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Everything posted by colinmce
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Here is a 12 minute short film called "Street Music" comprising footage from a February 19, 1973 session intended for release as Chaos on Survival Records. Was anyone aware of this session, or has anyone heard it? Frank Lowe, tenor sax; flute; voice Richard Dunbar, french horn Selene Fung, koto Jeanne Lee, voice Duncan Lawson, piano; vibes Ali, congas; flute; percussion Juma Sultan, bass; percussion Billy Parker, drums https://www.facebook.com/keepingjazzvisible/videos/665896531161464
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Well now I feel especially like an idiot, one because I said this doesn't exist and two because I .... have .. it
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Hard question to answer, I've found them all to be really excellent. The Bisio in particular is undoubtedly the best thing I've heard this year, and it will probably stay that way. At 4 discs the Trevor-Briscoe/Mezzei/Guazzaloca has a steep barrier to entry, but it's some of the best group/interactive free improvisation I've heard in quite some time. Of the 3 piano trios here, Frequency Disasters was the most impressive, really a lot of fun. The Oùat LP is very good (wish it was on CD instead). I enjoy Melford's work a lot but am having reservations about this one for some reason. Maybe not just in the mood for this style right now. I have never enjoyed Ballister and I don't think another one would change my mind. Slightly intrigued by the Day & Taxi disc.
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Definitely not significant, no. Actually this may be the first instance of this I've seen. In a back of the envelope sense, there were a few hundred or less OJC LPs and many hundreds, if not thousands, of OJC CDs, plus the many later twofer/compilation CDs that cleaned up a lot of the remainder of the Prestige, Fantasy, and Riverside catalogs in particular (there are 2 or 3 of these covering Mongo Santamaria).
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Some recent acquisitions I'm enjoying: Tim Trevor-Briscoe/Szilárd Mezei/Nicola Guazzaloca – Before Then (Not Two) Agustí Fernández/Rafał Mazur – Correspondence With No Words (Not Two) Lucía Martínez/Agustí Fernández/Barry Guy – Bosque De Niebla (Fundacja Słuchaj!) Steve Beresford/Pierpaolo Martino/Valentina Magaletti - Frequency Disasters (Confront Core Series) ISM (Pat Thomas, Joel Grip, Antonin Gerbal) - Metaphor (Umlaut) Rodrigo Amado/Thomas Johansson/Jon Rune Strøm/Gard Nilssen - Northern Liberties (Not Two) Michael Bisio Quartet - MBefore (Tao Forms) Jesse Kudler & Graham Stephenson - Apposite Rejoinder (JMY) Tony Oxley - Unreleased (1974-2016) (Discus) Looking forward to the following: Martin Küchen/Agustí Fernardez/Zlatko Kaučič - The Steps That Resonate (Not Two) Joe McPhee/John Edwards/Klaus Kugel - Existential Moments (Not Two) Andrew Neumann/Damon Smith/Forbes Graham/Sandy Ewen/Junko Fujiwara/Eric Rosenthal - Quartet:Quartet:Trio (Balance Point Acoustics) Whit Dickey Quartet - Astral Long Form: Staircase In Space Luis Vincente/Seppe Gebruers/Onno Govaert - Room With No Name (Fundacja Słuchaj!) Fred Moten/Brandon López/Gerald Cleaver - Moten/López/Cleaver (Reading Group) Matthew Shipp & Chad Fowler - Old Stories (Mahakala)
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I've never had any strong feelings about him one way or another myself, mostly because he usually works in the trio idiom, which is not really my bag a lot of the time. A Little Copenhagen Night Music on Arista-Freedom with Henry Franklin & Michael Carvin is pretty good (and obviously very cheap).
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I still can't get past Monder, though I agree Tony is playing well. Have you heard the Rogue Art with Angelica Sanchez & Tom Rainey yet?
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Miles In Europe is near the top of the heap of Miles albums for me period. The Blackhawk recordings are also among my overall favorites from his entire body of work. Oddly enough I never got on in a major way with Four And More/My Funny Valentine. Splitting hairs just a little, but I never found these recordings as compelling as others from the same period. MFV especially is quite a slog, and I loathe the title track. The complete edition helps the case, but I still don't reach for it often.
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It does look like they're doing their little re-do on Slugs. I need to pull my ZYX CDs of that off the shelf and give them a listen. If I recall the sound is OK but I would welcome an improvement. I never heard the official ESP release but there is a Lone Hill one out there with utterly atrocious sound.
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I never got the sense they had a lot to work with for this series to begin with, now I know they're really just out of material. Only my opinion of course!
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Albert Ayler 5LP set from Elemental for RSD (April 23)
colinmce replied to romualdo's topic in New Releases
Definitely going for the CDs here, looking forward to it. Maybe this opens up the possibility of an official CD release of the Cecil Taylor concert? -
I listened to this just yesterday. Fantastic comp.
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I listened to My Shining Hour for the first time in quite awhile the other day and it was sounding very much like Evans to me. I remember liking it, but I found it a bit of a bore this time around, very much of its time in a not-necessarily-positive way. I wonder how Charlie Haden felt about this group, he doesn't do much there, mostly just goes through the motions. I think the studio albums hold up quite a bit better.
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I'd be down for that, but I also like listening to the boots. They sound like Charlie Parker airshots, which always feels apt.
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Nice catch! What the hell was going on over at Savoy in the 80s?
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There were two sessions recorded for Footloose, 15 tunes were recorded in all. Floater is mostly tracks from Footloose with a few of the unreleased ones in the mix. Syndrome is the rest of Footloose and the rest of the recorded tunes. Floater Syndrome compiles all of Footloose plus 7 of the unreleased tunes, minus two alternates. The Japanese Complete Footloose CD, as well as a Gambit disc called Complete Savoy Sessions 1962-63, has all 15 songs. Phew! Since Floater Syndrome is by far easier to come by than the official JP disc or the OOP Gambit CD, I would say this is definitely your best bet to have nearly all of this material.
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At $55 for the two SACDs, I think I'm good with my OJCs. Am I the only one who thinks Tomorrow Is The Question is by far the drabbest Coleman LP? I've never felt like the music comes together; Heath, Mitchell, and Manne do an admirable job but it doesn't work for me.
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I also recently came across this recording from Newport 1965. You need a subscription to listen in full, but the clips are fantastic https://www.wolfgangs.com/music/paul-bley-trio/audio/20020001-50866.html?tid=4844095 That's a great comp. A cheap & friendly way to sample the extremely rare Marzette Watts & Cleve Pozar material too. Music from Turning Point and Floater Syndrome were also released in part on the Savoy LPs Turns and Floater in the 80s. Turns includes an alternate take of "Ida Lupino" that is not available anywhere else. To that end, the Artista-Freedom 2xLP has an otherwise unreleased alternate take of "Closer", and there is furthermore a very rare Japanese CD called The Complete Footloose that includes alternate takes of "King Korn" and "Around Again"
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aha though, a wrinkle! this is ‘Touching’ and the Polydor ‘Blood’, not the Fontana one. that is a much tougher nut to crack, availability-wise
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Both very excellent. If you're a fan of this music I don't think you'd want to be without them. The retailer millionsofrecords.com has both for 5.99 and 4.99 respectively.
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I've been on a huge Bley kick lately, especially his 60s work, and I have also spent the last couple weeks getting headaches over the details of his discography from this time. There are so many overlapping issues, overlapping titles, various pressings, various release dates ... it's all almost impossible to wrap your mind around. Here's a quick little list I put together to help keep some of this organized.
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I believe this was his final performance, in 2019. Very fitting, and a lovely record: https://dropadisc.bandcamp.com/album/front-to-front-sold-out
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RIP. Lots of love out there for Sounds of Liberation, Drum Dance, and Infinity, and people are getting hip to the 70s Steeplechases, but he made a number of very fine recordings for CIMP later in life in the company of compatriots like Byard Lancaster and Odean Pope that I hope will one day get some equal attention. It seems these days that the whole of an artist's life isn't appreciated as much as it should be.