Entertainment
5 min read
Celebrating the 1926 Jazz Centennials: A Golden Generation
NPR
January 22, 2026•3 hours ago

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A program celebrates the centennials of eight jazz legends born in 1926. These musicians, including Miles Davis and John Coltrane, significantly shaped jazz music across various styles like bebop and modal jazz. The broadcast features their iconic recordings and personal reflections, highlighting their transformative impact on the genre.
In 1926, as the Harlem Renaissance surged and the music was transforming American culture, a generation of musicians who would lead jazz into its next golden age was born.
This special episode of Jazz Night in America celebrates the centennials of eight legends born that year: Miles Davis, Tony Bennett, Melba Liston, Randy Weston, Ray Brown, Lou Donaldson, Jimmy Heath and John Coltrane. Through iconic recordings, rare stories and personal reflections, host Christian McBride traces how each of these artists reshaped the music, from bebop and cool jazz to soul jazz, modal explorations and spiritual transcendence.
Set List:
Miles Davis, "Miles Runs The Voodoo Down" 45 rpm single edit (Miles Davis) from Bitches Brew (Legacy Edition)
Melba Liston, "Little Niles" (Randy Weston, arr. Melba Liston) from Little Niles by Randy Weston
Randy Weston, "Ganawa (Blue Moses)" (Randy Weston) from Blue Moses
Ray Brown and Duke Ellington, "Pitter Panther Patter" (Duke Ellington) from This One's for Blanton
Tony Bennett and Lady Gaga, "Anything Goes" (Cole Porter) from Cheek to Cheek
Lou Donaldson, "Blues Walk" (Lou Donaldson) from the album Blues Walk
Jimmy Heath, "Big 'P'" (Jimmy Heath) from Really Big!
John Coltrane, "Dear Lord" (John Coltrane) from Transition
Credits:
Writer and Producers: Sarah Geledi with Simon Rentner; Host: Christian McBride; Mastering: Ron Scalzo; Executive producer: Steven A. Williams; Executive Producer at NPR Music: Suraya Mohamed; Executive Director at NPR Music: Sonali Mehta
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