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Ken Dryden

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Everything posted by Ken Dryden

  1. I interviewed Zev Feldman via Zoom yesterday and it was a real blast talking to The Jazz Detective. I plan to air it on my show, which broadcasts April 14th, though I will gladly post an archive.org link, as few people have time to sit by a computer for two hours on a pretty Sunday afternoon. The RSD Art Tatum, Yusef Lateef and Chet Baker & Jack Sheldon RSD releases are incredible, still to be heard are the Sonny Rollins and Sun Ra. I may work in some of the previous RSD releases on Jazz Detective, Resonance and Elemental Music, depending on whether I do one show or two.
  2. This arrived today and I've heard the first two discs. The sound is much better than what I heard on the preview track, although the label is still having issues proofreading songwriter credits.
  3. Eric Alexander: Just One Of Those Things (GMLP) Eddie Higgins: When Your Lover Has Gone Smoke Gets In Your Eyes (GMLP) Christmas Songs II (GMLP) Richard Wyands: Lady Of The Lavender Mist (MLP) Please add: Barney Wilen: Inside Nitty Gritty (MLP) Passione (MLP) Be Aware that some titles were licensed and reissued under diferent titles by Sunnyside, while I think Venus Jazz also licensed a few from Sunnyside. David Hazeltine had a great quip about Tetsuo Hara's penchant for nude covers on his Venus Jazz CDs. He met Hara with his wife and asked him if he planned to use her as a model in the future? Charles McPherson brought it up in an interview I did years ago and he was disgusted with the cover of his only Venus Jazz CD. Hara defends it as part of his artistic concept.
  4. I'll take this one for sure: The Three Tenors - Harry Allen, Ken Peplowski & Scott Hamilton Like The Brightest Star (GMLP)
  5. They're both bad. A perfect example of a rotten remake, The Ladykillers, starring Tom Hanks. It was so over the top and vulgar that it just wasn't funny at all. The subtleness of the original British film with Alec Guinness, Herbert Lom and Peter Sellers was far superior. My wife walked out of the remake after 10-15 minutes due to the overflow of obscenities and by the time I had sat through the entire film I wished I had as well. Shaft didn't exactly have a diverse cast, but I remember enjoying the film when I saw it in college. It was as entertaining as a typical film starring a white guy as a detective. There was a terrible movie that I remember being released in the summer of 1977 when I was in grad school with nothing to do, a group of us made the mistake of going to see a supposed comedy, Between the Lines, labeled by one critic as "the American Graffiti of the 1970s." It was so lame that I started making remarks out loud from the audience and I was getting more laughs than the film. Finally, we all left after about 15, 20 minutes. We should have known it was going to be terrible, a group came out from the previous showing and everyone was scowling and one woman uttered, "God, what a waste!" The Blade Runner sequel was absolutely dreadful, far too long with a story line that made no sense, the villain's character seemed to be particularly badly written. Another example is the most recent CBS Star Trek series, I didn't even make it through the pilot, it was so bad. Glad that I missed the blowhard failure Stacy Abrams guesting as President of Earth in a later episode. Who is to blame, casting directors, producers, studios script writers?
  6. At this time in my life, I feel that far too much of "culture" emphasizes politicalization more than creativity. Movies often seem to focus on diversity for diversity's sake, instead of telling a good story, what we get are boring, often insipid remakes of old films or endless half-assed sequels. The same can be said of various sitcoms, dramas and talk shows on television. I don't care what race or sex a character is, it's up to writers to come up with an entertaining plot and script that will develop the characters. Likewise in many genres of music, there have been a lot of highly promoted posers that have had little to offer. I felt rock was steadily going downhill back in the 1970s, which is why i narrowed my listening to groups already in my collection. Yet in jazz there are always young, up and coming musicians of either sex and various nationalities who produce compelling music worth investigating.
  7. A Cannoball Adderley set could always be narrowed to a specific time period of so many years. For some reason, it seems like Mosaic was frequently offering sales on sets sourced from Capitol, other than the Nat King Cole.
  8. My favorite was a musician asking Lester Young the last time they had played together, with Lester replying, "Tonight."
  9. I wonder if a Capitol boxed set of Cannonball Adderley would have any appeal? The CDs are pretty much out of print.
  10. This seems to be trending with a number of UK jazz labels, including Acrobat and Sounds of Yesteryear. I don't like paying premium prices for CDRs and unlabeled ones at that. This is definitely an unsavory business practice that will cross these labels off of my shopping list.
  11. My wife’s voice professor was accompanied by Ponty’s wife and was invited to stay in their home while she was in town. She got to meet the cat, but not Jean-Luc, who was on tour.
  12. I thought his name would come up in this BFT but it isn’t Dick Hyman.
  13. I was thinking about this commercial when I saw this thread, even before opening it! That gives away my age bracket!
  14. I avoid televised award shows, especially the Oscars and the Grammys. I rarely go to movies and the artists featured performing or being honored on the Grammy shows are of absolutely no interest to me.
  15. Found in a used bookstore yesterda and I'm just getting started reading it.
  16. Martin Bormann's remains were identified several decades ago and I seriously doubt that Hitler could have kept his mouth shut if he had made it to Argentina. The Soviet Union found the partially cremated remains of Hilter and Braun and took them back to their homeland. There is no telling how much stolen wealth made it out of Germany, I could see some of it turning up, much like the confiscated paintings have appeared when they are researched for provenance before being put up for aucition.
  17. The song was identified earlier in the thread. Hardly close to praise-and-worship, which in churches around here means boring, repetitious modern praise songs with banal melodies played by rock bands.That kind of music will get me out of a church pronto!
  18. Dave Brubeck told me once that he loved hearing Erroll Garner. Much like Oscar Peterson, he gets a bad rap. One guy I just couldn't get into was Jacques Loussier playing jazz treatments of Bach, his recordings felt mechanical to me and I have ong since disposed of his Telarc Jazz CDs.
  19. An Englishman, a Frenchman, a Spaniard, and a Dutchman are all on a Zoom call with their company's CEO. The CEO asks, “Can you see me?” They respond, “Yes,” “Oui,” “Si,” “Ja.”
  20. Next up are trigger warnings for the Three Stooges shorts due to the excessive violence. I remember having to edit an interview with a European jazz artist that I aired on my radio show because his answer to my query about how he discovered a vocalist unfamiliar to me who was on his new CD: "I was sitting on the toilet and I heard her on the radio in my daughter's bedroom." I guess that I should of aired it without mentioning it to the PD and station manager.
  21. The obvious solution to rejected performances is that the contract should specify that all of them are to be returned to the artist. Both Gerry Mulligan and Marian McPartland spoke to me about their digust with rejected material being issued years after they had recorded for a record label. As for the Tone Poets, I don't care, if the series is a moneymaker, they obviously should keep re-releasing the LPs. I've felt the same way about record store day LPs, I would rather have a CD, though they aren't always offered immediately in that format. There was a delay before the Sonny Clark RSD LP set was issued on CD and there was extra material.
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