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  2. My review should be on line at hothousejazz.com in the next day or two, unless it ends up in the digital paid subscriber edition.
  3. No shipping notice from UPS or Mosaic's expediter.
  4. 43 years ago, at The Widder Bar in Zurich, The Oliver Jackson Trio featuring Percy France performed "Liza" in honor of Swiss jazz researcher/writer/promoter Johnny Simmen's wife, Liza (this was the only known time the group played the tune). They are pictured here on January 29, 1983, with Leonard Gaskin and Oliver Jackson. Simmen was friends with many American jazz stars and also worked for Swiss Air, including programming their Jazz channel on international flights.
  5. January 29 Remembering Jeanne Lee - 1939 (- 2000) I often saw her as a citizen of Göttingen with Gunter Hampel and their children Cavana and Ruomi.
  6. Today
  7. It's really good. Not in my top 5, but really good. “Miles in India” Times Square 2 cd set, disc 2 A very interesting release that I am having a good time re-visiting.
  8. COLD. But again, no snow overnight, happy about that Starting off with a new arrival, Anaïs Reno “Lovesome Thing - Anais Reno Sings Ellington & Strayhorn” Harbinger cd Nice backing and I love this material so much. 632×632 123 KB Bass – Russell Hall Drums – Kyle Poole Liner Notes – Will Friedwald Piano, Leader – Emmet Cohen Saxophone – Tivon Pennicott Violin – Juliet Kurtzman Recorded August 11-12, 2020 at Samuri Hotel Recording Studio, New York City.
  9. Digging up this thread again now, another 12 years later: Among the records very recently bought from the estate of a deceased collector I also took home another copy of the Esquire 4-CD box set (ESQ100-4), but alas it also has only 22 tracks on CD 4. So this slipup seems to have been a fairly widespread problem. Since Sidewinder was not totally sure in 2013 which tunes exactly had been omitted (see his post of Dec. 1, 2013 above), I am wondering now: Did anyone ever do a closer comparison of the contents of this CD with other releases of each of the tunes supposed to be on this CD to find out which tunes EXACTLY were omitted and which is which now among the Tito Burns and Norman Burns tracks on the 22-track version? At any rate, its still a great set and a backup copy can do no harm.
  10. I didn't know much about him until I got that box. And it quickly became one of my top Mosaic boxes. On FIRE! Great album! A Top 5 BN, for sure!
  11. The Highwomen: Highwoman
  12. Steven, The inventory at the back of the book mentions that the source for some of the titles is the Library of Congress. Were you able to consult actual lead sheets at the Library, or did you consult copyright.gov?
  13. I have quite a backlog of new stuff and am just getting around to this one. Listened to the first disk yesterday. I like it more than I expected to. Pretty swinging stuff. Bob Zurke! Sound is good.
  14. It's good - I like the first Lookout Farm album even more. It goes for three figures on CD, but is available as an Amazon download.
  15. The cover of the actual Tone Poet is much darker than the image I copied from the Blue Note site. Disappointing that they couldn't recreate the original which really popped. Regardless, a classic session.
  16. I love it too. I purchased it in 1978 when I first saw Max Roach live. If I remember right, this was the only Max Roach LP they had in the record store then. It was a pleasant surprise for me to have Clifford Jordan on it, he is very strong, as is Eddie Khan on bass. But then, it was on another label, it was the French "America" Label, which had mostly Mingus records from the sixties. Roach when I saw him first, performed with Cecil Bridgewater, Billy Harper and Reggie Workman.
  17. I heard Sue´s Changes live, but it was one year later, and I think Adams and Pullen were replaced by Ricky Ford and first Danny Mixon and I think I had heard Sue´s Changes with Dannie Mixon on piano. During his solo spot he got into a medium tempo stride and the audience loved it. I saw Mingus one year later but I think he had skipped Sue´s Changes from the set list, they played his new opus "Cumbia&Jazz Fusion"..... as far as I can remember after almost 50 years.
  18. I first heard him on Liebman´s Drum Ode, which was a favourite of mine then when it came out and still is.
  19. RIP. I'd heard he was seriously ill, so it's inevitable, but it's still sad. While Richie Beirach is famous for his ECM recordings, I'd also recommend checking out his lesser-known albums produced in Japan. On the Trio label, albums like Sunday Song (a duo with Frank Tusa), Omerta (a duo with Dave Liebman), and Maracaibo Cornpone (where he appears as a sideman for George Otsuka) showcase a powerful side of Beirach quite different from his more decadent ECM music, and I really enjoy them.
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