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Michael Fitzgerald

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Everything posted by Michael Fitzgerald

  1. No, that look (in that context) says, "Where's 'one'?" Mike
  2. Until Getz is caught holding up a drugstore? Mike
  3. Look, it's a "Dear John" letter - aren't those all pretty much the same? Mike
  4. Yes, saw this in N&N. I see no possibility that Uptown or Mosaic will handle this. Coltrane is too valuable a commodity to Impulse. Well, at least I'll feel better when Impulse sells me another "complete" set - between the various 2-disc reissues they've already done and this stuff, it will be more worthwhile. I propose that the presence of "Skylark" on the Blakey tape would make Workman, not Merritt the bassist. I will also propose that the date of this Blakey tape is almost certainly early March (possibly very late February) 1963 when Blakey and Coltrane were playing opposite each other at Birdland. Mike
  5. No, it's stupidity. If people need to be told there's no real restaurant where you eat off the floor, they're stupid. Now, why there isn't a similar note for the fancy restaurant that serves nothing but Cheerios, I have no idea. Maybe that is a real restaurant. Mike
  6. David Letterman said when Brooke Shields was at Princeton that was one of her term paper titles: "A Chemical Reaction in Three Stages: Lather, Rinse, Repeat." I figure they do that trying to get people to use (and therefore buy) twice as much - REPEAT! Mike
  7. OK, so I know I shouldn't have high expectations when I'm watching TV, but I just saw a commercial for a vacuum cleaner that uses the interesting scenario of a restaurant called "Flor" where people sit and eat off the floor. Clever, amusing - based on that old saying, "clean enough you could eat off it". However, there is a small type legal disclaimer "not a real restaurant". Oh really? I was hoping to book reservations. We now have to have "closed course, professional driver" for every auto commercial, etc. How stupid can people get? Can we look forward to constant disclaimers during every movie we watch? "this is a fictional character. Mr. Bogart has never owned a cafe in Morocco."? I'm all for truth in advertising but - really, now. Mike
  8. I'm forgetting where exactly he got the info, whether he had access to medical records, but Pullman definitely has MUCH material on the hospitalization and the treatments. Mike
  9. You forgot the part about how the radio program is archived online (or how you're going to reformat the show for an upcoming Night Lights). Mike
  10. The Rolling Stones haven't been British since 1971 when they moved to the south of France as "tax exiles" because the UK Inland Revenue was hunting them down for back taxes. Mike
  11. Actually, I've never even seen a copy. It's disappointing that there are still errors. I'll try to get a look soon. Mike
  12. I can't call it opportunism - the illegal ones have been around so long it's amazing it took so much time before the legit one happened. It's a beat-the-boots situation and (ideally) the composers are now getting some money. Other thread here: http://www.organissimo.org/forum/index.php...56&hl=real+book Mike
  13. FWIW, here's a 1969 sighting of Eddie Khan from db 4/3/69 p.40: "Two recent emigres from the East Coast, drummer Billy Higgins and bassist Eddie Khan, have found themselves a comfortable niche in the Harold Land-Bobby Hutcherson Quintet. The quintet was recently featured at Shelly's Manne-Hole and rounding out the combo was pianist Joe Sample." but it didn't last long because here is from db 4/17/69 p.40: "Another recent emigre: Larry Gales, former Thelonious Monk bassist (replaced by Walter Booker). One of his first gigs was with the Harold Land-Bobby Hutcherson Quintet, along with Joe Sample, piano, and Billy Higgins, drums. The rhythm section changes as frequently as the name of the front line. For the past six weeks, Hutcherson has been "leader" on a special gig. The musicians have small parts (some speaking, some playing) in the Warner Bros.-Seven Arts film They Shoot Horses, Don't They? Others in the production include Teddy Edwards, Joe Harris, Teddy Buckner, Ike Isaacs, Ronnell Bright, Hadley Caliman, Lester Robertson, Thurman Green and Hugh Bell. The film deals with the dance marathons of the Depression era." Mike Mike
  14. I guess you mean "again" - because I have it on CD (EmArcy 822 471-2) - another one of my first batch of seven CDs. Mike
  15. And then, the elation turned to uncomfortable melancholy when he realized his dad's LP was still sealed in its shrink wrap? Mike
  16. Beloved and worshipped all over the world but virtually unknown in his native USA?
  17. When I was teaching high school I was astonished to find that kids did not know the sequence (reverse) of recent US presidents - they could get maybe 3. MAYBE. Not even with hints like, "well, what happened in the 1960s" or "OK, so you know WWII was in the 1940s - well, who usually gets elected president after a war"? BTW, 1066 was indelibly etched in my memory when I was in the *fourth* grade, studying the Bayeux tapestry. Mike
  18. Sorry, no, this was in 1983, issued on Columbia. Piscopo-as-Sinatra did an extended medley of: I Love Rock 'n' Roll [Joan Jett] Cold As Ice [Foreigner] Under My Thumb [The Rolling Stones] Hit Me With Your Best Shot [Pat Benatar] Born To Run [bruce Springsteen] I Know What Boys Like [The Waitresses] Smoke On The Water [Deep Purple] Life During Wartime [Talking Heads] The rock-as-big-band thing is what I meant. Mike
  19. This was done 20-some years ago by Joe Piscopo as "The Chairman of the Board" - and at least then you knew it was *supposed* to be funny. Mike
  20. All right, so I lied - I can help. Here is the cover (in b&w) of Touching, Fontana 688 608: Mike
  21. I still don't understand the confusion described in the initial question, but here is the cover of Blood, Fontana 883 991 JCY, artwork by Marte Röling. I own Touching as part of the Arista/Freedom 2fer and as a Black Lion CD, so I can't help with the Fontana LP issue of that. Mike
  22. The name also involves the Independent Order of Oddfellows - Pythias + Oddfellows = Pythodd (I've seen it spelled both ways, I'm leaning towards the added d, but would love to get visual proof). My friend Noal Cohen has some rare and interesting Hoeffler photos on his website: http://www.attictoys.com/jazz/ and there's more you can find poking around here: http://www.intofoc.us/gallery/Hoeffler/ins...o_fall_1958.htm Hoeffler was as good as Francis Wolff with those Blue Note guys. That Lee shot is just perfect. Mike
  23. Peter is a friend of mine as well and I'll second the accolades. I have heard him present over four hours worth of Bud biography. This will be worth the wait. You would not believe the i's he is dotting. This kind of attention to detail is what makes the hastily thrown-together things (i.e., the Wayne Shorter, Clifford Brown, etc.) seem so appallingly bad in comparison. Mike
  24. And for those who *can* imagine such a thing - isn't that punishment enough? Mike
  25. Happened upon this mention in db 4/13/72 p.41 - Cal Massey continues to be haunted by bad luck; now it's his daughter Singh, who needs corrective surgery for a crooked spine. The trumpeter-composer ran a benefit Feb. 23 at the Underground in Brooklyn which featured, among others, McCoy Tyner's quartet, Archie Shepp, the Heath Brothers, Joe Lee Wilson, Clifford Jordan, Charles Davis, Bill Hardman, Billy Higgins, Bill Lee, John Ore, Roland Alexander's quintet with Kiane Zawadi, Hilton Ruiz, Hakim Jami and Clifford Jarvis, and Massey's youngest daughter, Waheeda, backed by her father on piano, Jami, and Zahir Batin. Massey also presented his Jazz Review at the Apollo Feb. 18. Waheeda, 7, stopped the show, and other participants included son Zane Massey, tenor sax; Russ White, flute; Bob Ford, tenor, piano; John Stevenson, baritone; Jami and Batin. On Feb. 22, Massey performed at Danbury, Conn. State Prison with Shepp and Beaver Harris. Mike
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