Jump to content

Chuck Nessa

Members
  • Posts

    28,596
  • Joined

  • Donations

    0.00 USD 

Everything posted by Chuck Nessa

  1. Laz, go back and read again. He said "unofficial".
  2. But Warne's on his toes.
  3. WAG - RM.
  4. You might contact Ace with the question. I think they'd be glad to help.
  5. Go HERE for his phone number. He can probably help.
  6. That thread was deleted.
  7. Hopes for a happy, fruitful and calm year ahead.
  8. If anyone can supply burns I'll be happy.
  9. And the name of the guitarist is still missing ... You aren't paying attention.
  10. Used to know and enjoy David's work back in his Chicago days. He sent me a copy of an earlier release called "Every Corner" with Mike LeDonne and Billy Drummond on board. That's a good one too.
  11. And Vince Wilborn as Eddie Haskell.
  12. George Van Eps is the guitarist.
  13. Anyone? I just checked the booklet and there seems to be no remastering credit listed. Original session engineers are mentioned, but that's all. I think that's why he asked. Who wrote the liner notes?
  14. No sales for these suckers. That's what's going on.
  15. Yourmusic.com has this set for just under $24, in case anyone wants to pick it up before it goes OOP. If it matters, my guess is that the Yourmusic.com version is not packaged in the format with the CD sleeves and booklet bound into a small hardcover like a book (as the Pacific Jazz Gerry Mulligan Quartet recordings were as well). When I got this set from BMG several years ago, the CDs were in a "fat boy" 4-cd jewel case with the jewel case and a separate booklet inserted into a cardboard slipcase. I got my "dandy" booklet bound into etc, as you describe it, from BMG. I suggest the same is available from Yourmusic.
  16. Powell just "shifted" his attention to "classical" composition.
  17. Think I got 'em all 'cept for the bass player. I'll 'fess up later. Honest. This could be fun - pretty amazing band.
  18. By 1966 the master tapes would be multitrack so the mono pressings would be "fold downs". It is extremely unlikely any company would run a mono machine in this era.
  19. The packaging of the Clifford Brown set has to be manufactured in large quantities to make the unit cost "livable". They undoubtedly ran out of them.
  20. Nothing I've encountered by this band lived up to the billing. In fact I've dumped everything.
  21. Sad example of current attitudes towards intellectual property.
×
×
  • Create New...