Skip to main content
Search Query
Show Search
Home
Schedule
Local Programming
Hosts
Classical Playlists
Donate
Donate Your Vehicle
Donate Your Vehicle
KBIA
About
Menu
Show Search
Search Query
Donate
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
On Air
Now Playing
KMUC
On Air
Now Playing
KBIA
All Streams
Home
Schedule
Local Programming
Hosts
Classical Playlists
Donate
Donate Your Vehicle
Donate Your Vehicle
KBIA
About
Search results for
Sort By
Relevance
Newest (Publish Date)
Oldest (Publish Date)
Search
Close Enough For Jazz: How The 2015 NPR Jazz Critics Poll Was Fit To Be Tied
It wasn't exactly a tie. But then again, it was a rather bountiful year for jazz albums. The pollmaster breaks down the result, and by extension, the year in jazz.
James P. Johnson: The Father Of Stride
The early-20th-century musician's seminal work represents the cornerstone of jazz piano conception. Pianists like Aaron Diehl, Ethan Iverson, Marc Cary and ELEW pay tribute.
How A Korean Jazz Festival Found A Huge Young Audience
In a picturesque setting a few hours from Seoul, hundreds of thousands of millennials camp out for a three-day weekend of jazz. Its secret? It might just be that the music comes ... well, not first.
Nels Cline And Julian Lage On Mountain Stage
The genre-straddling star guitarists perform together with fluidity, precision and grace.
Jon Batiste On Piano Jazz
The Colbert bandleader sings "What A Wonderful World" in a 2011 session with guest host Jon Weber.
Remembering Composer Steven Stucky
The Pulitzer Prize-winning American musician, teacher and author was 66 years old. He had been diagnosed with cancer in November.
Singing For Life In A Crypt In Harlem
Opera singer Lawrence Brownlee joins jazz pianist Jason Moran in a landmark church to tell a troubling new story with an old spiritual.
Mark Murphy On Piano Jazz
The vocalist, acompanied by bassist Sean Smith, performs "Song For The Geese" in this 1998 session.
Danilo Pérez: A Man, A Plan, A Canal, Panama
For the pianist and founder, the Panama Jazz Festival is much more than a bunch of concerts in his hometown. It's an exhibition of how music can change a neighborhood, a political climate or a life.
Harold Mabern On Piano Jazz
McPartland caught the Memphis-born pianist for a session just before he left for a 1991 Japan tour.
Previous
797 of 2,378
Next