'At the height of the Cold War, the United States was also fighting a culture war. To counter Soviet propaganda, the U.S. State Department launched a public relations campaign called the Jazz Ambassadors program, sending
Louis Armstrong,
Duke Ellington, and
Dave Brubeck and other leading jazz musicians on tours around the world.
Randy Weston was one of them. Those world tours cemented Weston's commitment to bridging cultures through music. Whether it's Highlife from West Africa or Sufi music from Morocco, the traditional music of Africa informed Weston's jazz for some 60 years. It's a journey that began in segregated Brooklyn in the 1920s, where his parents taught him that he was an American-born African.' --
All Things Considered
Published on September 02, 2018 17:46