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So, What Are You Listening To NOW?


JSngry

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10 hours ago, HutchFan said:

Listening to this for the second time today:

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Miles Davis - Live at The Fillmore East (March 7, 1970): It's About That Time (Sony Legacy, 2 CDs)

This masterpiece is the subject of today's blog post on PLAYING FAVORITES.

 

The thing that most makes me smile about this gig is a bit trivial (or not, maybe!) - the gig was Wayne's last with the band, and it was on a Saturday. With that in mind,, note that Wayne takes great pains to, at one point, quote "Never On Sunday" to some great length. Language!

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Spurred on by the inclusion of "Sister Sadie" in Dan Gould's current BFT. This is a really good band, and a pretty damn good record, with Pauls Gonsalves & Quinichette aboard (although not at the same time). But the real treat for me is the section work here, the blends and colors that was once everywhere and today seems to be nowhere. I've heard the same thing about the "French Orchestra sound", but can't speak to that.

This, I think I can speak to. Technology changes, society changes playing changes to meet the technological and societal changes, and so it goes, colors change, concepts of sound change...nothing's "right" or "wrong", just different.  And me myself, this era/style of section playing is really, really satisfying.

How many people playing in big bands today have actual, extended experience playing in any kind of a dance band, never mind an unamplified one?

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2 hours ago, erwbol said:

A lot of them are very good. I have almost the entire Coltrane portion of the series, except the ones I didn't need like The Coltrane Quartet Plays (APO Hybrid SACD). The mini-LPs are laminated and so not easily damaged (unlike the Alice Coltrane mini-LPs from 2004). This is the best Ascension CD I have heard. The Kevin Reeves from 2000 had too much highs, the Originals from 2008 also by Reeves was even worse with added compression.

Noted. If these come round again I’ll be waiting. In the meantime, this:  

 

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1 minute ago, David Ayers said:

Noted. If these come round again I’ll be waiting.

The masters have been used for subsequent (budget) reissues in jewel cases, some up until recently while others having been replaced with for instance the US Originals masters of the 2011 SHM-CD masters. I have a spare copy of this Ascension in jewel case in near mint condition as well (UCCI-9124). Are you perhaps interested for a friendly price? 

I also have Live at the Village Vanguard Again! (UCCI-9144).

Also a spare copy of the incredible SHM-CD from 2011 of Meditations without the distortion in the bass of the all domestic releases. And SHM-CD 2011 of Transition.

Friendly price means free except the price of shipping, which is not budget from the Netherlands.

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7 hours ago, erwbol said:

Though the two sets from March 6, 1970 have been recorded in much better sound without the added distortion. Strange Sony chose to only release March 7, 1970. The soundboard bootleg from the other night is an essential companion.

Thanks erwbol.  I'll track that down. :tup 

I will say that I intentionally avoided including bootlegs in my survey -- even if they're widely available. Just wanted to stick with official releases.

 

1 hour ago, JSngry said:

The thing that most makes me smile about this gig is a bit trivial (or not, maybe!) - the gig was Wayne's last with the band, and it was on a Saturday. With that in mind,, note that Wayne takes great pains to, at one point, quote "Never On Sunday" to some great length. Language!

Wayne's fantastic wit.  No way that's trivial.  

 

1 hour ago, Justin V said:

When my daughter wakes up and asks for some Stitt, I have no problem obliging her.

Justin, you have an extremely HIP daughter!  ;) 

 

1 hour ago, John Tapscott said:

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Still strange that Geri Allen's gone. ... Way too soon. 

 

Edited by HutchFan
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7 minutes ago, HutchFan said:

Wayne's fantastic wit.  No way that's trivial.  

Right. And the notion of music as an actual language, a means of literal (but non-verbal) communication, no way that's trivial either! Notes are just the building blocks of a very complex and comprehensive language.

Verbal language is actually too often crude in comparison.

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10 minutes ago, JSngry said:

Verbal language is actually too often crude in comparison.

Absolutely. 

Makes me think of this famous quote: "Human speech is like a cracked kettle on which we tap crude rhythms for bears to dance to, while we long to make music that will move the stars to pity."
-- Flaubert

 

NP:

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32 minutes ago, HutchFan said:

Thanks erwbol.  I'll track that down. :tup 

I will say that I intentionally avoided including bootlegs in my survey -- even if they're widely available. Just wanted to stick with official releases.

It's no longer on Dimeadozen, but I still have the FLAC files from 2006 on my hard drive. I can upload to dropbox or similar for whomever is interested.

----------------

Miles Davis Sextet
March 6, 1970
Fillmore East
New York City

Miles Davis - trumpet
Wayne Shorter - tenor & soprano saxophones
Chick Corea - electric piano
Dave Holland - acoustic & electric basses
Jack DeJohnette - drums

Airto Moreira - percussion

Disc One: First Show
1. (band warming up) / Directions 8:29
2.  Miles Runs the Voodoo Down 13:08
3.  I Fall in Love Too Easily/Sanctuary 5:56
4. It's About That Time/The Theme (appl) 14:39

Disc Two: Second Show
1. (band warming up) / Directions 9:58
2.  Miles Runs the Voodoo Down 10:16
3.  Miles Runs the Voodoo Down (concl) 4:32
4. It's About That Time/The Theme (appl) 16:19
(I Fall in Love Too Easily and Sanctuary are omitted)

Artwork available here:
http://www.miles-trees.org/pasttrees/index.cfm?fuseaction=cor_av&artID=973
More information at Peter Losin's "Miles Ahead":
http://www.plosin.com/milesAhead/Sessions.aspx?s=700306

I originally received this several rears ago via the Miles-Trees.org "Fillmore" tree.  Thanks to all involved for your efforts. This should not be confused with the following night's concert (March 7), which Columbia officially released as "It's About That Time" in 2001. When the Fillmore Tree was originally distributed, the general consensus was that this March 6 recording sounded much better than the official March 7 release.


Lineage:
Audio CD-R -> xACT CD extract util -> .WAV files -> xACT flac level 8 -> you

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8 minutes ago, Captain Howdy said:

How do you say "Where is the men's room?" in music?

 

1 minute ago, JSngry said:

Why would you need to?

Exactly.

You're thinking in prose, Captain.  Think POETRY.  Wooing a lover (or at least getting laid). Finding God (or at least some sort of meaning).  Sorting out the order of things.  Expressing who you are, booty shaking-wise or otherwise.  BIG things, man!  That's what the language of music is for.

 

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13 minutes ago, JSngry said:

OTOH, I used to think that Joanne Brackeen always sounded/played like she needed to pee, like, right NOW.

But I'd also think that she was pro enough to have already scoped out where the bathroom was in any place she played. Pros just do that.

Jim, you're confusing musical urgency with bladder urgency.

Not all urgency is the same. ;) 

 

Edited by HutchFan
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12 minutes ago, Captain Howdy said:

Because if a language has no fixed meaning that people can agree upon, then it's useless.

We need, at best, a dictionary and a government, to make that even kinda work for verbal/written languages on any scale, so I'm not particularly impressed by their efficacy.

16 minutes ago, Captain Howdy said:

What if I'm finding god on my sax but that fat homely bitch in the front row thinks I'm wooing her?

Then you'd best allow for the possibility that you are about to find god where you least expect it (which is usually how it works anyway).

9 minutes ago, HutchFan said:

Jim, you're confusing musical urgency with bladder urgency.

Not all urgency is the same. ;) 

 

Nor are all bathrooms. The REAL pros know which ones have locks on the stalls.

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