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đ đ One of my favorite West Coast vinyls
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What does that title mean?
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Pianist Enoch Smith Jr. Returns to Recording After an 8-Year Absence with "The Book of Enoch Vol. 1," Set for November 7 Release On Misfitme Music Recording Features 7 Hymns, Both Traditional & More Contemporary, Given Smith's Own Mainstream Jazz Treatments & Played by His Trio â September 15ï»ż, 2025 Enoch Smith Jr. gives the gospel music repertoire a fresh infusion of blues and swing with the heartfelt, hard-driving The Book of Enoch Vol. 1, to be released November 7 on his own Misfitme Music. Played by his trio of bassist Kai Gibson and drummer David Hardy, the albumâSmithâs sixth, and his first in eight yearsâobviously draws deeply on the gospel tradition but presents its seven tunes in the context of soulful, infectious straightahead jazz. In other words, it might not be the sound one first associates with a collection of hymns old and new. Yet Smith, who is director of music and worship at the Allentown Presbyterian Church (APC) in New Jersey, had done many of these rearrangements and reimaginings for its jazz vespers. Everyone who heard it encouraged him to share it with the world. âEven the patrons at the services were, like, âAre you going to do anything with this? This is some really great music.â So thatâs what led to recording it,â Smith says. âYou know, these are great songs. These songs feel good. These songs make me feel good.â How could they not, the way Smith plays them? His take on Andrae Crouchâs âSoon and Very Soonâ is loaded to the brim with hope and good cheer, while âGracefullyââthe pianistâs own adaptation of âAmazing Graceââis indeed full of grace but also a firm resolve. Meanwhile, the traditional hymn âJoshua Fought the Battle of Jerichoâ balances lively, forward-moving swing with a lithe, almost flamenco-like Afro-Latin flourish. Enoch Smith Jr. (center) with bassist Kai Gibson & drummer David Hardy. There is also a more introspective side to The Book of Enoch. Itâs on display in the quiet splendor of âHoly City,â and in the subtle, serene, yet confident readings of Kenneth Morrisâs âChrist Is Allâ and Ralph Carmichaelâs âA Quiet Place.â Even as the closing âMitchâs Movesâ radiates celebration from its bouncy rhythm, it also suggests a more personal, thoughtful trajectory in its melodic and improvisational movement. Smith, Gibson, and Hardy have long played these songs at APCâs jazz vespers services, and when they took the material into the studio they approached it in a similar fashion: played as one full set, all the way through. It captures their skill and spontaneity, but also the joy and assurance that each musician (and all of them, together) bring to the performance. âTo be honest, I hadnât really missed recording,â Smith says of his long absence from the studio. âIâve never loved the scene itselfâŠ. I've just always loved creating music. Iâm hoping to just add something to this beautiful landscape.â Enoch Smith Jr. was born November 24, 1978, in Rochester, New York, and was already musical by the time he was a toddler, singing in the childrenâs choir at church. It set the course for his childhood, which would include trumpet in middle school, concert choir in high school, and drums in the churchâbefore he began teaching himself piano at 14 and also became the churchâs substitute pianist. As he exhibited and developed these talents, Smith found encouragement to continue music as a serious pursuit. He thus matriculated at Bostonâs Berklee College of Music; Smith had learned to play by ear, and now he needed to learn sight reading and theory just to keep up with his own classmates. (It left him feeling like a misfit, hence the name he would one day give to his record label, Misfitme Music). He continued to play in the church, keeping in touch with his musical roots and inspiration, as he also gained new inspiration from his studies at Berklee. Settling after college in Brooklyn, NY, Smith recorded his first album, Church Boy, in 2010, with the next two, Misfits and Misfits II, following in 2011 and 2015, and To Houston, With Love in 2018. Each recording experimented with the possibilities of pop, rock, and R&B, while also anchoring themselves at the natural intersections of gospel music and jazz. 2016âs The Quest: Live at APC hit that intersection where it lives: at Allentown Presbyterian Church, where Smith serves as director of music and worship. Smith spent the next eight years focusing on a life in Allentown, raising a family, teaching Brazilian jiu-jitsu to underprivileged kids in the community, and leading Jazz Vespers at APC. The overwhelming positive reception he received for putting his own twist on the hymns he played each Sunday led him back to the studio to make The Book of Enoch, Vol. 1. Photography: Mark Krajnak ï»ż â "The Book of Enoch Vol. 1" EPK ï»ż Enoch Smith Jr. Website â
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Episode 46 https://artpepper.bandcamp.com/track/straight-life-episode-forty-six-2
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Todd Bishop Group âLittle Played Little BirdâThe Music of Ornette Colemanâ I really like this one, but no surprise as I have liked another Todd Bishop disc a lot. And Weber Iago is on piano here, always a good thing.
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Kathleen Edwards: Billionaire Margo Price: Hard Headed Woman
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I canât listen and post well now that Memphis is here in the home. He insists on sharing my listening seat with me when I can listen, and there is really not enough room in this chair for us both to sit comfortably, and itâs impossible to incorporate a laptop which he sees only as an impediment to attention he deserves. I managed to squeeze in a few listens. . . Jose James â1978â Nude Blonde cd Miles Davis âESPâ Sony Blu-Spec CD2 Kenny Burrell âPrimeâLive at the Downtown Roomâ High Note cd
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What Classical Music Are You Listening To?
Peter Friedman replied to StarThrower's topic in Classical Discussion
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Joe Pass Quartet 5CD Mint $75 shipped Paypal US only Tal Farlow Verve 7CD Mint $100 shipped Paypal US only Gerald Wilson Pacific Jazz 5CD Mint $75 shipped Paypal US only Gerry Mulligan Verve Concert Band Sessions 4CD $50 shipped Paypal US only Or take them all for $250
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2025 MLB Season Starting NOW!!!
Dan Gould replied to JSngry's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
The Sox have achieved a sparkling winning percentage of 0.333 since Roman Anthony went down. Maintain that extraordinary achievement and its four more wins, or 86 total. Now you may say 6 against the A;s and Rays but then its last series against the Jays and Tigers ... 4 wins may be pushing it and it will hardly matter. 86 won't get anyone into October. No wonder Cora is saying that nothing is assured and they have to start winning games. -
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Nice scores! I bought the Brookmeyer Select set a few months ago, and I've really enjoyed it.
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I've been plugging holes in my Mosaic Select collection over the past month or so, and have scored several at really good prices (about half of these were in the $15-20 range). #9 - Bob Brookmeyer #10 - Bud Shank & Bob Cooper #15 - Art Pepper #19 - Pacific Jazz Piano Trios (feat. Russ Freeman, Richard Twardzik, Jimmy Rowles, Clare Fischer) #21 - Gerry Mulligan #27 - Al Cohn, Joe Newman, and Freddie Green #29 - Onzy Matthews #31 - Woody Herman #34 - Denny Zeitlin The Zeitlin I was familiar with after having had a burned CD-R of it for many years (it's fantastic!). The rest of them are new to me. I haven't gotten past playing the Art Pepper and Pacific Jazz Piano Trios sets, as I've really been stuck on them the past few days. The Pacific Jazz Piano Trios set, in particular, is one that I can't believe I've gone so long without. It's an absolute gem of a set!
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I would assume that anything folded into the UME jazz bucket could conceivably get a Tone Poet release. PJ/World Pacific was part of Liberty/Transamerica from the late 1960s, which also owned Blue Note, and of course BN bought some of the Transition masters as well. Solid State was a Liberty/Transamerica imprint, too. So it all makes good sense to me.
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Frank Sinatra - In The Wee Small Hours LP (Tone Poet Vinyl Edition)
street singer replied to dougcrates's topic in Re-issues
The Tone Poet series has never been exclusively Blue Note. One of the first albums in the series was Chick Corea's 'Now He Sings, Now He Sobs' (Solid State), and one of the most recent is Serge Chaloff's 'Blue Serge' (Capitol). They've also issued many Pacific Jazz titles and a few albums from the Transition label. This does seem an odd choice for the series, though... From Joe Harley regarding the mastering: "Capitol ran two tape decks for this recording (and others). One set was assembled and used many 100s of times. The other was put away with each track filed separately on what we call phono reels. These tracks had never been used before. I had them assembled and this is what we used. The sound is astonishing...Frank is in the room." -
What rock music are you listening to? Non-Jazz, Non-Classical.
HutchFan replied to EKE BBB's topic in Miscellaneous Music
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Claude Hopkins - Swing Time (Prestige/Swingville)
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What vinyl are you spinning right now??
clifford_thornton replied to wolff's topic in The Vinyl Frontier
đ I am hopeful but unsure if that concert was recorded... -
Many thanks for sharing your memories ...
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What Classical Music Are You Listening To?
Peter Friedman replied to StarThrower's topic in Classical Discussion
Mozart Symphonies N.25, No.24, No.26 Josef Krips - Royal Concertgebouw