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BillF

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Everything posted by BillF

  1. 1975 and the mid-century author is taking on a few postmodern touches. I think she's at her best in the 60s.
  2. Dave Liebman with the Vein Trio at Band on the Wall, Manchester on Tuesday.
  3. Eileen Dover Gulley Jimson Rudy Vallée
  4. Mc-Lock-lin Depends which side of the border you are on I guess (Scottish, not Watford Gap ). I always thought it was the latter. That's how my friend Danny Padmore who played bass with him in his early days pronounces it.
  5. Mc-Lock-lin
  6. Elmes Steele Jane Asher Bill Birch
  7. "Last Train from Overbrook" from this: Sublime!
  8. Marmaduke Moose the Mooche Quasimodo
  9. Hans Keller Basement Jaxx Jack Straw
  10. Donna Tartt Donna Lee Cheryl
  11. The Cookers Jack Hobbs Volker Gass
  12. Emily Bronte Johnny Mandel Prince of Darkness
  13. Lazy Ade Monsbourgh Serge Gainsbourg John Constable
  14. The Fol De Rols Sex Kitten Piglet
  15. Emperor Penguin Emperor Rosko Mark Rothko
  16. Manfred Mann Piltdown Man Shelly Manne
  17. Bay City Rollers Rowley Birkin Dick Berk
  18. Phil Upchurch Chappell & Co Kirk Lightsey
  19. Standard and Poor Stan the Man The Getz Stuff Quintet
  20. "Lady Bird" from this:
  21. Sal Volatile Art Salt Tupac Shakur
  22. Everton Weekes Patience Strong Davey Tough
  23. Earl Miner Richie Cole Shaft
  24. In fact I do understand you and in some places throughout the book i have felt that he leans towards working off a diary with dates, etc. too. And although OF COURSE I have not only never been there but also was born much too late to could have been there at all if I had just traveled there I approached the book from a totally different angle and like it just for what it is (to me, anyway): 1) It adds to the documentation of post-war jazz in Britain and fills gaps (stretching beyond the regional aspect of the book), including in its illustrations, that I feel won't be filled elsewhere - particularly since it adds to a lot of ground not covered by Jim Godbolt in HIS history (which I feel is nice for lack of a better one but I find it rather unbalanced and often scratching the surface only) 2) It essentially covers a key period of jazz that I am interested in and therefore avoids turning into a "history" book that purports to cover it all but ends up focusing too much on more recent decades because more recent material is easier available and researchable there and likely sales propsects are better if you mention artists still on "everyone's" minds 3) A strictly personal thing: I like those regional histories that IMHO flesh out the overall picture. Anyone can cover New York, London, as the no. 1 focus points and leave it at that, but ... I for one find lots of interest and merit in regional books on Detroit, Chicago, Newark, Boston, etc. I have bought over the years. Highly subjective, of course, and I would not expect too many others to attache the same kind of importance to those criteria. BTW, I would not consider it "essential" overall either but rather a very good "special interest" book. OK
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