

The Jazz Real Book
Jay Sweet
In this podcast, Jazz History professor, biographer, musician, and popular podcaster Jay Sweet will help guide you through the tunes included in the Jazz Real Book. For decades, this book (often called "The Jazz Bible") has been a resource for jazz musicians looking to learn jazz standards and repertoire. This podcast will discuss essential recordings and details associated with the songs in the Jazz Real Book, the musicians who created the material, and the recordings that inspire jazz musicians and fans worldwide.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Feb 1, 2026 • 19min
Equipoise and Stanley Cowell
“Equipoise”and Stanley Cowell (109) Standards Rating 3, Difficulty Rating 7 “Equipoise” is a perfect title for Stanley Cowell’s composition—everything about the piece feels balanced, even while the harmony and rhythm are in constant motion. Set in F♯ minor with a medium, quasi-Latin groove, the tune blends space, syncopation, and subtle tension. Its unusual 28-bar AAB form and shifting root movement—often by half and whole steps—create a floating sense of tonal gravity. Stanley Cowell’s touch as a pianist mirrors the composition’s design: lyrical, poised, and harmonically rich. A pianist with deep classical training and broad jazz experience, he had a gift for making complex structures feel natural and expressive. “Equipoise” captures that artistry—intellect and feeling held in perfect balance.Stanley Cowell Max Roach Jazz Real Book Playlist Vol. 2

Jan 28, 2026 • 1h 37min
Soulive Interview (Alan and Neal Evans)
Soulive is a genre-blurring powerhouse that sits at the crossroads of funk, soul, jazz, and hip-hop, built around the deep musical chemistry of guitarist Eric Krasno, drummer Alan Evans, and organist Neal Evans. Formed in the late 1990s, the band made a bold statement early on by embracing the classic organ-trio format—Hammond B-3, guitar, and drums—while pushing it into thoroughly modern territory. What sets Soulive apart is their ability to be both technically sophisticated and irresistibly accessible. They can stretch a tune into extended improvisation without losing the pocket, and they treat rhythm as the main event rather than a backdrop. Over the years, the band has collaborated widely, working with artists like Chaka Khan, John Scofield and Dave Matthews, further cementing their reputation as musical connectors.Equally at home on festival stages and in intimate clubs, Soulive has earned a loyal following by staying true to one core idea: the groove comes first. Everything else is built on top of that. Check out their new single Baby Jupiter

Jan 25, 2026 • 16min
Equinox and Bassist Steve Davis
They explore the brooding minor-blues tune Equinox, its slow 12-bar modal groove, and the unusual chord twist that gives it a ritualistic feel. The conversation highlights the original quartet’s sound and a home-recorded demonstration of the tune. A focused segment chronicles bassist Steve Davis’s role, background, and lasting influence on Coltrane’s modal direction.

Jan 21, 2026 • 1h 1min
Will Downing Interview
Will Downing’s career spans more than three decades, a journey built on talent, versatility, and a deep connection to love and relationships. From his Brooklyn roots, he first made waves as a background vocalist, lending his smooth baritone to hits by Mariah Carey, Billy Joel, Jennifer Holliday, and others. In 1988, he went solo, finding early success overseas before establishing himself as a fixture on the U.S. R&B charts. Albums like A Dream Fulfilled, After Tonight, and Classique brought critical acclaim and commercial success, while All the Man You Need earned a Grammy nomination, cementing his status as one of R&B’s most enduring voices. Along the way, Downing explored jazz standards, photography, and radio, showcasing his creative range and commitment to nurturing emerging talent. Tracks from his 2025 EP Still in Love continue that tradition, exploring relationships with honesty and elegance. On Valentine’s Day, Downing brings that lifetime of experience to the stage at Union County Performing Arts Center in Rahway, New Jersey, offering fans an evening of romance, rich vocals, and timeless storytelling.

Jan 18, 2026 • 21min
Epistrophy and Kenny Clarke
Epistrophy and Kenny Clarke (107)Standards Rating 7, Difficulty 7“Epistrophy” isn’t just a Monk tune—it’s a historical artifact, a blueprint for modern jazz, and a flex by two geniuses who knew exactly what they were doing. Co-written by Thelonious Monk and Kenny Clarke, the piece feels like organized chaos: jagged melody, looping phrases, and harmonies that never quite settle, which is precisely the point. Monk’s chords grind and shimmer, while the melody keeps circling back on itself like a nervous thought you can’t shake. Clarke’s role is just as crucial. As the architect of bebop drumming, he doesn’t simply keep time—he provokes, comments, and destabilizes. On his 1946 recording, his ride cymbal floats while bombs drop unpredictably, pushing the band forward. “Epistrophy” became Monk’s go-to closer for a reason: it sounds like a mic drop. Rating it a 7 for difficulty feels fair—deceptively simple on paper, brutally unforgiving in execution.Kenny ClarkeThelonious Monk Jazz Real Book Playlist -Vol. 2

Jan 14, 2026 • 39min
Jordan Williams Interview
Jordan Williams is a rising American jazz pianist whose playing balances deep tradition with a clear, contemporary voice. Raised in Philadelphia, he began playing piano by ear at a young age, developing strong melodic instincts before entering formal classical and jazz training. By his early teens he was already performing publicly, showing a natural command of swing, harmony, and groove.Williams later studied jazz while remaining active as a performer, earning a reputation for lyrical phrasing, rhythmic clarity, and an intuitive sense of interaction. His style draws from the lineage of pianists such as Herbie Hancock and Mulgrew Miller, combining soulful touch with modern harmonic language.His debut album Playing by Ear, released on Red Records, marks his emergence as a bandleader. The recording features Jeff “Tain” Watts on drums, Nat Reeves on bass, and Wallace Roney Jr. on trumpet, highlighting Williams’ compositional voice and collaborative approach.

Jan 11, 2026 • 16min
El Gaucho and Joe Chambers
“El Gaucho” and Joe Chambers (106) Standards Rating: 5: Difficulty Rating: 6 “El Gaucho” exemplifies Wayne Shorter’s distinctive compositional voice through its unconventional 18-bar form, Latin-inflected groove, and harmonically ambiguous structure. Rather than relying on standard ii–V progressions, the tune drifts through whole- and half-step root movement, creating a floating tonal center. Shorter heightens expression by sustaining upper extensions—9ths, ♭9ths, and 11ths—over shifting harmonies, producing controlled melodic tension. Joe Chambers plays a crucial role in shaping the piece’s character. His drumming establishes a supple Latin pulse that feels grounded yet elastic, allowing the soloists rhythmic freedom. Chambers’ touch is subtle and conversational, emphasizing color over volume. A master accompanist and composer, he blends rhythmic sophistication with deep musical sensitivity, reinforcing his status as one of modern jazz’s most influential drummers.Wayne Shorter Joe Chambers Jazz Real Book Playlist Vol. 2

Jan 4, 2026 • 21min
Eighty One and Ron Carter
“Eighty-One” and Ron Carter (105) Standards Rating 5: Difficulty Rating : 6“Eighty-One” is a 24-bar tune with a 12-bar A section and a 12-bar bridge, written in F and first recorded on E.S.P. (1965). Though credited in The Real Book to Miles Davis/Ron Carter, the piece is widely regarded as Carter’s, and it reflects his expanding role in the Second Great Quintet. Carter’s concept—shaped by intervallic thinking, pedal points, and harmonic ambiguity—defines the tune’s character. The chart’s instruction to play even eighth notes places it firmly in a post-bop context, prioritizing articulation and interaction over swing’s triplet lilt.The melody is spare and rhythmically precise, using quarter-note triplets, unexpected pickups, and extended rests to make space a compositional element. Harmonically, the near-constant use of 9sus4 voicings—avoiding the third—creates an open, floating soundscape.. “Eighty-One” stands as a concise statement of Carter’s modern jazz language: economical, flexible, and deeply interactive.Ron Carter Bill FrisellJazz Real Book Playlist Vol. 2

Jan 2, 2026 • 1h 2min
Sullivan Fortner Interview
Sullivan Fortner’s 2025 stands as a defining chapter in an already remarkable career. The year brought a Grammy nomination for Southern Nights, a live-in-the-moment trio recording born from a spontaneous Village Vanguard engagement, captured in a single four-hour studio session. Alongside it came high-profile collaborations with Theo Croker, Kurt Elling, and Lauren Henderson, each revealing different facets of Fortner’s musical identity—from free-form duo exploration to intimate vocal-piano dialogue. The year’s biggest surprise was his selection as the first-ever jazz recipient of the Larry J. Bell Jazz Artist Award, a historic honor accompanied by a $300,000 prize. Grounded in gospel roots, shaped at NOCA and Oberlin, and refined through formative years with Roy Hargrove, Fortner embodies a lineage-driven approach that values listening, intuition, and trust. Despite the accolades, his perspective remains modest and forward-looking, focused on the music itself—and on what comes next.

Dec 28, 2025 • 17min
Ecclusiastics and Charles Mingus
“Ecclusiastics” and Charles Mingus (104) Standards Rating 2, Difficulty Rating 7 “Ecclusiastics” offers a concentrated portrait of Charles Mingus’s artistic personality: volatile, spiritual, blues-soaked, and uncompromising. Drawing its title from the Jewish wisdom text attributed to Ben Sira, the piece reflects Mingus’s lifelong engagement with moral struggle, Black church traditions, and personal prophecy. Marked at an extremely slow ♩ = 52, the tune demands patience and emotional control, qualities Mingus valued deeply in his musicians. Its unusual ABC form, shifting meters, and harmonically restless language mirror his resistance to standardized jazz structures. On Oh Yeah (1962), Mingus performs on piano and vocalizes freely, calling out and humming like a preacher mid-sermon. This blurring of composition, improvisation, and embodied expression exemplifies his belief that jazz should confront, instruct, and testify. “Ecclusiastics” ultimately functions as both composition and sermon—an extension of Mingus’s artistic will.Charles Mingus Mingus Big Band Spotify Playlist #2


