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  2. I guess of course it depends on how we define a 'clear' influence(!), but for a vibraphonist (though this sells him way short - multi-instrumentalist, electronic musician, producer etc.) who knows this music on a really deep level - the amazing Corey Mwamba.
  3. Thanks. That angularity is what I am thinking of specifically.
  4. Any recommendations for stores in Columbus (OH), Cincinnati, Louisville, or Indianapolis?? (Cleveland too.) Now that we’re in Pittsburgh (and have a car for the first time in 15 years), we’re driving to see my dad in St. Louis every 6 or 7 weeks (and driving thru STL back to KC 2-3x per year to see my wife’s folks). Specifically for jazz CD’s? I almost never buy vinyl, for the most part — though I do have a turntable. This is all territory we NEVER got to when we lived in KC, or when we were in DC either — so that vast expanse of cities between Pittsburgh and Chicago/STL is nearly all entirely new to us (which is kind of exciting for us, in terms of having so many new cities to explore — especially cities that date back well into the 19th century).
  5. Teddy Charles, perhaps? Maybe (especially) that first Prestige Jazz Quartet album with Mal, which happens to include as version of “Friday the 13th” — though even without that Monk tune, I’d still be tempted to suggest that album. And there’s an angularity to a number of albums with Charles on vibes. Can’t say that’s enough to qualify as a ‘Monk’ influence specifically — but I’d say they occupy a similar space, at least in my brain.
  6. When Karl Berger plays with Don Cherry, he uses a lot of dissonance, so he sounds a bit like Monk, but his choice of notes is quite different from Monk’s. https://youtu.be/Z62wpWSraTU?si=ns11I4Ga1KQea0Bt
  7. Today
  8. The shops I go for jazz used vinyl : millerecords, welcome to the jungle. The are also radiation records, three shops across the town, but not been there since long time. Don’t expect bargain. If you like digging for bargains you may try Porta Portese Market on Sunday mornings : the biggest flea market in town, but beware of pickpockets.
  9. I don't really hear much Monk in Jackson. You're right that he played with him but I just don't hear much of it having rubbed off. Hutcherson perhaps a little? But it seems like more of an expansive modal thing to me.
  10. On to Bud Powell “A Portrait of Thelonious Monk” Columbia/HDTT cdr
  11. FWIW, then, and "for eternal reference" , here is the download of that pic. (Click to enlarge and, if desired, click again with RH mouse button to open in new tab and enlarge yet a bit further.)
  12. I saw them both Coltrane with Dolphy, Tyner, Workman and Elvin on November 17th 1961, 2 weeks after they recorded Live at the VV This was at the Walthamstow Granada, London on a bill with a Dizzy Gillespie group featuring Leo Wright and Lalo Schifrin. I was 14 at the time. Miles twice, in '67 with the second quintet and '69 with Shorter, Corea, Holland and De Johnette
  13. Milt Jackson is the only vibes player I can think of who recorded with Monk. That's the session that gave us "Misterioso", IIRC. I would say the version of Bobby Hutcherson who's so integral to Grachan Moncur III's EVOLUTION and Dolphy's OUT TO LUNCH is engaging with Monk's concepts.
  14. You can read them at this eBay listing. Click on the back cover image and then use the magnifying glass to enlarge and our mouse to scroll across the page. https://www.ebay.com/itm/317704969080?_skw=stuff+smith+memorial+prestige&itmmeta=01KS7N2HQ3W4H1N4YRFCWDDY3C&hash=item49f8b11b78:g:wdYAAeSwsTBpUFBD&itmprp=enc%3AAQALAAABAGfYFPkwiKCW4ZNSs2u11xBgnmESe5swbVEEYqhi2iKSERR17Ez0DnrF5HyVtlu7jH4amMftLgdpUEQUb%2Bne%2BcKP5PWqFiH%2B9EJ0WRIq7ap7Ig5te3okPeyhCPY18eyyDRtx2ujyWBTXbbLl9M%2FKr2RoSzYjYI%2FnE%2BfYz70t4rDzSAmvKDFE1y3vLdCzSOHlO1N5QaHRt%2BwivJIJj80UBFUiQw5jbySuszNd%2F6gjkaf2U5i5poF2MyzqYwkyJKBMBkPYd6TAn9RUIH7Gqd5uCa8g461FGRPhxB%2BOSRdzYwyGgXv2NFbMyha9%2BqJUW%2Fm5MLaZuIstg4n1qbxC83uw3Hw%3D|tkp%3ABk9SR-CbivXJZw
  15. Miles Davis “Seven Steps to Heaven” Sony Blu-Spec CD2
  16. Remo Rau Quartet – An Evening At The Cafe Africana I have never heard of this one. Is it a good record? Great band.
  17. The vibraphone has a close relationship as an instrument to the piano, but I can't off the top of my head think of any vibes players who showed a clear relationship to Thelonious Monk's music. Perhaps the high sustained sound of a vibraphone makes Monk's rhythmic concepts less satisfying. Any ideas? Idle curiosity, really.
  18. Shifting gears. . . now Bill Evans "You're Going to Hear From Me" Milestone cd Recorded at the Jazzhus Montmartre (Store Regnegade), Copenhagen, Denmark; November 24, 1969. Bill with Eddie Gomez and Marty Morell
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