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Larry Kart

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Everything posted by Larry Kart

  1. Even Mildred Bailey? She was a real jazz singer and a great one.
  2. I think the former but don't know for sure. As you can see, the personnel of the band I heard differs a bit (bass and drums) from the band in the film and on the record.
  3. Another great gig was in a loft above the Village Vanguard in 1964 by, in effect, the New York Eye and Ear Control band -- Don Cherry, Roswell Rudd, John Tchcai, Albert Ayler, Louis Worrell, and Milford Graves. This was the only time I heard Ayler in person, and I was astonished. His sound seemed come up through the floor and exit through the hairs on my head.
  4. What I recall about Rosenthal's book is that he didn't pay much attention to at least one key figure IMO -- maybe Hank Mobley or Jackie McLean.
  5. He was Daiv Rosenthal a classmate at the University of Chicago, son of literary critic M.L. Rosenthal, and later on author of a book on Hard Bop. Don't recall when he stopped beating his head on the bar, but he must have. Years later a friend of mine mentioned that Daiv was immensely popular among the girls in our co-ed dorm. I found this hard to believe because Daiv was literally obnoxious -- he seldom bathed and smelled pretty bad. My friend explained that Daiv, having been trained in adolescence by the family maid in giving advanced cuninlingus, went about dispensing orgasms to all the freshman girls in the dorm who had not yet had one -- word of mouth, so to speak. Daiv later died of a drug overdose, doing research for his book perhaps. IIRC it was not a very good book. He was Daiv Rosenthal a classmate at the University of Chicago, son of literary critic M.L. Rosenthal, and later on author of a book on Hard Bop. Don't recall when he stopped beating his head on the bar, but he must have. Years later a friend of mine mentioned that Daiv was immensely popular among the girls in our co-ed dorm. I found this hard to believe because Daiv was literally obnoxious -- not a nice guy, he seldom bathed and smelled pretty bad. My friend explained that Daiv, having been trained in adolescence by the family maid in giving advanced cuninlingus, went about dispensing orgasms to all the freshman girls in the dorm who had not yet had one -- word of mouth, so to speak. Daiv later died of a drug overdose, doing research for his book perhaps. IIRC it was not a very good book. BTW, "Mr. PC.' was Trane's weapon of choice at that point. The typical version went on for 35 or 40 minutes -- McCoy would drop out after a while and it would be just Trane and Elvin until the end.
  6. Coltrane at Mckie's Disc Jockey Show Lounge, circa 1963, Seated at the bar, my face was about three feet from Elvin's bass drum, sound waves bounced off my chest. At one point on "Mr. P.C" I hear a thudding sound. The guy to my right was beating his head on the bar. Seemed to make sense.
  7. Of all the Mosaic sets I've bought, this one may have surprised me the most. LOTS of fine music here.
  8. I like Stillman, and Versace and Juris provide heady, empathetic support. Juris was quite a loss. III
  9. The cause, I'll bet, is almost certainly that over time there are fewer projects left that would appeal to many customers. Take a look back at a chronological list of Mosaic sets and see how many of them were virtual slam dunks for one reason or another.
  10. Dmitry -- re: Mosaic's" fatal mistake," I could be wrong but I don't think that "everybody else" (on other labels) who "got into" vinyl at that time did so because that thought it would become a "new" hot medium;I think it just happened that way, and rather faddishly so I believe. Again, who predicted it?
  11. Evolving the audience as the music itself evolves sound lovely. But I still haven't heard one word about how to do that from any of you; and I, as a not wholly unplugged-in guy, sure don't know down which alley I should be sniffing. Names please, or even genres? A Monday Minchuro Mosaic? I am fairly sure though that this "evolving" music is about as stable as a greased eel. And you're telling me, if I'm Mosaic, that I should bet my supposedly wobbly enterprise and probably diminishing bankroll on somebody's spider sense!!!
  12. You can argue that their target audience is now too narrow, but what about then? You haven't said (unless I've missed it) how you'd widen their audience now, but I'd be willing to bet that if it had been widened in that way or those ways twenty years ago, Mosaic would now be long out of existence. Mosaic was designed to fit a particular perceived and then already existing niche or niches, and it did so very well for a long time. If those niches are no longer viable, so be it, but so far I've seen no substitutes being put forward. "Wider" in itself strikes me as virtually meaningless. P.S. Speaking of niches and the sound quality of the first disc of the recent Tristano box, anyone who is enough of a Tristano admirer to buy that set almost certainly is in one of the tightest niches there is in jazz and would be willing to put up with those sound issues in return for what can be gleaned from those recordings nonetheless. ('m one of those people.) It's not like we weren't warned upfront.
  13. I find Vanessa to be a more attractive figure than her sister Virginia (Woolf). i
  14. B Bought it because my copy of DMC somehow disappeared. SITN is a worthy follow up. BTW who was Larry Wilcox? Thornton is SO hip.
  15. Dan pretty much speaks for me on this "issue." Why is this Mosaic's responsibility?
  16. Yes, I don't listen to the Nlonet albums that often. A Lee recording I can particularly recommend is "Rich Lee" (Steeplechase) which pairs him with tenor saxophonist Rich Perry. Perry is very heady player, not unlike Joe Henderson, and he and Lee stimulate each other.
  17. "The Modern Art of Jazz" -- never heard the other one. "The Modern Art of Jazz" has a great bass-drum team: Oscar Pettiford and and Kenny Clarke. Mat's' own playing is charming and hip, and the tracks with Art Farmer and Gigi Gryce are excellent.
  18. Because I admire Coker's playing, I hope that he farmed out that "essential discography" list to some idiot instead of doing it himself.
  19. I prize their recording of the Rachmaninov 2nd Symphony conducted by Edward Downes.
  20. Brit trumpeter Jimmy Deuchar's "Pub Crawling" (recorded in Britain in '56-'57, released over here on Contemporary) with Tubby Hayes, drummer Phil Seaman, altoist Derek Humble, trombonist Ken Wray, et al. Deuchar is out of Fats Navarro but individual, the tasty originals (all named after Brit beers and ales) have a Dameron flavor. Just a lovely relaxed date. I'm soft on it because I've liked it all these years and nobody else seems to know about it.
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