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  2. Nels Cline “Consentrik Quartet” Blue Note cd Decided to try out the most recent Nels Cline release. Enjoying it! Certainly is well-recorded. Nels Cline on guitar, German jazz saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock, American drummer Tom Rainey, and double-bassist Chris Lightcap.
  3. Today
  4. an original pressing that sounds amazing. What a great soundscape. Definitely my favorite of Shepps big band projects. I think quite some of the Afrocentric Freejazz (think of Hannibal for instance) of this decade were spoiled by bad vocalists but the girls (and guy) on this album could sing 👍
  5. Lovely raw and energetic live performance.
  6. Ran across it in a used record store.
  7. Had a long detour into Virginia Woolf, rereading Orlando and Mrs. Dalloway, and I am now back into Russo's Empire Falls, which I expect to wrap up next week. Next books on the horizon are McCullers's The Heart is a Lonely Hunter, Nabokov's Ada, or Ardor, and Maxwell's So Long, See You Tomorrow. Oh, and Jane Austen's Persuasion.
  8. https://www.legacy.com/us/obituaries/oklahoman/name/hugh-walker-obituary?id=27591505
  9. Not live but part of the current London Jazz Festival, a double bill today at the Barbican: Big Ben, Ben Webster in Europe (1967) and Cecil Taylor a Paris (1968).
  10. Ts-find, I have to say that the 'Authentic Barock Sound' is highly present on the Astree label. I would say this is a recommended label for stuff like this ...
  11. I hope this is still happening, was just thinking of Hugh Walker after a huge Big John listening rehearsal. Perfect drummer, think this dude made total sense in this genre.
  12. November 16 Diana Krall - 1964
  13. Already posted, but this record is blowing my mind...wow!!!
  14. Whoever is conducting this research got to talk to Marvin Cabell, GMIII, wowwww, alright, alright. Like, maybe I'll like it. No chance talking to Hugh Walker? That dude was badass, right up there with Eddie Gladden and Idris Mohamed!
  15. It's a pretty wonderful thesis though, based on the author's own interviews with Patton, Harold Alexander, Marvin Cabell, Leroy Williams, Grachan Moncur III and others and with loads of detail on things that are barely documented otherwise... There's always room for more research...
  16. 👍 Found it in the dollar bin. Couldn't believe it! One of the most wicked jazz records of the 70's.
  17. Joachim Kühn - Famous Melodies (Label Bleu)
  18. WOWW!! About Pharoah, he never hid behind Trane, he was always Pharoah, love that about him!
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