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Episode: My Other Music (MOM): Joseph Celli
My Other Music (MOM), Joseph Celli, Producer/Host
Tuesday, January 16, 2018, 1 - 4pm
1. Alexander’s Ragtime Band – Ella Fitzgerald, 2:39
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OFrPlV1IbJI
2. Fats Waller: Honeysuckle Rose
3. Herbie Hancock: Gershwin’s World #2. It Ain’t Necessarily So, 4:46, Polygram Records
4. Herbie Hancock: Gershwin’s World #4. Here Come’s the Honey Man, 3:58, Polygram Records
5. Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong: Autumn in New York, 6:12
6. Rudresh Mahanthappa’s Indo-Pak Coalition: AGRIMA #4. #4. Agrima, 7:46, (self-released)
7. Etta Jones: Georgia on My Mind, 4:34
8. Miles Davis Quintet: Live in Europe 1967, Vol 3 #7. On Green Dolphin Street, 9:05, Columbia Records
9. Cecile McLorin Salvant: WomanChild: I Didn’t Know What Time It Was, 6:08
10. Tony Bennett & Lady Gaga: It Don’t Mean A Thing If it Ain’t Got that Swing, 2:17
11. Chucho Valdes: Bele Bele in La Havana
#4. Con Poco Coco, 8:32, Blue Note
12. Dominique Eade & Ran Blake: Town & Country #2. It’s Alright Mom I’m only Bleeding, 3:57,
13. Bobby Hutcherson Skyline
14. Billie Holiday: I’ve Only Got Eyes for You
15. The Bad Plus: Smells Like Teen Spirit (cover of the Nirvana)
16. Ethel Waters: Stormy Weather
17. Thelonious Monk Quartet w. John Coltrane
#8. Blue Monk, 6:45, Blue Note
18. The Tony Bennet Bill Evans Album
#3. Some Other Time, 4:42, Concord Muisc
19. Dominique Eade & Ran Blake: Town & Country
#3. West Virginia Mine Disaster, 3:20,
20. Joe Lovano: Flights of Fancy (Trio Edition)
#8. Bougainvillea, 7:57, Blue Note
21. Ella Fitzgerald: All the Things You Are, 3:20
22. Medeski Martin & Wood: Radiolarians I
#4. Professor Nohair, 7:13, Indirector Records
23. John Coltrane & Johnny Hartman: The Say It’s Wonderful
24. Louie Prima: Pennies From Haven
25. The Bad Plus: Hearts of Glass, 4:45, Sony Music
Show: Joseph Celli: My Other Music (MOM)
Host Joseph Celli presents a program of music from Japan/Okinawa, Korea, China, Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand, Cambodia, Tibet, Mongolia & elsewhere in Asia. Included with the traditional court, folk & religious music are occasional interviews with Asian musicians, World Premieres, and historical context about the music, musicians & instruments.
Celli said, “Unfortunately, we tend to think of Asia as being homogeneous but it actually has more musical diversity and individuality than most places in the world.” Programs range from the overtone singing of Tuva to the ecstatic Gamelan of Indonesia, and the elegant court music of Korea, Japan & Cambodia. Information about upcoming concerts of Asian music, exhibitions & an occasional undiscovered spicy restaurant are all part of the fun.