View Bronwyn Bishop's profile |
Musical theater from off the beaten path. Obscure and unusual show tunes from within the canon and without, flops, failures, and the newest works from up-and-coming artists—plus tried-and-true hits. Also, occasional appearances from songs that are not show tunes (but only if they go really well with show tunes).
<-- Previous playlist | Back to Acid Jazz Hands with Bronwyn Bishop playlists | Next playlist -->
Artist | Track | Album | Label | Year | Comments | Images | Approx. start time | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Miles Davis | Buzzard Song | Porgy and Bess | Columbia | 1959 | Music: George Gershwin | 0:00:00 (Pop-up) | ||||
Blossom Dearie | To Keep My Love Alive | Soubrette Sings Broadway Hit Songs | Verve Records | 1960 | Music: Richard Rodgers Lyrics: Lorenz Hart | 0:12:28 (Pop-up) | ||||
Mel Torme & Margaret Whiting | All You Need Is a Quarter | Broadway, Right Now! | Verve | 1960 | Music: Jule Styne Lyrics: Betty Comden & Adolph Green | 0:14:25 (Pop-up) | ||||
Cy Coleman, Skeeter Best & Aaron Bell | Little Biscuit | A Jazzman's Broadway | Harbinger Records | 2018 | Music: Harold Arlen Lyrics: Yip Harburg | 0:16:46 (Pop-up) | ||||
Cassandra Wilson | Shall We Dance? | Blue Skies | JMT | 1988 | Music: Richard Rodgers Lyrics: Oscar Hammerstein II | 0:18:53 (Pop-up) | ||||
Frank Traynor and the Jazz Preachers | seventy-six trombones | Frank Traynor's Jazz Preachers Plays Show Tunes | W&G | 1967 | Music: Meredith Willson | 0:26:13 (Pop-up) | ||||
The Dave Brubeck Quartet | Tonight | Bernstein Plays Brubeck Plays Bernstein | Columbia | 1961 | Music: Leonard Bernstein | 0:29:53 (Pop-up) | ||||
Fred Hersch | A Cock-Eyed Optimist | Fred Hersch Plays Rodgers & Hammerstein | Nonesuch | 1996 | Music: Richard Rodgers | 0:41:00 (Pop-up) | ||||
Sonny Rollins | There's No Business Like Show Business | Work Time | Prestige | 1956 | Music: Irving Berlin | 0:43:46 (Pop-up) | ||||
Chet Baker | I Talk to the Trees | Chet Baker Plays the Best of Lerner and Loewe | Craft Recordings | 1959 | Music: Frederick Loewe | 0:50:02 (Pop-up) | ||||
Earl Rose | More I Cannot Wish You | Guys and Dolls | Amadeus | 2005 | Music: Frank Loesser | 0:55:48 (Pop-up) | ||||
Charl du Plessis Trio | I Got Rhythm | Baroqueswing Vol. II | Claves | 2016 | Music: George Gershwin | 1:00:46 (Pop-up) | ||||
Oscar Peterson | Why Can't You Behave | Oscar Peterson Plays the Cole Porter Song Book | The Verve Music Group | 1959 | Music: Cole Porter | 1:10:12 (Pop-up) | ||||
Ella Fitzgerald | It Might As Well Be Spring | Sweet and Hot | Decca | 1955 | Music: Richard Rodgers Lyrics: Oscar Hammerstein II | 1:12:41 (Pop-up) | ||||
Nancy Wilson | I Remember | Love, Nancy | Columbia | 1994 | Music & Lyrics: Stephen Sondheim | 1:15:15 (Pop-up) | ||||
Louis Armstrong | Let's Do It (Let's fall in love) | Ella and Louis Again | Verve | 1957 | Music & Lyrics: Cole Porter | 1:17:57 (Pop-up) | ||||
Sarah Vaughan | Smoke Gets in Your Eyes | No Count Sarah | Mercury | 1955 | Music: Jerome Kern Lyrics: Otto Harbach | 1:26:35 (Pop-up) | ||||
Andre Previn, Shelly Manne & Red Mitchell | I'm Talkin' with My Pal | Pal Joey | RevOla | 2009 | Music: Richard Rodgers | 1:37:24 (Pop-up) | ||||
Shelly Manne & His Friends | Show Me | Modern Jazz Performances of Songs from My Fair Lady | RevOla | 2009 | Music: Frederick Loewe | 1:39:23 (Pop-up) | ||||
Stan Getz & Bill Evans | Night and Day | Stan Getz & Bill Evans | Verve | 1973 | Music: Cole Porter | 1:43:16 (Pop-up) | ||||
John Coltrane | Body and Soul | Coltrane's Sound | Atlantic | 1964 | Music: Johnny Green Lyrics: Edward Heyman, Robert Sour & Frank Eyton | 1:51:35 (Pop-up) | ||||
Frank Sinatra | The Lady Is a Tramp | A Swingin' Affair! | Capitol Records | 1957 | Music: Richard Rodgers Lyrics: Lorenz Hart | 2:00:30 (Pop-up) |
<-- Previous playlist | Back to Acid Jazz Hands with Bronwyn Bishop playlists | Next playlist -->
RSS feeds for Acid Jazz Hands with Bronwyn Bishop: Playlists feed | MP3 archives feed
| E-mail Bronwyn Bishop | Other WFMU Playlists | All artists played by Acid Jazz Hands with Bronwyn Bishop |Listen on the Internet | Contact Us | Music & Programs | WFMU Home Page | Support Us | FAQ
Live Audio Streams for Give the Drummer Radio: Pop-up | 128k MP3 (More streams: [+])
Listener comments!
Listener Gregory:
Charles:
Bob in Los Angeles:
doctorjazz:
Bronwyn Bishop:
Listener Gregory:
TonyR:
doctorjazz:
Bronwyn Bishop:
WR:
doctorjazz:
Threemoons 🌛🌕🌜:
WR:
WR:
Webhamster Henry:
TonyR:
TonyR:
Webhamster Henry:
TonyR:
TonyR:
Listener Gregory:
Listener Gregory:
TonyR:
Listener Gregory:
Great choice with the Cassandra Wilson, Ms B!!
Bronwyn Bishop:
Charles:
Bronwyn Bishop:
Charles:
Webhamster Henry:
Listener Gregory:
Charles:
Bronwyn Bishop:
doctorjazz:
Up until around the 60a, jazz and show music were popular culture (your parents likely had Miles' Kind of Blue and Ella Sings Cole Porter Songbook in their record collection. Then in the 60s jazz took a left turn, Coltrane, free jazz. Show tunes became more rock oriented, simpler changes. Shows I've seen recently, while they may have great performances, rarely have your leaving with the runes stuck in your head-they're more likely opera recitative. Last to me is a whole shift in what it takes to perform music. Until the 60s, some folks just played or sang songs written by songwriters. By the end of the 60s you had to be performing your own material to be a "serious" artist-this spilled over into jazz as well. It's ot 100 percent, but those are the trends, so show music isn't in the jazz repertoire the day it was in the 40s and 50s.
Whew...sorry, long winded answer...
Listener Gregory:
doctorjazz:
Bronwyn Bishop:
Listener Gregory:
You are an expert, @doctorj! Don't sell yourself short.
Bronwyn Bishop:
doctorjazz:
WR:
Bronwyn Bishop:
doctorjazz:
Bronwyn Bishop:
WR:
doctorjazz:
doctorjazz:
That was an interesting choice for Platt, though.
Listener Gregory:
Webhamster Henry:
doctorjazz:
Sweet Corn Lizzie:
WR:
doctorjazz:
Listener Gregory:
doctorjazz:
Listener Gregory:
doctorjazz:
doctorjazz:
The rest of the band:
Bass – Ray Brown
Drums – Louie Bellson*
Guitar – Herb Ellis
Piano – Oscar Peterson
Webhamster Henry:
WR:
mjhnyc.org...
In the "before times" I used to go there regularly, the rotating exhibits are always powerful and revisiting the main exhibit worthwhile as well. I've not yet started going out in public regularly, maybe soon.
Listener Gregory:
@doctorj!!! Why do you do me this way?
Bronwyn Bishop:
doctorjazz:
Listener Gregory:
doctorjazz:
doctorjazz:
WR:
↳ Song: "Countin' The Blues" by "Ma Rainey"
Personnel according to Discogs listing for Biograph LP compilation:
Countin' The Blues (Tk. 3)
Banjo – Charlie Dixon
Clarinet – Buster Bailey
Cornet – Louis Armstrong
Drums – Kaiser Marshall
Piano – Fletcher Henderson
Trombone – Charlie Green
doctorjazz:
WR:
WR:
Dean:
Bob in Los Angeles:
Dean:
Webhamster Henry:
Listener Gregory:
Listener Gregory:
Listener Gregory:
doctorjazz:
doctorjazz:
Listener Gregory:
Webhamster Henry:
Listener Gregory:
doctorjazz:
doctorjazz:
Bronwyn Bishop:
Listener Gregory:
Webhamster Henry:
Webhamster Henry:
doctorjazz:
WR:
Webhamster Henry:
doctorjazz:
Listener Gregory:
Listener Gregory:
Webhamster Henry:
WR: