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With the thousands of recordings in your collection, is there one you


Hardbopjazz

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You know, come to think of it -- earlier I said I really didn't have any?? Well, that's not entirely true. I have a few particular classical works that qualify...

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William Levi Dawson - Negro Folk Symphony (1934/52)

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Samuel Barber - Symphony No. 2 (1944/47), which Barber ordered destroyed in 1964 (and thus it because the much less known of his only two symphonies). Thankfully it was reconstructed in the 80's from a set of orchestral parts that were found in a warehouse (and previously thought to have been destroyed).

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Brahms - Piano Quartet #1, orchestrated by Schoenberg thusly (1861, orch 1937)

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Kurt Atterberg - Piano Concerto (1935), a HUGE neo-romantic work that gets a little bitonal in places, every bit as much an "integrated" symphony/piano-concerto "hybrid" as Brahms' first piano concerto.

Edited by Rooster_Ties
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Artie Shaw 1939-1940 Classics 1087

This CD has:

'I didn't know what time it was' with Helen Forrest,

'Frenesi'

'Gloomy Sunday', 'My Fantasy', 'Don't Fall Asleep' with Pauline Byrne, a singer I like very much. She seems to not have recorded more. I can't find any more info about her.

'Dreaming out loud' and 'Now we know' with Martha Tilton.

And Artie Shaw plays clarinet.

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Oliver

Armstrong 5s and 7s

Duke in the late '20s

Jelly in Chicago

Henderson w/Red and Hawk

Bird Koko session

Miles/Monk/Bags session

Monk Brilliant Corners

Newk - Worktime

Diz/Rollins/Stitt sessions

Ornette, Trane and Dolphy messed all this up for a while but I still pull out favorites.

The rest expands on the above and become really personal as they guided my life.

I did not mention specific issues 'cause my early versions do not equate to current packages in some cases.

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First 10 that popped into my head.

Red Garland - All Kinds Of Weather

Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis & Johnny Griffin - The Tenor Scene

Ben Webster - Meets The Oscar Peterson Trio

Kenny Burrell - The Tender Gender

Duke Pearson - Wahoo

Andrew Hill - Grass Roots

Lee Morgan - Charisma

Miles Davis - Someday My Prince Will Come

Coleman Hawkins - Hollywood Stampede

John Coltrane - Crescent

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There is one recording that will always hold a special place for me. Cab Calloway's Some of These Days. I was in college and had gotten into "art rock" (which turned out to be neither). A radio station played Cab and my brain exploded. I wrote down the name of the track and ran straight to the record store. The song had everything- energy, skill, surprises, contrasts. I played it over and over and it eventually led to the entire world of music opening up to me. To he'll with prog rock when you can listen to jazz!

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Miles - both Milestones and Nefertiti (Nefertiti wins in frequency by an edge, though...)

Burrell - Blue Lights 1 and 2

Paul Desmond - Easy Living

Trane - Coltrane's Sound and Crescent

Andrew Hill - Judgment!

Bobby Hutcherson - Components

Depeche Mode - Violator

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Miles - both Milestones and Nefertiti (Nefertiti wins in frequency by an edge, though...)

Burrell - Blue Lights 1 and 2

Paul Desmond - Easy Living

Trane - Coltrane's Sound and Crescent

Andrew Hill - Judgment!

Bobby Hutcherson - Components

Depeche Mode - Violator

jmjk... I don't think I've read anything from you in a while!

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Miles - both Milestones and Nefertiti (Nefertiti wins in frequency by an edge, though...)

Burrell - Blue Lights 1 and 2

Paul Desmond - Easy Living

Trane - Coltrane's Sound and Crescent

Andrew Hill - Judgment!

Bobby Hutcherson - Components

Depeche Mode - Violator

jmjk... I don't think I've read anything from you in a while!

Yeah. I don't have as much time to read and participate in the O Forums as I used to. Two toddlers will do that to ya!

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I am with those whose collections have grown so much that I don't listen to any one recording all that often.

But from my earlier days of collecting (30+ years ago, gee, more like 35 +) here are some that sounded good to me then and still sound good to me now.

John Coltrane - Blue Train

Hank Mobley - Roll Call

Miles Davis - Miles Ahead

Miles Davis - Miles Smiles

Modern Jazz Quartet - Last Concert

Charlie Parker/Dizzy Gillespie - Bird and Diz

Thelonious Monk - Monk's Music

Thad Jones - Mel Lewis - Presenting the Jazz Orchestra

Woody Herman - Woody '63 (now part of the Mosaic Select)

Duke Ellington - The Great Paris Concert

McCoy Tyner - Enlightenment

Edited by John Tapscott
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In season, out of season, no matter what mood I'm in, when I get discouraged, when I want to express happiness, get over sorrow, start to feel good about life again, get over tragedy, celebrate good times, there is one recording throughout my life that I have returned to again, and again, and again, and again,....

Marvin Gaye: What's Going On.

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I return to these often:

King Oliver

Louis Armstrong Hot 5s and 7s

Henry Red Allen and his New York Orchestra

Chocolate Dandies

Fletcher Henderson Orchestra 20s

Duke Ellington late 20s

Bennie Moten

Clarence Williams' small groups

Richard M. Jones

Jelly Roll Morton

Jabbo Smith

Missourians

Bix

Django

Miff Mole and His Molers

among the singers, Bessie Smith, Clara Smith, Ma Rainey, and Ethel Waters

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Albums? Like another poster I come back to "First Time: The Count Meets the Duke" a lot, also "Oscar Peterson Trio Plus One" with Clark Terry, Gillespie's "Birks' Works: Complete Big Band Recordings" on Verve, Basie's "Lil' Ol' Groovemaker" also on Verve, Sinatra's "Only the Lonely" and "Jazz for Swingin' Lovers," Pepper's "Winter Moon," Bill Evans/Toots Thielemans, "Affinity," and Ellington's "New Orleans Suite."

Invidivual tracks? Teagarden/Armstrong, "St. James Infirmary," Rosolino's "Star Dust" Basie's "Easin' It" and "Moten Swing" from the Roulette years, Miles's "Round Midnight," Coltrane and Hartman's "Lush Life."

And a lot of others!

gregmo

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In season, out of season, no matter what mood I'm in, when I get discouraged, when I want to express happiness, get over sorrow, start to feel good about life again, get over tragedy, celebrate good times, there is one recording throughout my life that I have returned to again, and again, and again, and again,....

Marvin Gaye: What's Going On.

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Great choice! I love this record and need to re-visit it more.

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I haven't been on this forum in a while, but this is a fun topic.

I typically like to play my own eclectic mixes, but here are a few lesser known cd's I'm always playing:

Gene Harris Quartet - At Ste Chapelle Winery

Akiko Tsuruga - Sweet and Funky (very listenable B3 stuff with Eric Johnson doing some very nice guitar work)

Jimmy Rivers and the Cherokees - Brisbane Bop (Rivers was an amazing western swing guitarist)

Doug Sahm and the Last Real Texas Blues Band (A live recording, very tasty covers of r&b classics)

Greg Piccolo - Homage

Edited by zootsi
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