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Everything posted by AllenLowe
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I've always been a fierce opponent of de-hiss in sound restoration (with some very mild exceptions) - the new generation of de-hiss programs, however, are scaring me: they seem to be able, now, to get the hiss out and leave the high end - HOWEVER - they color the sound in a very horrible way (sounds like someone tapping on a milk bottle). I am starting to hear this crap, and more and more it makes me determined to hold onto everything LP that I have with original sound - been perusing Ebay lately and making important scores on old RCAs and VJMs, Brunswicks and even a few MCA/Decca/Ace of Hearts. Music is the only art form they would treat this way (or maybe not) - but no one would bleach a Rembrandt. this is really bad stuff. Beware.
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Donald Lambert "Recorded 1959-1961"
AllenLowe replied to AllenLowe's topic in Offering and Looking For...
whatsa matter, I thought Lambert was popular? -
that;s it - I was working in a record store and his stuff was very popular/
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is he the guy who did that ECM stuff (or was it CTI)?
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fascinating guy - he was another, like Carisi, who represented the old modernism as it thoroughly rejected the new modernism. Nice guy too, in my few encounters.
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Leeway - have you not yet figured out that Facebook is the new NEW cool (jazz is the old/new cool; uncool is the new extra cool; coolies need not apply)?
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if I can frighten just one small child in this world, I will have served a purpose in life.
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I think that's code for cocaine.
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actually, it comes in a hard case that's convenient for all kinds of household tasks.
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this just in from All About Jazz: By TROY COLLINS, Published: December 16, 2011 Allen Lowe: Blues and the Empirical Truth Operating on the fringes of the jazz establishment since the early 1990s, under-sung saxophonist Allen Lowe has earned meritorious praise for his distinctive efforts. It is his academic writings documenting the history of American folk music that have garnered him the most widespread critical acclaim however. Lowe's first foray into roots music, his 1994 album Dark Was the Night—Cold Was the Ground (Music & Arts), reconciled modernism with tradition, consequently inspiring his interest in scholarly dissertations like American Pop from Minstrel to Mojo: On Record 1893-1956 and That Devilin' Tune: A Jazz History 1900-1950. No stranger to ambitious projects, Lowe's recent excursion into the blues, the wryly titled 3 disc set Blues and the Empirical Truth, encapsulates myriad variations on the timeless form. Expertly realized by a rotating roster of talent, the diverse line-up features all-stars like Marc Ribot, Roswell Rudd and Matthew Shipp working alongside a handful of lesser-known, but talented local musicians from Lowe's adopted hometown of Portland, Maine. Recorded in Brooklyn and Portland, Lowe arranged an assortment of instrumental configurations to extrapolate venerable blues tropes—abstracting and reconfiguring the standard form according to his capricious whims. The sheer volume and variety of material is staggering (52 cuts over three and half hours), sprawling from lyrically austere chamber-like vignettes to rousing punkish tirades. Having recently switched from tenor to alto (in addition to playing C melody saxophone and a bit of primitive but effective guitar), Lowe's soulful tone and probing phrasing serves as the date's unifying factor, instilling a sense of rough-hewn consistency to the eclectic proceedings. Though the collection is filled with an endless array of stylistic detours—far too many to list—the stalwart contributions of Lowe's sidemen cannot be understated. Ribot's spiky fretwork, Rudd's blustery vocalisms and Shipp's elliptical contributions (on piano and Farfisa organ) imbue the set with expressionistic ardor, while the efforts of Lowe's Maine-based cohorts find concordance in their amiable rapport. Key among them is guitarist Ray Suhy, whose scorching leads veer from Delta-inspired anguish to metallic posturing. Unfortunately, Jake Millet's electronic percussion sounds at odds with the session's stripped-down aesthetic; his digital drums' lacking spatial presence and artificial decay is suitably futuristic, but ultimately proves more distracting than engaging. Ironically, Wynton Marsalis is one of the key instigators of this vanguard project; an argument with Marsalis over the role of minstrelsy in African-American musical history indirectly led to Lowe's publication of Really the Blues? A Blues History, 1893-1959 (encompassing a 36 CD set and an 80,000 word essay!), which subsequently resulted in this unique exploration of the malleable idiom—in all its many guises. Endlessly revealing, Blues and the Empirical Truth is a fascinating journey into one man's vision of modern music's most basic and resilient foundations.
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Prestige International & Folk Releases - Who Knew?
AllenLowe replied to JSngry's topic in Discography
Neal thanks for that link - are there MP3s associated with that site? -
I have that as an LP, I think.
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2 eggs over easy french toast hash browns toast bourbon and soda
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I'd pay some big bucks for a reissue of Hair to Jazz..
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56? That's old news.... many more, Jim.
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I'm a convert.
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I love it - got a job through it, no kidding, I'm now a Visiting Professor at the Berklee College of Music, through contacts I made.
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Theme from the Film 10 10 Little Indians TEN or Madness theme for 1010 WINS (old radio station) Ten Times a Lady. sorry. Next.
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just to mention, I actually have an old LP set of some Berlinners, from the 1890s.
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Chris, are you kidding? Since I stopped thinking for myself, I've never been more carefree and happy. I just registered Republican.
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