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This is the Trent Radio program that spawned the Discovering Jazz podcast. In February 2016 my partner and I had recently moved to Peterborough, Ontario and I decided I wanted to do a program on Trent Radio, Call letters CFFF-the community and university radio station. Since they didn’t have a jazz program and I was interested in learning more about jazz I applied to do one. I called it “Discovering Jazz”, as it was (and still is) a discovery process for me.
The following year, on a whim, I entered one of my episodes for the 36th NCRC (National Campus and Community Radio Conference). I didn’t tell anybody I’d entered. And it won the award for best music program in Canada. It came as a shock to those from the station who attended the conference as they went up to accept the trophy.
So I figured that maybe I should make this show into a podcast—and I did.! The first episode was September, 2017. I also made that prize winning episode from October of 2016 into a podcast—and here it is.
Since then I’ve moved to Victoria B.C., and now Edmonton, Alberta (where I was born and raised). And the podcast now emanates from Edmonton, aka “Jazz City”.
In this episode, I play recordings by
-Miles Davis,
-French horn player Mark Taylor,
-Penticton’s Darylectones, t
-the great Gene McDaniels,
-NOJO from Toronto,
-Sarah Vaughan,
Oscar Lopez,
Jane Bunnett (pronounced Bun NET…not BUN net as I say on the podcast)
Sonny Rollins
One correction, though. I refer to Sonny Rollins as the composer of “St. Thomas” melody. In fact, he didn’t compose it, but took it from a traditional melody. And that melody had previously been recorded in a jazz form by pianist Randy Weston under the title of “Fire Down There”.
By Larry Saidman4.4
4141 ratings
This is the Trent Radio program that spawned the Discovering Jazz podcast. In February 2016 my partner and I had recently moved to Peterborough, Ontario and I decided I wanted to do a program on Trent Radio, Call letters CFFF-the community and university radio station. Since they didn’t have a jazz program and I was interested in learning more about jazz I applied to do one. I called it “Discovering Jazz”, as it was (and still is) a discovery process for me.
The following year, on a whim, I entered one of my episodes for the 36th NCRC (National Campus and Community Radio Conference). I didn’t tell anybody I’d entered. And it won the award for best music program in Canada. It came as a shock to those from the station who attended the conference as they went up to accept the trophy.
So I figured that maybe I should make this show into a podcast—and I did.! The first episode was September, 2017. I also made that prize winning episode from October of 2016 into a podcast—and here it is.
Since then I’ve moved to Victoria B.C., and now Edmonton, Alberta (where I was born and raised). And the podcast now emanates from Edmonton, aka “Jazz City”.
In this episode, I play recordings by
-Miles Davis,
-French horn player Mark Taylor,
-Penticton’s Darylectones, t
-the great Gene McDaniels,
-NOJO from Toronto,
-Sarah Vaughan,
Oscar Lopez,
Jane Bunnett (pronounced Bun NET…not BUN net as I say on the podcast)
Sonny Rollins
One correction, though. I refer to Sonny Rollins as the composer of “St. Thomas” melody. In fact, he didn’t compose it, but took it from a traditional melody. And that melody had previously been recorded in a jazz form by pianist Randy Weston under the title of “Fire Down There”.

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