2025

Remembering James Moody

...and celebrating his centennial birthday.

Moody with Dizzy Gillespie.

Today (Mar. 26, 2025) we celebrate the centennial birthday of James Moody. Moody, a prolific saxophonist and flutist with a career spanning eight decades, passed on here in San Diego in late 2010. He led an extraordinary life, and would've turned 100 years old today.

Read full article at: Remembering James Moody

Up Jumped Spring!

Blog Name:Home Page News

Blog Author:San Diego's Jazz 88.3

Posted on:March 18, 2025

The new season of Jazz Live begins April 8th. Get your tickets today!

The 2025 Winter Pledge Drive

Blog Name:Home Page News

Blog Author:San Diego's Jazz 88.3

Posted on:March 2, 2025

KSDS/Jazz 88.3's 2025 Winter Membership Drive has concluded! We welcomed many new and renewing members and the music will continue to thrive because of it. If you would like to donate towards the campaign you can do so by clicking here. Here is the Top Ten Artist Poll we conducted for the drive.

Here's the Top Ten:

  1. Duke Ellington
  2. Wes Montgomery
  3. Gilbert Castellanos
  4. Ray Charles
  5. Gerry Mulligan
  6. Art Pepper
  7. Oscar Peterson
  8. Freddie Hubbard
  9. Nat King Cole
  10. Clifford Brown

Read full article at: The 2025 Winter Pledge Drive

Flying High at The Center for the Arts Escondido - March 25th

Blog Name:Home Page News

Blog Author:San Diego's Jazz 88.3

Posted on:February 13, 2025

On March 21st it’s a tribute to the original ladies of jazz in “Flying High: Big Band Canaries who soared” at California Center for the Arts Escondido. Jazz canaries – Ella, Billie, Dinah, and even Rosemary Clooney and Doris Day – started off in the great big bands and went on to their own even greater solo careers. Now Champian Fulton shares the stage with Count Basie vocalist Carmen Bradford and the Hot Sardines Elizabeth Bougerol to swing the memorable tunes of the jazz canaries. Tickets and information are found here.

American History at the Intersection of Jazz and Civil Rights

A new episode of FREEDOM NOW! JAZZ AND CIVIL RIGHTS airs live every weekday at noon throughout Black History Month, and is available for on-demand listening at jazz88.org.

Davis famously informed his musicians they’d be playing the gig for free just minutes before downbeat. What followed was one of the most celebrated live jazz performances of all time.

Black History Month 2025 continues with week 2 of “Freedom Now! Jazz and the Fight for Civil Rights.” 

  • Long before the 1619 Project, there was Ellington’s Black, Brown, and Beige, a sprawling jazz symphony meant to communicate a comprehensive picture of African American history through music. 

  • Long before Wynton Marsalis became the first jazz musician to win a Pulitzer, Norman Granz treated jazz as high art, imploring audiences to listen with the same reverence they might reserve for Bach or Brahms.

How Does a Jazz Radio Station Pick This Year's Super Bowl Winner?

We ask YOU! Which is the better jazz city, Philadelphia or Kansas City?

Black History Month 2025 Freedom Now! Programming Schedule

Tune in every weekday this Black History Month from noon to 1 p.m. Pacific.

*Note: All programs to air from noon to 1 p.m. Pacific. If you’re unable to catch a program live, each day’s program will be made available for on-demand listening the next day here. 

Week 1

February 3

Black and Blue: Louis Armstrong and Civil Rights

Hosted by Will Friedwald with special guest Ricky Riccardi

 

February 4

Breaking Barriers: Benny Goodman, Teddy Wilson and Lionel Hampton

Hosted by Loren Schoenberg

 

February 5

Billie Holiday's Strange Fruit: Protest in Song

Hosted by Will Friedwald

KSDS Broadcast Signal Is Down

Blog Name:Home Page News

Blog Author:San Diego's Jazz 88.3

Posted on:January 20, 2025

KSDS apologizes about our broadcast signal and stream being down. We are currently working on the issue and hope to have it resolved as soon as possible. Thank you all for reaching out to let us know. It is always reassuring to hear from so many people. We are grateful for your understanding and patience. Tuesday, 12:32pm

On MLK Day 2025, a Civil Rights Era Flashback

Eulogizing the four young girls killed in the Sept. 1963 bombing of the 16th St. Baptist Church in Birmingham, MLK decried not just racism but a soulless worldview.

The 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala. Photo by Ted Tucker, Greater Birmingham Convention & Visitors Bureau.

By Matt Silver

On this MLK Day, we honor not just Dr. King’s words and actions but those of the broader struggle for civil rights. And we do so, in our small part, by pairing the stories of that era with the artistic response they incited.

Undoubtedly, the tragedies of that period shaped artistic expression as much as the triumphs, if not more so. The 1963 bombing of the 16th St. Baptist Church in Birmingham, Ala. is no exception. We invite you to read a bit about the tragedy below and engage with the following musical statements, handpicked by our on-air hosts for this MLK Day.

John Coltrane’s “Alabama”

Charles Mingus’s Town Hall Concerts

Ramsey Lewis’s “Wade in the Water”

George Adams’s “Going Home”

Babs Gonzales’s “We Ain’t Got Integration”

Max Roach’s “Let Thy People Go"

The King of Love is Dead: Nina Simone's Unforgettable Live Performance Just Days after King's Assassination

Simone’s ’Nuff Said! Offers ‘Some Kind of Something’ on This and Every MLK Day

Nina Simone took the stage at Wetsbury Music Fair on Long Island in April 1968, three days after Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was assassinated.

By Matt Silver

Over the last several years, America has had to reckon with issues of race, class, civil rights, opportunity, and dignity in a way it hasn’t since Nina Simone first sang protest songs.

Perhaps as a byproduct of the moment, there’s been a resurgence of both popular and critical interest in Simone, the High Priestess of Soul and a civil rights icon. That’s why, on this Martin Luther King, Jr. Day, I’m compelled to revisit Nina Simone’s ’Nuff Said!