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Any good starter compilations of Thelonious Monk? (on CD)


Rooster_Ties

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On 24.9.2018 at 4:08 PM, JSngry said:

I wonder how many people of our ages actually started hearing Monk with the BN sides vs how many came to them with at least a little awareness of what was to follow.

I really can't recall details, but the first Monk I bought was the Blue Note twofer with that brown wrapping paper look. But the first Monk that got me hooked was the track Jackie-Ing from the Five By Monk By Five LP - it was played on local radio when that LP was reissued in Germany. That was years before the first buy.

Edited by mikeweil
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yeah, Jackie-ing got me big time too. It was on the Riverside Greatest Hits album I cited earlier. Other than the Mulligan track, that was one strong LP for a 15 year old! Rollins, Trane, Ernie Henry, Max, The best cut of the Town Hall set...talk about whetting an appetite, that one did it!

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Reading through this thread got me nostalgic... Thelonious Monk and Sonny Rollins was my intro. I was probably twenty at the time. I was cobbling a fledgling collection together with loose change and white rice.  The years that followed became an insatiable gorge on both discographies.

 

 

I worked in a record store as a second job seven or eight summers ago when my daughter was first born. Dude brings in a crate of records, most of which were the usual shit, but I'll be damned if an original pressing of Monk Rollins isn't packed right there in the middle. I told the store owner not to pass on the collection. Store owner bought the crate for a few bucks and gave me the LP as a gift. It was a generous and special gift to me and remains a prized possession. That record store still has a Nessa LP sleeve framed on its wall. 

In many ways, that record remains quintessential Monk. Unbalanced in almost every sense, but as sturdy as a pile of ballast stones at the bottom of a harbor.  

 

 

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On 9/24/2018 at 10:08 AM, JSngry said:

I wonder how many people of our ages actually started hearing Monk with the BN sides vs how many came to them with at least a little awareness of what was to follow.

It was the BN sides for me but I came to jazz relatively late, around 2001 or so. I can't remember what came next, maybe Brilliant Corners.  I remember The Complete Prestige recordings being a big eye opener.  

Edited by Brad
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5 hours ago, Scott Dolan said:

He and Rollins somehow brought out the best in each other. 

Truthfully, and if I have to choose, I prefer Monk with Rollins. It's bouncier!

Aside from "natural tendencies", I think the simpatico is also very much a function of time and place. Sonny was in a kind of raggedy place in his life and Monk was without his cabaret card/work. From all accounts, they hung out a lot, not "rehearsing", but just playing. The records are delightful snapshots, but I have a feeling that what happened there happened plenty of other times in Monk's crib. I'd wager a good amount of lunch money that there was some duet action going on that may exist only in the ether of once-made sounds. If there was a way to capture and retrieve that....

 

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