Home » Jazz Articles » Radio & Podcasts » Meredith Bates, Vesna Duo, Soft Machine, Oná Ensemble
Meredith Bates, Vesna Duo, Soft Machine, Oná Ensemble
Click the play button to listen
During this week's two-hour program of jazz and improvised music, selections from new releases by saxophonist Ben Wendel; string experimentalist Meredith Bates; Vesna Duo (pianist Liana Pailodze Harron and percussionist Ksenija Komljenović); Soft Machine; pianist Yelena Eckemoff; the Oná Ensemble; and the Mark Wade Trio.Playlist
- Shirley Scott "What Makes Harold Sing?/" from One for Me (Strata-East) 8:50
- Carolyn Trowbridge "The Old Woman Who Never Grew Older" from Found Memories (Carolyn Trowbridge) 3:52
- Ben Wendel "Lonely One" from BaRcoDe (Edition) 9:25
- Meredith Bates "3rd Incantation (binding)" from The Observer Effect (Phonometrograph) 11:20
- Toshiyuki Tsuchitori-Ryuichi Sakamoto "綾 (Aya)" from DisappointmentHaterumae (WeWantSounds) 20:16
- Vesna Duo "Black Hole Sun" from Poptimism: A Vesna Duo Mixtape (Vesna Duo) 5:29
- Brion Gysin "Dreamachine Pt. 1" from Dreamachine: 1984/1992 (WeWantSounds) 6:10
- Stephen Thelen "Palermo" from Worlds in Collision (RareNoise) 6:28
- Soft Machine "Turmoil" from Thirteen (Moonjune) 5:06
- Let Spin "Have a Go, Hero" from I Am Alien (Discus Music) 4:06
- MeShell NdegeOcello "An Invitation" from The Omnichord Real Book (Blue Note) 2:21
- [SINGLE] Yelena Eckemoff "Ruins of Älvsborg" from Rosendals Garden (L&H Production) 7:32
- [SINGLE] Roy Hargrove "Circus" from Bern (Time Traveler Recordings) 9:04
- Ona "Pro Olmir" from Traces of Brazil,Voices of Toronto (Duas Trompas) 3:52
- Mark Tonelli "Twenty One Biscuits" from Brasiliana (Artists Recording Collective) 5:12
- Mark Wade "Saga" from New Stages (Dot Time) 6:52
- Caleb Wheeler Curtis "Florence" from Ritual (Chill Tone) 4:42
Tags
Comments
About Soft Machine
Instrument: Band / ensemble / orchestra
Related Articles | Concerts | Albums | Photos | Similar ToPREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
All About Jazz has been a pillar of jazz since 1995, championing it as an art form and, more importantly, supporting the musicians who make it. Our enduring commitment has made "AAJ" one of the most culturally important websites of its kind, read by hundreds of thousands of fans, musicians and industry figures every month.






