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  2. Did the doctors do an X-Ray or even better, an MRI? If not, then they are simply moving you on and not diagnosing your problem. The co-worker I mentioned had had back problems prior and they usually resolved with some prescription anti-inflammatory meds and thought this was the same. Example 2 on why you should be careful... Now this is not what I am saying you are seeing, but my wife had a serious neck issue 15 years back. It was severe. We ended up in the ER one Sunday night. They took an X-ray and sent her home with a heavy dose of Naproxin. A few days later, we went to our ortho doc to get her checked out. He took blood and agreed with the course of treatment i.e. muscle relaxers. A day later, she woke me at 4 AM saying she needed to go to the emergency room again. They wanted to send her home. I told them she needed an MRI of her neck. They said that they couldn't do that in the ER,only if she was admitted. I said, "Admit her". They said nope. They took her for more X-Rays, including one of her lungs (she was coughing a lot). They came in and said, "We have to admit her, she has a slight case of pneumonia". I said, "Great, now order an MRI of her neck". They said only the doctor on her case could do that. The next morning when I came in (at around 4 AM), they were all bustling around her, prepping her for an ambulance ride to Boston for immediate surgery. The doctor came up to me and had the nerve to say, "It's a good thing we did an MRI. She has an abscess". Two major surgeries later, my wife's still here. It was touch and go for a bit, but because we advocated hard for her treatment, she's still here. You are your own best health advocate. Don't let them use the insurance BS to cut costs of your care. At this point, my wife has probably had about 20 MRIs. If the first or even second doc had done one, all of the rest might've been avoided and my wife would still be able to see her knees. BTW - the infectious disease doc thinks it was all due to an abscess tooth my wife had a few months earlier. Life is tricky.
  3. Today
  4. Surprising venue in more or less the middle of nowhere. Tomeka Reid & Marty Ehrlich Duo | Improvisation | Denver NY | Roxbury Arts Group Inc
  5. I am pretty sure these have always been muscular and not structural. A pull/muscle spasm. The doctors I've consulted have always prescribed the muscle relaxants/pain meds and neither seem to work. But they also don't say "this isn't muscular".
  6. Randy Weston “Portraits of Thelonious Monk–Well You Needn’t” Verve cd Recorded June 3, 1989 Studio Ferber Paris France Randy Weston piano Jamil Nasser bass Idris Muhammad drums, percussion Eric Asante percussion
  7. When I pulled out the Sidney Bechet Mosaic to play this one was right alongside so I relocated it to the upstairs as well. This was only available on LP, and it’s a great set in many ways. “Complete Mosaic Johnny Hodges Sessions 1951-1955” LP 1
  8. The Electrola issue WAS a European issue of the American Victor recording, but not "quick". Not nearly, as this case shows. In fact, it was even later than you and I would have assumed. I would have thought the much later "Cubano Be Cubano Bop" pressing (of an original recorded in late 1947, 22 months after "Night In Tunisia") hit the market relatively quickly in 1948. But not so. Out of curiosity, I checked Discogs for what (numerically) must have been the next Electrola release (EG 7780) after the two Gillespies, and to my amazement this was a German cover version of "Blue Tango" by Leroy Anderson that was a chart topper in the USA in early 1952! So the two Dizzy Gillespie 78s cannot have been released too long before that period. (The Electrola releases AFTER EG 7780 according to Discogs featured unimportant German popular orchestra music that is not likely to figure in any discography and therefore cannot be dated accurately.) In general, even though the delays of EG 7778 and EG 7779 may be extreme, it is far from so that releases outside the USA always followed the U.S. original release fairly quickly or with fairly regular delays during that period. It depended on the licensing labels, their "response times" or marketing considerations (cashing in on overseas hits etc.). And yes, the name of the tune had changed by 1945. Since the other surviving early recordings of that tune (various live recordings) that predate the Sarah Vaughn recording of 1944 all were released for the first time MUCH later than 1944/45 it is obvious they were assigned the commonly used title of that tune in hindsight for those later releases. However, referring to V-Disc 275 of September 1944, the actual V-Disc pressed in 1944 displays the "Night In Tunisia" title: https://www.discogs.com/release/7805779-Tony-Pastor-And-His-Orchestra-Boyd-Raeburn-And-His-Orchestra-Schicklegrüber-A-Night-In-Tunisia So my conclusion would be that this title had come into common use by that time - in 1944. (BTW, just for info, that "Schicklegruber" title refers to the maiden name of the mother of none other than Adolf Hitler! A name often used in mockery when referring to that "person".)
  9. Warm morning, a bit stuffy. Looking forward to a walk with Tobi soon. Starting off with Chet Baker, “Young Chet,” compilation cd on Pacific Jazz cd.
  10. April 5 Jack Walrath - 1946 - 80 today!
  11. RIP. A wonderful guy.
  12. The hard cover one was such a revelation. I must find mine to pull it out and gaze at it 🤩
  13. Side By Side is great. So is Back To Back!!
  14. Yesterday
  15. 1. A very fine Smoke Gets in Your Eyes with tenor (I think) and guitar. My guesses are all over the place. Lovano and Lage? Not Lovano and Lage. 2. Oh, that's got to be Walt Dickerson. From the Prestige era I think (flip side of For My Queen), if not then it's the Richard Davis duets. Walt brought out the best in every bassist he played with. It is the Walt Dickerson album To My Queen. 3. Something from the Joe Pass Virtuoso albums on Pablo? No there's a bass there. I'll switch to the Jim Hall Ron Carter duets. Not Jim Hall & Ron Carter. 4. Sounds like a drummer led band, I'm leaning toward Max Roach. Not a drummer led band, previously identified. 5. Angel Eyes on bass clarinet. David Murray? Not Angel Eyes, bass clarinet or David Murray. 6. Who Can I Turn to? Maybe Cory Weeds? Not Who Can I Turn To?, nor is it Cory Weeds. 7. Jaunty, with a latin touch. I'll try Zoot Sims Not Zoot Sims. 8. I was about to guess Tatum and Defranco, but this is live. Is it Ken Peplowski? Not Ken Peplowski. Not Ken Peplowski, though he likely played this oldie. 9. Nice marimba tune. Also live. Later Bobby Hutcherson? Not Bobby Hutcherson. 10. Bebop standard, but not Yardbird Suite. Or is it? Tuba! Wild guess - Wynton Marsalis? It is a bebop standard, no Wynton Marsalis. 11. Nice piano trio. Thought about Hampton Hawes, but decided Fred Hersch might be a better guess Not Fred Hersch. 12. Sprightly theme and meaty solos from trumpet and tenor. Later Woody Shaw? Not Woody Shaw. 13. Guitar duet on My Old Flame. I'll guess one of them is Herb Ellis Not My Old Flame nor is Herb Ellis present. 14. That sounds like later Archie Shepp playing inside. Horace Parlan on piano? Shepp and Parlan were previously identified. 15. I'll use a second Bobby Hutcherson guess hoping one is right. Yes, it is Bobby Hutcherson. 16. Dexter Gordon? Not Dexter Gordon. Correct.
  16. Muscle relaxers don't typically work for facet joint/nerve pinches. Be very careful here. I had a coworker who woke up like you and he pushed through for a day. The next day, he had to call an ambulance and be rushed to the hospital for immediate back surgery. He had ruptured a disc and came close to doing some permanent damage doing it the way he did.
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