in like warmth on the skin after a night of shivering in the dark. Charles isn’t the only notable scribe among the track list, an even mix of Walker’s originals and a carefully curated crop of covers that rifle through the past and present. Setting the course are two gems from JJ Cale, whose sanguine saunter leans well into the album’s themes of amble and ease. Walker opens the album with the smoke ring sway of Bill Withers, turning the lights low for a gently funked rendition of “The Same Love That Made Me Laugh.” The groove grows deeper on Al Green’s “Take Me To The River,” putting a distinctly reclined feel on the soul classic. The breezy feeling extends to the originals as well, injecting a bit of Cale’s country funk into “Up On The Mountain,” soaking spring air and hope into “Supernatural Thing,” and melting nostalgia into meditation on “Midway Girl.” Why The Worry follows a string of critically acclaimed albums from Walker, garnering praise from NPR to The Washington Post. He’s been found on the road with The Mavericks, The Wood Brothers, Raul Malo, Paul Thorn and Ruthie Foster among others. He recently penned “Moon and Stars” – the title track to The Mavericks new album, sung as a duet with Sierra Ferrell. Walker’s latest album Why The Worry is out on tomorrow, on Royal Potato Family.

I had the chance to catch back up with Seth Walker (it has been a few years since last we spoke and I’ve been paying attention) and he will be back this way on April 30th at the Stoughton Opera House with Dave & Dave of Trampled By Turtles and his longtime pal (doing a short run with) Oliver Wood. What a incredible line-up for all of us who get to be a part of it. He sounded as blown away as I feel about it. We got into the joy of this upcoming show, but we started with getting into his brand new (just dropped April 4th) album ‘Why The Worry’ on Royal Potato Family Records. We kinda go seed to flower, dissect a few tunes off the release, and discuss how he and Oliver worked on their offering on the record and more. When I said I have been paying attention, it all comes back to this moment and this album, it’s really got that truth to it that I search for. Seth also gives some thought to a setlist and he gives love and props to our pal Kevin over at Royal Potato Family. Finally, we will have to check in and find out who wins the tennis matches on this short run. Deuce.

Photo by: Parker Pfister

Da Truth Brass Band at Congo Square Rhythm Fest

Da Truth Brass Band performed live at the 2025 Congo Square Rhythms Festival! We’re video streaming live from the Treme Stage all day today. I attended live via WWOZ. What a fin time as expected.

Sunday, March 30, 2025 – 11:00am to 7:30pm
Armstrong Park (OUTDOORS)
901 North Rampart Street
New Orleans, LA 70116

Sunday, March 30 was streamed live from Congo Square Rhythms Festival!

SCHEDULE (subject to change):

11am-12:15pm Alicia Renee aka “Blue Eyes”
12:30-2pm Da Truth Brass Band
2:15-3:30pm Zena Moses & Rue Fiya’s Allstars
3:45-4:45pm NOLA Resistance
5-6pm Gladney
6:15-7:30pm Original Pinettes Brass Band

Tribute to Poly Styrene

This year’s American Songbook (at the Lincoln Center) celebrates the voices of women and nonbinary performers who have not only shaped the landscape of music, but have also driven important conversations on gender, identity, and empowerment. Galvanized by a Sex Pistols concert, the UK-born Marion Elliot adapted the sobriquet Poly Styrene, formed a band and then promptly changed the history of rock by recording the seminal punk anthem Oh Bondage! Up Yours! Poly Styrene would only release one album in the 1970s, but Germ Free Adolescents would prove to be one of the most influential LPs of its era. For this evening of music by and inspired by Poly Styrene and her band X-Ray Spex, the American Songbook band—featuring Keyanna Hutchinson (guitar), Barbara Duncan (percussion), Evan Lawrence (bass), and Elenna Canlas (keyboards and vocals)—will be joined by an array of musical luminaries, all paying their respects to a true punk pioneer. Watch it all HERE!!

Featured Artists

Host: LaRonda Davis

Vocalists:
Cleo Reed
Dunia Best
Felice Rosser
Honeychild Coleman
Princess Nokia
Lisa McQuade
Militia Vox
Rachel Dissident
Rose Blood
Shara Lunon