Six Count

A podcast for the voices and stories of jazz in Durham, North Carolina. Hosted and produced by Xara Wilde.

Farewell Episode: Kevin Beardsley to join the U.S. Army’s Jazz Ambassadors this August, & Part 2 with MoBetta Ledbetter of the United States Navy Band

Bassist Kevin Beardsley is set to join the U.S. Army’s Jazz Ambassadors, departing for basic training on August 10.Kevin sat down with Six Count on July 29 in downtown Durham before his penultimate weekly performance at Kingfisher, where the jazz jam runs every Tuesday from 8:30 to 11:00 p.m. Tonight (Tuesday, August 5) is the bassist’s last regular gig at the bar.During the conversation, Kevin shares about his decision to join the army’s premier big band, his aspirations for musical growth, and parting words to the Triangle’s jazz community. (Local jazz fans shouldn’t despair, however; Kevin plans to return to the area regularly for family visits and gigs throughout the year.) While at Kingfisher, host Xara Wilde also had the opportunity to speak with MoBetta Ledbetter, a member of the Commodores from the United States Navy Band. MoBetta reflects on his four years with the ensemble, shares insights he wishes he’d known when starting out, and describes what it’s like working as a musician in the Navy.Music creditsThis episode features live recordings of the Kingfisher jazz jam with Kevin on bass, Jeremy “Bean” Clemons on drums, and Tinashe “Blu” Thompson Jr., on sax on July 29, 2025. This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app.

08-05
20:50

Yuan Dong on philosophy, mentorship, and discovering her voice

Yuan Dong is a jazz pianist and vocalist in Durham and a PhD candidate in philosophy at Duke, where she researches social epistemology and the neuroethics of video games.At age seventeen, Yuan left her hometown in China for Charlottesville, Virginia, to finish high school, a move that would eventually lead her to jazz. She earned her bachelor’s degree at William and Mary, where she studied under renowned vocalist Stephanie Nakasian (mother of Veronica Swift).On this episode, Yuan shares about her first encounter with jazz, the mentorship she received from pianist Ed Paolantonio and vocalist Angela Bingham (a past Six Count guest), and her vision for where her music will take her next.Music creditsThis episode features the songs, “Journey to the West,” and “Blue Dress,” sung by Yuan Dong.This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on YouTube, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app.

07-02
31:55

Saxophonist Imraan Khan: From Straight Ahead to Brazilian Rhythms

Raleigh-based saxophonist Imraan Khan specializes in Brazilian music, including samba jazz, bossa nova, and Baião. Originally from New York City, Imraan moved to the Triangle in August 2020. He shares his early influences from Caribbean music, straight-ahead jazz, and bebop, as well as the release of his debut album, Começando (2019). In addition to performing throughout Brazil, Cuba, and the United States, Imraan has graced stages at the Montreux Jazz Festival and Jazz à Vienne in France. He also discusses the early mentorship he received from saxophonists Andy Fusco (a former member of the Buddy Rich Big Band) and T.K. Blue, and pianist Richie Iacona. What might surprise most? Imraan is also a motorcyclist who repairs his own vehicles, founder of an IT consulting company, and a member of a Rick James tribute band.Music creditsThis episode features the songs, “Começando,” “Luz da Cançāo,” and “A Natureza Dela,” from the 2019 album Começando by Imraan Khan. This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count for GivingTuesday, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app.

05-14
38:32

Album alert: Thrio to release Volume 2 on March 21

Andrew Berinson and Paul Creel of Thrio returned to Six Count to share about the upcoming release of their second album, Volume 2. The album will be available on streaming platforms on March 21. Volume 2 will feature arrangements of songs composed by Miles Davis, Chick Corea, and Wynton Marsalis, as well as a few of Thrio’s original compositions. Andrew and Paul share about how Thrio has grown since the group’s first album, what went into the making of Volume 2, and what to expect from their latest work. Thrio is a jazz trio featuring Andrew on piano, Paul on bass, and Donovan Cheatham on drums. In addition to performances throughout the Triangle, Thrio hosts the Thursday jazz jam at Bond Brothers Eastside in Cary. The band is planning a pre-release party on March 20 at the bar and concert venue.Six Count first interviewed Thrio at the Sharp Nine Gallery in fall 2022, following the release of their first album, Volume 1. Follow Thrio on Instagram, Facebook, or YouTube.More about the albumVolume 2 was recorded at Overdub Lane in Durham. The album was recorded, mixed, and mastered by Jason Richmon. The album art is by Andrew Berinson featuring photography by James Motter.Music creditsThis episode features the song, “Nardis,” from the 2025 album Volume 2 by Thrio, featuring Andrew Berinson on piano, Paul Creel on bass, and Donovan Cheatham on drums. Nardis was originally composed by Miles Davis.This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count for GivingTuesday, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app.

03-12
32:28

With several albums on the way, drummer Michael Shekwoaga Ode is ready to make his next artistic statement

Michael Shekwoaga Ode is a Nigerian American drummer, melodist, vocalist, composer, and educator from Durham. The musician sat down with Six Count during his visit home over the holidays. Now based in New York City, Michael leads three bands, and he frequently plays with saxophonist Kenny Garrett, a former member of Miles Davis’s band. Michael plans to release several albums this year across the groups.Michael shares about the jump from the Triangle to New York, his cinematic approach to shows, and the relationship between spirituality and music. He also shares about the first time he saw jazz performed live (with Jon Curry and Lance Scott) as a student at Jordan High School in Durham.  Michael studied at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music under the mentorship of drummer Billy Hart in Oberlin, Ohio. Music creditsThis episode features a recording of a live performance with Michael on drums, Ernest Turner on piano, Butler Knowles on bass, Irving Aday on keys, and guest Dave Finucane on sax at Missy Lane’s on January 5. This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count for GivingTuesday, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app. 

02-12
35:18

Vibraphonist Brandon Mitchell on his latest releases, getting inspiration from his roots, and what’s coming for the artist in 2025

Brandon Mitchell is a vibraphonist and music educator based in Raleigh. Brandon shares about his latest work, including the release of the album Lakewood Jump by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers and his 2024 singles, “A Promise is a Comfort to a Fool” and “Little Sunflower.” The artist also talks about getting inspiration from the Afrobeats movement and his Caribbean roots in Jamaica and Grenada, and what’s coming up for him in 2025. Brandon will release music with his four piece featuring Chris Mills on bass, Brandon Shamar on piano, and Chuck Pinckney on drums.Originally from Washington, D.C., Brandon holds a bachelor’s in percussion performance from Elon University and a master’s in jazz studies from North Carolina Central University. He teaches vibes, drums, piano, and other percussion instruments around the Triangle.In addition to performing throughout the East Coast, Brandon has performed in Italy at the Jazzit International Music Festival in Montegrosso, the Piccolo Teatro in Milan, and by the Duomo in Florence for a show presented by the Notte Bianca festival. He’s also performed with Branford Marsalis, Joey Calderazzo, and Jon Metzger, among others.  Music creditsThis episode features the songs “A Promise is a Comfort to a Fool” and “Little Sunflower,” by Brandon Mitchell. This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count for GivingTuesday, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app.

01-15
40:25

Bass player Thomas Owens on the Wednesday jazz jam at Durham’s Congress Social Bar

Thomas Owens is a bass player based in Raleigh. The North Carolina native shares about balancing performing with his day job in IT, the impact of his mentors (including previous Six Count guests Al Strong and Greg Gelb), and the evolution of his music, from historic swing music to fusion and other genres.  You can hear Thomas play every Wednesday evening from 7:00 to 9:30 p.m. at Congress Social Bar in Durham. The jazz jam is hosted by Al. Thomas received his bachelor’s from the University of Maryland, Baltimore County (UMBC) with a major in business technology and a minor in music.Music creditsThis episode features a live recording of the jam at Congress Social Bar, featuring Holland Majors on keys, Al Strong on trumpet, Geoffrey Ammons on electric guitar, Thomas Owens on bass, and Larry Draughn on drums. This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count for GivingTuesday, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app.

12-04
39:04

Listening Session #1: Saxophonist Dexter Moses (plus special album announcement!)

Six Count hosted its first listening session with a small group of musicians in January. Dexter Moses, the featured guest, curated the following playlist for the evening: “I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles,” by Charlie Parker and Jay McShann (1942)“Cherokee,” by Charlie Parker and Efferge Ware (1942 or 1943)“Bag’s Groove” (1953) and “Off Minor” (1947), by Bud PowellThe Black Peril, by Soweto Kinch (2019)Liberation RagDegeneration, Pt. 11 – The Disorder WithinLiberation’s DawnBlack FridayHomecoming“52nd Street Theme (Live),” by the Branford Marsalis Quartet (2014)“I Cover the Waterfront (Live),” by the Don Shirley Trio (1968)“All The Things You Are,” by Phineas Newborn Jr (1956)“I’ve Done My Work,” by Donald and Geraldine Gay (2001)“Sugar (Solo Piano – The Keystone Transcriptions),” by Teddy Wilson (1939-1940)“On a Turquoise Cloud,” by Duke Ellington (1948)Listen to the playlist on Spotify. *Not all versions of the songs selected by Dexter are available on the music service.The musician also shares about his debut album, New Perspective. He plans to begin recording in April. Dexter is a previous guest on Six Count. Listen to his episode from September 2023 on the under-appreciated influence of Don Byas on swing and bebop. More about the artist Dexter is a saxophonist, composer, and educator in Durham.A double alumnus from North Carolina Central University (NCCU), Dexter holds a bachelor’s in jazz studies and master’s in jazz composition and arranging. On Wednesdays, he hosts Evening Jazz at WNCU 90.7 FM, the university’s jazz radio station, from 8:00 to 11:00 p.m.Dexter teaches private lessons in saxophone, flute, and clarinet at the Russell Lacy Music school in Durham. (Episode art by Micah Haycraft)Music creditsThis season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count for GivingTuesday, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app. The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. 

02-23
23:34

Show-day release: Percussionist Larry Q. Draughn on a pivotal moment at Newport Jazz Festival, what we can learn from youth, and the magic of double trios

Larry Q. Draughn is a percussionist and educator based in Greensboro, North Carolina. You can catch Larry next this Friday, January 26, at the Sharp Nine Gallery in Durham. The drummer will perform a double trio at 7:30 p.m. with Lynn Grissett on trumpet, Jason Foureman on bass, Steven Haines on bass, Devin Fuller on drums, and two special guests. Get tickets.In addition to performing throughout the Triangle and beyond, Larry teaches at Brightwood Elementary School in Guilford County and directs the North Carolina Jazz Continuum Project. Larry has performed at the Notre Dame Collegiate Jazz Festival (South Bend, Indiana); the Ravinia Jazz Festival (Highland Park, Illinois); Jazz Port Townsend (Townsend, Washington); Detroit Jazz Festival (Detroit, Michigan); Newport Jazz Festival (Newport, Rhode Island); and the Fiji Jazz and Blues Festival (Port Denarau, Fiji), among others.The drummer has recorded with the NCCU Jazz Ensemble, vocalist Lenora Helm Hammonds, Steve Haines, and Mondre Moffett, and he’s shared the stage with Branford Marsalis, Joey Calderazzo, and Nneena Freelon, to name a few. In 2012, his music was featured in ESPN’s “Free to Be” commercials in 2012 during the network’s Black History Month campaign.The drummer holds a bachelor’s in classical percussion from North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University and a master’s in jazz studies from North Carolina Central University (NCCU). Larry is an alumnus (’07) of Betty Carter’s Jazz Ahead, a two-week jazz residency performance and composition project administered through the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. He’s also studied at the Ravinia Steans Music Institute in Highland Park, Illinois. You can follow Larry on Instagram and YouTube. Music creditsA live recording of “Koko,” by the North Carolina Jazz Continuum, featuring Larry Q. Draughn on drums, Thomas Linger on piano, Lynn Grissett on trumpet, Kenny Phelps-McKeown on bass, and Dave Finucane on sax. The performance took place on March 25, 2016 at the Sharp Nine Gallery in Durham. This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count for GivingTuesday, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app. The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. 

01-26
27:36

Cicely Mitchell, co-owner of Missy Lane’s Assembly Room, on opening weekend in Downtown Durham

Cicely Mitchell is the co-owner of Missy Lane’s Assembly Room, Downtown Durham’s newest venue dedicated to jazz and other Black American Music (BAM). Cicely spoke with Six Count during the venue’s opening weekend on January 14, 2024. She shares reactions from the inaugural evening headlined by vocalist Lois Deloatch, her vision for the space as a hub for art and community, and what guests can expect. Miss Lane’s plans to put on three seasons of live programming per year, with each announced at least sixty days in advance. The venue also offers club memberships to receive early access to tickets, preferred seating, members-only events, and a “personalized hospitality concierge.”The venue has partnered with Weldon Mills Distillery, Little Waves Coffee Roasters and Ninth Street Bakery, Duke Arts, and C7 Yoga. Missy Lane’s will serve as a coffee house and meeting space by day, serving java from 7:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. Monday through Friday and 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. On Fridays and Saturdays, Missy Lane’s will host Office Hours from 11:00 p.m. to 2:00 a.m. with a house DJ, Professor X. The DJ will play jazz, Afro beats, improv, and more, and the event will feature a percussion jam session.Missy Lane’s is located on 310 E Main St, Suite 100. Free parking is available on weekends in a lot adjacent to the building, or in nearby decks.Music creditsThis episode features live recordings from Missy Lane’s opening night on January 13, 2024. That evening’s performances featured Lois Deloatch Gomes on vocals, Ernest Turner on piano, Butler Knowles on bass, and Donovan Cheatham on drums. This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app. The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST.

01-16
09:35

Live recording: Al Strong, trumpet player, at Duke University’s Osher Institute with guest co-host Peter Burke of Locavore Jazz

If you love jazz and live in the Triangle, you know Al Strong. The two-time Grammy-nominated trumpet player, composer, recording artist, mentor, and educator spoke with Six Count at Duke University’s Osher Lifelong Learning Institute on October 4, 2023. Al is the co-founder of the Art of Cool Project, a nonprofit that hosts a jazz education summer camp and the Art of Cool Music Festival. The Washington, D.C. native is a graduate of the Duke Ellington School of the Arts, the only public high school in the Capitol that provides dual curriculum in college-preparatory academics and pre-professional arts training.Al holds a bachelor’s degree in jazz studies from North Carolina Central University, where he leads the program’s trumpet studio, and a master’s in jazz performance and pedagogy from Northern Illinois University in DeKalb, Illinois. The musician has performed internationally at the Montreal Jazz Festival in Canada, the North Sea Jazz Festival in the Netherlands, and the Peru Jazz Festival in Lima, among others. His shows have headlined the Blue Note Jazz Festival and Winter Fest in New York City, as well as D.C.’s Blues Alley Jazz Festival.Al’s career has included performances and recordings with Aretha Franklin, the Count Basie Orchestra, and the Hamiltones. He has also served as music director for the rapper Rakim, and performed with former rapper Eric Roberson (also known as Erro) and hip hop duo the Foreign Exchange.Al and Six Count host and producer Xara Wilde were invited to speak at a class about jazz in the Triangle. The course’s instructor, Peter Burke, manages the local jazz blog Locavore Jazz. Thank you, Peter, for the opportunity! Music creditsThis episode features a live recording of Al Strong performing with the Rebecca Kleinmann Latin Jazz Quintet at Beyu Caffee on January 7, 2023. The performers that evening included Rebecca Kleinmann on flutes and vocals, Stephen Anderson on keys, Andy Kleindienst on bass, Gastón Reggio on drums, and Brevan Hampden on congas and other percussion. This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count for GivingTuesday, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app. The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. 

12-08
58:38

Happy One-Year Anniversary to the Six Count podcast in North Carolina!

Happy One-Year Anniversary to the Six Count podcast in North Carolina! Since launching in fall 2022, we have: interviewed twenty-three musicians for seventeen episodespartnered with an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina (taintradio.org)upgraded  our equipment had first interview with a live audiencecollaborated with blogger Peter Burke of Locavore Jazz to co-host an episodeThank you to our guests for joining the show and to our listeners! 2022–2023 Six Count guests: Andrew BerinsonPaul CreelDonovan CheathamEllis DysonMichael Pelz-ShermanHal GoodtreeIttai KormanTheous JonesJoe MacPhailRebecca KleinmannFrankie AlexanderChristian TamburrMark WellsBrad LindeTaha ArifLaura WindleyKeenan McKenzieAngela BinghamErnest TurnerGregg GelbKai LanceDexter MosesWhat will the next year bring? Let us know who you want to hear from on the Six Count podcast in 2024!Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count for GivingTuesday, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app! The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. Music creditThis episode features a live recording of the song “Find Your Way,” by Thrio. The group performed at the Sharp 9 Gallery on September 23, 2022. We chose this song because Six Count’s first episode in North Carolina featured the group! We interviewed pianist Andrew Berinson, bassist Paul Creel, and drummer Donovan Cheatham before their show that evening. 

11-28
02:05

Joseph Silvers, founder of the Hot Club of Raleigh, on the legacy of guitarist Rex Griffin on North Carolina’s jazz manouche scene, and the story of when Django Reinhardt’s son performed in Greensboro

Joseph Silvers is the founder of the Hot Club of Raleigh, a jazz manouche band based in the City of Oaks. The group has performed at Watts & Ward and Young Hearts Distilling, among other establishments in the Triangle and beyond. On this episode, Joseph shares the story of when Jean-Jacques “Babik” Reinhardt, son of Django Reinhardt, performed with the Hot Club of North Carolina during a U.S. tour from France with the François Vola Group. François Vola, a French guitarist and composer, is the godson of Louis Vola, the bassist in Django Reinhardt’s original Quintette du Hot Club de France. François once lived in North Carolina before returning to France in the late nineties.Griffin saw the François Vola Group with Babik play in Hickory and invited them to perform with his group. They accepted the invitation, performing at the Paisley Pineapple (now Natty Greene’s) in Greensboro for the Hot Club of North Carolina’s Monday night gig. For further reading, check out this 1997 review by the Washington Post on Vola and Reinhardt’s album “Old World New World.”Early yearsJoseph was born in Greensboro and grew up in rural Madison (Rockingham County, North Carolina) among tobacco farms. At five years old, Joseph’s grandfather gave him a three-quarter-size acoustic guitar from a thrift store, and he’s been playing ever since.Joseph began learning the bass, and later the guitar, when he was eleven years old from Rex Griffin, founder of the Hot Club of North Carolina. Quickly advancing under Griffin’s mentorship, the musician picked up a Washburn guitar (also gifted by his grandfather), beginning his jazz manouche journey. When Joseph was fifteen, Griffin booked him for his first gig at Madison Dry Goods and Country Store on Murphy Street downtown. Just a year later, he was regularly subbing for Griffin’s rhythm guitarist in the Hot Club of North Carolina for their weekly gig at Tate Street Coffee House in Greensboro. While with the group, Joseph performed with Frank Vignola in the summer of 2009 for a tour that included stops in Greensboro, Raleigh, and Madison.Griffin passed in 2021. Forming the Hot Club of RaleighAfter serving as a full-time band member for several years, Joseph established the Hot Club of Raleigh in 2018. The original members included Joseph, Steven Ray (who passed in 2018; may he rest in peace), Matt York on woodwinds, and Andy Powell on bass. The group now comprises Joseph and Andy, Devin Frazier on guitar, and previous Six Count guest Dexter Moses on woodwinds.You can also find Joseph playing with Gallus Mag, a noise rock band, as well as with Hunter MacDermut at Lanza’s Cafe, Carrboro, on the last Sunday of each month. The duo will play next on November 26. Joseph holds a bachelor’s from North Carolina State University and a master’s from the University of Illinois, with both degrees in electrical engineering. If you’re interested in playing at a weekly jazz manouche jam, get in touch with organizer Richard Badu.Music creditsThis episode features the songs “Limehouse Blues” and “Troublant Bolero” by the Hot Club of Raleigh.This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app! The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.

11-10
39:24

Farewell episode: Saxophonist Aaron Hill on leaving the Triangle, heading to Washington State University to serve as director of big bands and applied saxophone

Saxophonist Aaron Hill spoke with Six Count before moving back to the West Coast this past August. Aaron accepted a position as an assistant professor at Washington State University in Pullman, Washington. The musician will serve as director of big bands and applied saxophone in the university’s School of Music. On this episode, Aaron reflects on his many musical collaborations in the Triangle since moving to the area in 2007, including with pianist and bandleader Eric Hirsh; the Mint Julep Jazz Band (led by past Six Count guest Laura Windley); trumpeter, bandleader, and educator Jim Ketch; colleagues at North Carolina Central University (NCCU), the North Carolina Jazz Repertory Orchestra, and many others. He also shares about the jazz scene in Hawaii, where he lived for nearly a decade. The saxophonist has performed internationally in Canada, France, Germany, Greece, and Sweden, among others, as well as domestically in forty-eight states. He’s shared the stage with Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter, Branford Marsalis, and Joey Calderazzo, among many others.The Washington native holds a master’s degree in jazz studies and jazz performance and composition from NCCU, as well as a doctorate of musical arts in saxophone performance from UNC Greensboro. In addition to teaching at NCCU, he has taught at N.C. State, UNC–Chapel Hill, UNC Pembroke, the North Carolina School of Science and Mathematics. Aaron joined the show a day before his farewell concert at Magnetic Sound Studios in Durham with the Eric Hirsh Quartet. Music creditsThis episode features the songs “Somehow It Seems to Help” and “To Comfort a Shadow” from the album Distillation (2018), by Eric Hirsh featuring Aaron Hill.This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app! The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebookand Instagram @thexarawilde.

10-06
47:45

Dexter Moses, saxophonist, on the underappreciated influence of Don Byas (1913–1972) on swing and bebop

Dexter Moses is a saxophonist, composer, and educator in Durham. In addition to his own group, the Dexter Moses Quartet/Quintet, the musician has performed and recorded with Branford Marsalis, Delfeayo Marsalis & the Uptown Jazz Orchestra, Joey Calderazzo, and Nneena Freelon, among others.A double alumnus from North Carolina Central University (NCCU), Dexter holds a bachelor’s in jazz studies and master’s in jazz composition and arranging. On Wednesdays, he hosts Evening Jazz at WNCU 90.7 FM, the university’s jazz radio station, from 8:00 to 11:00 p.m.On this episode, Dexter shares about: the life and legacy of the legendary saxophonist Dexter Gordon (to whom he dedicated his August show at the Sharp 9 Gallery in Durham);how listening to a bootleg recording of saxophonist Don Byas and bassist Slam Stewart inspired his master’s thesis at NCCU, which argued that Byas should be named among the founding fathers of bebop alongside saxophonist Charlie Parker;and negotiating the complexities of performing historic swing music today as a Black musician within the context of race and racism in the United States.Further reading: Dexter mentions the longest musicians’ strike and recording ban in entertainment history, which took place from 1942 to 1944. Learn more about “The Day the Music Stopped.”Dexter joined Six Count the day after being a featured artist of the Wednesday jazz jam hosted by drummer Taha Arif at Hayti Collective Kitchen and Cocktails in Durham. You can find out more about the weekly event, which takes place from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m., by listening to Taha’s episode (published in April 2023). Dexter teaches private lessons in saxophone, flute, and clarinet at the Russell Lacy Music school in Durham (and he’s accepting new students!).Episode art credit: Micah HaycraftMusic creditsThis episode features a live recording of “The Change,” by the Dexter Moses Quartet.This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app! The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.

09-01
47:00

Listen to the Six Count podcast on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina

Listen to the  Six Count podcast on taintradio.org, a noncommercial venue for independent producers. The online jazz radio station based in North Carolina presents music and music-related programming 24/7. Six Count airs on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST.Music creditsThis episode features the song “Forged in Rhythm” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app! Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram@thexarawilde.

08-31
00:30

Show alert! Jazz guitarist Kai Lance to play with the Mark Tipton Trio of Boston at the Sharp 9 Gallery this August

North Carolina native Kai Lance is a guitarist and educator based in Chapel Hill.  Kai will perform with the Mark Tipton Trio at the Sharp 9 Gallery in Durham on Saturday, August 19. The lineup: Mark Tipton, trumpetKai Lance, guitarGeorge MacLaurin, pianoAaron Gross, bassDonovan Cheatham, drums Buy tickets for the show. Mark is a trumpeter, composer, and educator. The musician is pursuing a DMA (Doctor of Musical Arts) at the New England Conservatory in Boston, where he is a teaching fellow. Mark earned his bachelor’s from the Oberlin College and Conservatory in Oberlin, Ohio, and a MM (Master of Music) from the Mannes College of Music in New York City. Kai, also a student at the conservatory, shares about what to expect at the August show, as well as a never-going-to-be-the-same-again moment at a high school jazz camp in Louisville, Kentucky; his mentors from the Triangle’s jazz scene; and his aspirations as a musician. Follow KaiInstagramYouTubeBandcampSoundCloudFacebookMusic creditThis episode features the songs “Seresta,” by Paquito D’Rivera (performed by Kai Lance) and “Lost Cause,” by Kai Lance.This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app! The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebookand Instagram @thexarawilde.

08-04
34:22

50 years of jazz in the Triangle: Saxophonist and bandleader Gregg Gelb on his performance and teaching career, and new music with La Fiesta Latin Jazz Quintet

Gregg Gelb is a saxophonist and clarinetist, bandleader, and educator based in the Triangle. On this episode, the musician shares about his latest work with La Fiesta Latin Jazz Quintet, “The Latin Jazz Dance Suite,” which his group debuted at Magnetic Sound Studios in Durham on June 23. The quintet comprises Ramon Ortiz and Beverly Botsford on percussion, Steve Anderson on keys, and Andy Kleindienst on bass. Since moving to Raleigh in 1979, Gregg has collaborated with and formed an array of groups, including Group Sax, the Gregg Gelb Swing Band, the Second Line Stompers, and others.An arranger and composer, he’s has written more than 250 charts for his eight-piece band and 50 charts for his big band. Gregg also mentors advanced student musicians as the director of the Triangle Youth Jazz Ensemble in Raleigh. Under his leadership the ensemble has been selected seven times to the finals of the Essentially Ellington High School Jazz Band Competition & Festival at Jazz at Lincoln Center.In addition to teaching in public schools, Gregg has served as an interim assistant professor of jazz at Francis Marion University, UNC Greensboro, North Carolina State University, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and institutions in the North Carolina Community Colleges System. The musician is now an adjunct jazz and classical music professor at Central Carolina Community College, and he teaches private lessons.Follow Gregg: SpotifyFacebookInstagramMusic creditThis episode features the songs “New Normal,” from the album The Latin Jazz Pandemic Suite (2022) by La Fiesta Latin Jazz Quintet, and “Four D” from the album Road Trip (2016) by the Gregg Gelb Jazz Quartet, featuring Christopher Gelb on drums, Thomas Linger on piano, Charlton Provatas on bass, and Gregg Gelb on tenor sax. This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app! The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.

07-21
39:21

Pianist Ernest Turner on his approach to improvisation, fatherhood, and reflections from a more than 20-year career in jazz

Ernest Turner is a GRAMMY-nominated pianist, composer, and educator based in Durham. Ernest began learning the piano at the age of four from his mother. Since launching his professional career more than twenty years ago, the musician has performed with three of the Marsalis brothers (Delfeayo, Branford, and Jason), R&B artist John Legend, the New Orleans Jazz Orchestra, saxophonist Stephen Riley and the late saxophonist Brian Horton, and many others in the Triangle.The pianist shares about his conversational approach to performances to engage with and educate audiences, his philosophy on improvisation, incorporating spirituality into his music, reflections on fatherhood and his career, and more. He also offers his thoughts on the use of the word “jazz,” versus terms like “Black American Music” or “BAM,” as the jazz trumpeter Nicholas Payton has promoted since at least the early 2010s.Ernest earned his bachelor’s degree in jazz studies from Loyola University and a master’s in jazz performance from the University of New Orleans. The pianist is an adjunct instructor at UNC Greensboro and a former faculty member in jazz piano at Eastern Carolina University (2006–2010). Follow Ernest:FacebookSpotifyApple MusicAmazonYouTubeInstagramErnest released the album Original Mind with saxophonist Stephen Riley in 2021 and My Americana in 2019.Music creditThis episode features the songs “Return of Thanos,” from the album My Americana (2019), by Ernest Turner, and “Blessed Assurance” from the album Original Mind by Stephen Riley and Ernest Turner (2021).This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app! The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.

06-30
52:33

Jazz vocalist Angela Bingham on storytelling through music, performing little-known lyrics, and creating intimacy with audiences

Angela Bingham is a jazz vocalist, voiceover actress, and podcast co-host. You can catch her next with the Jim Ketch Quintet on Friday, June 9, at the Sharp 9 Gallery in Durham. The show, entitled “There’s Lyrics for That,” will feature songs by Wayne Shorter, Freddie Hubbard, Jon Hendricks, and Thelonious Monk, among others. Buy tickets.Who’s on:Angela Bingham, voiceJim Ketch, trumpetAndrew Berinson, piano*Kenny Phelps-McKeown, bassDonovan Cheatham, drums*Dexter Moses, saxophone*Previous Six Count guestThis summer, Angela is leading jazz vocal performance workshops through the Durham Jazz Workshop (housed at the Sharp 9). The next workshop begins July 31. She also teaches private lessons for students and adults.More about Angela Angela has lived in North Carolina since 2011, performing regularly at the Pimiento Tea Room in Holly Springs, the Umstead Hotel and Bond Brothers Eastside in Cary, and the O.Henry Hotel in Greensboro, to name a few. Originally from the San Francisco Bay Area, she studied jazz under Roger Letson at De Anza College in Cupertino, California. The vocalist launched her professional jazz career in Salt Lake City, Utah, in the late nineties.Outside of music, Angela is a voiceover artist specializing in e-learning, corporate narration, and commercial projects. A movie buff, she also co-hosts the movie-focused podcast Put Your Books Down with Natalie Sanderson. Music creditThis episode features the songs “Honeysuckle Rose” and “P.S. I Love You,” from the album The Night We Called It a Day, by Angela Bingham and David Halliday (2016), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. This season features the songs “Forged in Rhythm” and “Callous & Kind” by Keenan McKenzie & The Riffers (2017), used by Six Count with permission from the artist. How to listenYou can find Six Count on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or any other listening app! The series also airs on taintradio.org, an online jazz radio station based in North Carolina, on Sundays at 6:00 p.m. and Fridays at 8:00 p.m. EST. Support the showIf you’d like to support Six Count, you can make a gift on DonorBox or Venmo @thexarawilde. Follow Six Count on Instagram at @sixcountpodcast and Xara Wilde on Facebook and Instagram @thexarawilde.

06-08
38:34

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