Blue Voodoo Episode 2 - Gilbert Holmström

Blue Voodoo Episode 2 - Gilbert Holmström

Up next

Blue Voodoo episode 4 Chico Lindvall

THIS EPISODE WAS DONE IN SWEDISH "Det är en enda pågående process, hela skiten… " "Trummorna låter som om de vore inspelade på botten av en swimmingpool…" "Nutidens musiker spelar för att pappa ska bli glad. Jag spelade för att min pappa inte skulle bli glad." "Mindre pretto, mer ...  Show more

Blue Voodoo Episode 3 – Erik Söderlind

THIS EPISODE WAS DONE IN SWEDISH Erik Söderlind is a jazz-guitar player from Sweden. He is the guest in episode number three of the podcast. He has been around on the Swedish and international jazz-scene for more than a decade. You will be able to recognize him immediately becaus ...  Show more

Recommended Episodes

Episode 10: Beethoven's Legacy
Beethoven: The Basics with Andy Bush

In the final episode of the series, Andy takes a look at some of Beethoven’s later works and asks his guests to explain which 1 piece of his music best describes the great composer’s legacy and influence. References to tour merch, Wimpy and privet hedges may also feature. Many th ...  Show more

How Louis Armstrong invented the modern pop star
Switched on Pop

In 1964, Louis Armstrong knocked the Beatles off the top of the charts with his recording of “Hello, Dolly!” becoming, at age 62, the oldest artist to ever hit number one on the Billboard Hot 100. Sixty years later, Louis Armstrong remains a beloved cultural figure, his oft-imita ...  Show more

Music for the movies
Composers Datebook

Synopsis On today’s date in 1927, a landmark film title The Jazz Singer received its premiere showing at the Warner Theater in New York. The Jazz Singer starred Al Jolson and is usually credited with being the first “talkie”—the first motion picture to successfully incorporate pr ...  Show more

Rhapsody in Blue, Reimagined
Switched on Pop

What do Duke Ellington, United Airlines, and the K Pop group Red Velvet share in common? They've all covered George Gershwin's piano concerto, Rhapsody in Blue. First premiered in 1924, the piece became an immediate hit for the way it blended American jazz with the European symph ...  Show more