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This is 91.5 p. Bushland 89.38 cd a heart 91.70 am Hayes a service of High Plains Public Radio. If you appreciate having public radio service available as a web stream then please thank and patronize the community sponsors you hear mentioned on the air who help cover the direct costs of operation Thank you. From American. Think David. Thank you so much oh thank you so much you know heaven you wherever you're listening thank you let's enjoy some time together so this week we're celebrating the birthday of jazz clarinetist Pete Fountain Yeah and we're going to play so what's your question and find a theme song that actually fits the Newman administration if you can believe that's that's real little happened straight guys we've got some big things to celebrate this month did you know that July 10th is don't step on a b. Day or there's lots of was a buzz about that one. And don't forget now. Signal to kill a day oh that's how I actually get my vitamin c. . And this is also National fishing month I'll save the worm from my tequila. And there's national u.f.o. Day probably for too much tequila Yes. Yes All right before any of us get abducted in Provo Here's Joe Carter right in the bay and with a Louis Jordan to him This one's called I Like a like that. You Most simplest along. With you to live. My. Welcome to 12th Street jumper thank you very much glad to be here oh we are so lucky to have you know originally where are you from well I'm originally from Chicago but I grew up near Philadelphia and began to play in that area and ended up in Kansas City I think you've done a fine job finding the right place to live on that's for sure. Now do you remember the 1st time that you heard Pete I do I do and this was I was just beginning to play the clarinet at the age of 14 and he had just become a kind of national figure appearing on the Lawrence Welk Show and my parents so I have very square parents and they were listening to the Lawrence Welk and I heard this clarinet and I came downstairs and into the dining room where the television was and. I was just blown away by the by his clarinet by a sound do you remember what it was exactly that stood out so much to well this is the sound was was very rich and he had it he had a wonderful round sound and it almost a kind of fruity sound was it was very different from what I was hearing from my high school band. Now you said you earlier you told me you had a story about how he got into the clarinet or something happened with an early clarinet Well he was he was very influenced by it as you said by by Benny Goodman but there was another clarinettist that he loved too and that was working for Zola working for us all it was a clarinettist from New Orleans who played with the Bob Crosby band a number of other bands and was a wonderful clarinettist and and in a way and sound is is very much related to Irving for Zola and Pete was very lucky in that when friends all of passed away he inherited urging for solace clarinet sounds great and feet got really excited about it and so he got that clear . And he started to play it and the room became filled with the smell of garlic it was complete was overwhelming and he found he couldn't play the clarinet in work because that clarinet because it was all it had just had too much garlic and his. Thanks for being on this show John let's get you played right away and all you young musicians out there with a pre-owned instrument coming your way check it clean it do it you k. a Joke all right what song are we going to start with the sick last like Dixieland tune from the Pete Fountain songbook back home again in Indiana. The. Character and kid means they're welcome to do so what's your question really let's meet this week's contest or sure thing he's a Kansas City clarinet player with a need for Reed Please welcome our special guests John Black and. Hard to do that's Bobo. 70 Why don't you tell John in our listeners this week's show what's your question categories than to Yo-Yo the categories I ain't got no backup plan. Midnight and Moscow is the best time to call fled. And a good man is hard to fire. Troy am I ain't got no backup plan for 25. Still Bobo with a big. All right the answer is high society. Was York. That's easy What song was one of the big hits on the best. I'm sorry the answer is high society the question is what is Jeff Sessions worst nightmare. Ok John wanted to take another category How about midnight Moscow for 5009. 000 Those are peace Ok sir it is way way lose. Your. God or name a song from Pete Fountain's hit album Swing low sweet clarinet that is so good but still wrong the answer is weighing weighing Blues The question is What does the Donald get whenever his wife gets into bed. Ok John manager pick another category called on a good man is hard to fire for 100 slow mo. Ok I mean. Is there because Ok the answer is I can't believe that you're in love with me oh. God it what was everyone's favorite song on cheek to cheek. So close and the answer is I can't believe that you're in love with me the question is What does Donald Trump say every morning to his mirror. Not sell means it's nearly double time all right you got 10 seconds to complete the titles of these Dixieland choose from so that they played in the cellar. Ready Nobody Knows the Trouble I've. Taught. Swing low sweet 9 iron. I've got far every one. Of my last 3 wives. On the sunny side of the tanning booth. What can I say for I say what tape recordings of judges. Sorry John. Play. Such a great. Place for. There's more to come right here on Wall Street just. A. Here join me this weekend for punk and disorderly on High Plains Public Radio we'll hear from Jack nasty Babes in Toyland Slater canning the bouncing souls and much more that's this Saturday night at midnight Central see their. 2018 is officially half way over in a year marked with one strange turn after another h.p. P.r. Remained a reliable source of sane journalism in a year known for polarization h.p. P.r. Created community you turned to High Plains Public Radio to hear calm and reason and this month h.p. P.r. Turns to you paint a world with Public Radio one pledge of support at a time at h.p. P.r. Dot org. Welcome back to see Joe Public Radio's weekly jazz blues and Comedy Jam. How was feelin as the loaded as it. May be finished the jam crayfish. Song. Dixie dinner in St Louis blue capsules or the Sweet Georgia. Brown tablet digs the day and it's said what the doctor ordered you to go to Dr. All right Joe Bruno to do it Jordan recorded it now here's Ebony funding to sing Don't let the sun get you cry. Don't let the sun chat you crying and. Crying my son told. You done me dirty no. Doubt I don't want you no mood. Don't let the Sancerre choose 9 in. Line in at ma Moviefone Dole. Salloum me a good movie. And that was just don't won't you know who. You can hurt cut up. you've done it. And I don't know you know. Huge. Won't you. Do it in the. And that's our show thanks to my co-host Ebony funder and this week special guests in the 12th Street jump like Born on the Bronx Tyrone Clark on the bass and music director Joe Klein right at the keyboards David Bass the supplies the vocals their job Vic handles the audio duty at the New York directs our show. Jumpers written by Paul Seaborn in the game produced by theater league dedicated to enhancing the quality of life in the communities it serves with the thrill of live music and theater thanks to the green lady lounge in case you are f.m. 89.3 right here in Kansas City the home of 12 St Joe Now check us out online at Facebook and all the usual places and follow me on Twitter at 12th street and join us next week for Public Radio's jazz blues and Comedy Jam til then I'm Pete Webber remind you yet check out the live music scene in your neck the words because that's where it's always jumping. This is Ira Glass of This American Life here is something that was on public radio this past year it was on in December the news that particular week in Doha Qatar the United Nations had a climate change conference and progress at this conference was very very slow goals like limiting the increase in world temperature to 2 degrees Celsius which the world's governments committed to in 2009 in Copenhagen those were starting to seem impossible and that same week the typhoon called Bhopal hit the Philippines on Tuesday with a death toll that exceeded Hurricane Sandy. Even at that time and would eventually be many times larger than Hurricane Sandy the lead negotiator from the Philippines not arrive Sanyo gave this speech that becomes as you'll hear very unusual for this kind of g.v. Plea bureaucratic diplomatic setting they were in an important backdrop for my delegation just the profound effects of climate change we are already confronting and that's why you see it here every single hour even as we've actually ember across to need here we are suffering. But I'm sure we have never had to buy food like we just wreaked havoc in a part of the country that this never seen a storm like this in half a century finally my damn chair I'm making an urgent appeal not the Senate go shoot for. That was a leader of my doing but that's a Filipino I appeal to the whole world appealed to the leaders from all over the world to open our eyes to the stark reality that we face I appeal to ministers. The outcome of our work is not about what our political masters want. This is about what is demanded of us by 7000000000 people. I appeal to all of. These no more dealings no more excuses. Please let the op be remembered as the place where we found the political will to turn things around. I think part of what makes the coverage of stories on public radio effective is that we can take the time to let people say what they need to get their point across that quote from that Filipino delegate was over a minute long was a minute 7 actually and that's not so unusual for public radio somebody needs that much time to make a point studies show that the average quote on television news news depends on which that he woke at is between 7 and 9 seconds so just consider that difference a minute 7 vs 9 seconds if you want broadcast stories that give analysis and context and feeling you know feeling to it is just easier if you're interviewees are allowed to talk for longer than 9 seconds if you are someone who appreciates the difference the way that we pay for the stories you've probably heard because the pledge drive it is the fairest system possible it's a great system those of us who like this kind of thing on the radio we are in and we pay for that that seems fair to me that is why I played I think that's fair I want to stop on the radio I feel like I should pitch in I hope if you have never given I can convince you to feel the same way if you've been given a lot we could use the help again you know now during this drive Here's how to help out. Her. With the. A Brian deer elk here join me this weekend for punk and disorderly on High Plains Public Radio we'll hear from the sag nasty Babes in Toyland.

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