The bold and ferocious harmonic imagination of John Coltrane is laid bare in this concert, captured at the Comblain-La-Tour Festival in Belgium, 1965. Alongside his famed quartet, he delivers a transcendent performance that is marked by the total physicality of the music – four sets of hands moving with restless vigour as vapour literally rises from their shoulders and into the night sky.
Musical performers put on a show in a pawn shop to convince a man to give them the money they need t...
In this entertaining Puppetoon animated short film, a young boy, Jasper, gets trapped inside a pawns...
Jake Blues, just released from prison, puts his old band back together to save the Catholic home whe...
Born on a sharecropping plantation in Northern Florida, Ray Charles went blind at seven. Inspired by...
Set to a classic Duke Ellington recording "Daybreak Express", this is a five-minute short of the soo...
Bizet's Carmen gets a modern adaptation. Seducting, provocating, sensual. All the ingredients for a ...
Two musical stars from the golden age of Hollywood get a second chance at rekindling their love in t...
Young Cab Calloway's mother is concerned, because Cab spends his days listening to the radio, preten...
Retracing the longstanding career of avant-garde drummer Sunny Murray, one of the most influential f...
Common sense says you can't make a living in America playing avant-garde improvisational jazz. But K...
A documentary that explores the challenges that a life in music can bring.
In the Swedish city of Lethe, people from different walks of life take part in a series of short, de...
Ella Fitzgerald - Live At The North Sea Jazz Festival
"Comping (an abbreviation of accompanying) is a term used in jazz music to describe the chords, rhyt...
Miles Davis performing live at Berkshire Music Center, Tanglewood Massachusetts on August 18, 1970. ...
The daughter of a preacher becomes the centerpiece for a conservative political campaign but finds h...
In this rotoscope animation, Tom Waits sings about "The One That Got Away."