Parts of shows have turned up on cds/DVDs. There's some good stuff on the Coleman Hawkins 100th Anniversary disc as well as on a Billie Holiday collection. (I'm not 100% sure of all this. I'll check my collection when I get home.)
I hope we're all linking to Amazon through the board.
Some one gave me a Kindle and much to my surprise I like it-- especially when I'm traveling. I just ordered the Lieber-Stoller autobiography.
Wow, it pays to check this board every day. I thought there was no mail delivery today. I read these posts, rushed out to my mail box and sure enough there was my package from CD Baby!
Sometimes recordings were announced but never took place. Verve actually took photos for the cover of a Bill Evans, Gil Evans session that never happened.
I have vague memories (as many of my memories are) of 2 stories:
1) When Phil Woods was married to Chan Parker he played a gig using one of Bird's altos. Mingus came to the club and harassed him about it
(took it form him? stood in front of the bandstand staring at him? yelled at him?-- I forget).
2) Jimmy Blanton's bass was left to a cousin of his who later played with Ellington.
Both the stories could be apocryphal or some sort of acid flashbacks.
I just checked the large format Francis Wolf book and there's no photograph of Washington there, nor is there one in the Blue Note Album Cover Art book.
There's a few recordings I'd like to have on cd that were originally released on Mainstream. Who owns the rights and have they released anything recently?
The liner notes to the first Lp on which he appeared (a Cohn-Sims record) doesn't even mention that he sings. Just discusses him as a new find on piano. I've seen him several times over the decades (including once when he opened for Van Morrison) and quite enjoyed him but I do think The Back Country Suite period is his best as a composer. (I'm as tired of hearing "Your Mind is on Vacation " on the radio as I am of hearing Krall sing "Peel Me a Grape". )
I have my sound issues with that box. Jack the Bear is unlistenable. The first few discs in the box have a whistling sound near the end of each number-- apparently caused by noise-reduction. I'm sort of reluctant to mention this latter problem because I didn't notice it until someone on line pointed it out. Now of course it jumps out at me. Hope I'm not doing it to you. ( I didn't need anyone to bring the Jack the Bear sound issues to my attention.)
I just asked about this on on the Duke-lym list serve. It's very possible of course that the theater was just playing the Lp over their wound system while they sold popcorn during the intermission. And the theater may be have created the intermission themselves. I don't think the film was released with one.