Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Jazz Conversations, The Other Side of Monday Michiru is a 2015 recording by jazz pianist Toshiko Akiyoshi and her daughter singer/flutist Monday Michiru, released in Japan by Victor Entertainment. Track listing
Chris Barton of Los Angeles Times stated "This year marks another active one for McBride with September's rambunctious big-band album "The Good Feeling" and this month's "Conversations With Christian," a collection of duets that rose out of a 2009 podcast series of the same name. Full of loosely intimate interplay, the results sometimes recall ...
The audio podcasts were typically an hour in length and include conversations with notable comedians or entertainers, sometimes at their own home. [3] Guests typically relate to either stand-up comedy, geek and nerd culture, or both. Occasional "hostful" episodes featured solely Hardwick, Ray and Mira.
Conversations is a 1963 album by American jazz multi-instrumentalist, Eric Dolphy first released by the FM label and later reissued by Vee-Jay as The Eric Dolphy Memorial Album the following year. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The album was reissued on disc one of Musical Prophet: The Expanded 1963 New York Studio Sessions , released in 2018 by Resonance Records .
Most episodes focus on a single movie from the director's filmography, and the show's episodes are grouped into miniseries, in which some or all of the director's films are reviewed. Founded in 2015, the show is hosted by actor Griffin Newman and The Atlantic film critic David Sims.
The first documented use of "podcasting" in the definition known today (i.e., broadcasting rather than downloading) was mentioned in a podcast episode of the Evil Genius Chronicles on September 18, 2004, by Dave Slusher, who also mentioned the emerging technology of torrenting as well as pondering if he should monetise the podcast (and, if so ...
Mind Your Language is a British sitcom that premiered on ITV in 1977. It was produced by London Weekend Television and directed by Stuart Allen. Three series were made by London Weekend Television between 1977 and 1979, and it was briefly revived in 1985 (or 1986 in most ITV regions) with six of the original cast members.
The show first aired on September 6, 1980 on CBS and continued until December 13 the same year. [1] Its episodes were eventually added to syndicated Tom and Jerry packages in 1983. [2] The series was broadcast on Pop in the United Kingdom in October 2013. [3] Episodes of the show also occasionally appeared on Cartoon Network and Boomerang.