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Everything posted by Gheorghe
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Both "Time Waits" and "The Scene Changes" are really great. About Pharoah Sanders: I purchased live at the East when I was still at high school.
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The Elvin Jones collaboration with Dave Liebman was really fantastic.
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Both "Time Waits" and "The Scene Changes" are really great.
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Great, I also listened to it a few days ago I saw J.C. Heard with Dizzy Gillespie Quartet in summer 1983. The personnel was Diz, Ed Cherry, Mike Howell and veteran drummer J.C. Heard. Dizzy had played and recorded with Heard as early as 1946 I think, so this was kind of a reunion. I remember the first tune was Manteca, really hot....
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Great, especially "There´s No Business like Showbusiness", really up tempo, long theme, quite hard to play I must admit
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When I saw Sonny Rollins in 1979 he had a hat similar to that blue hat on the first picture, but in white. It´s the same white hat he has on the photo of the back cover of the album "Don´t Ask" from the same year.
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Here´s also Pharoah Sanders listening right now: "Live at the East" was one of my first LPs at high school. Though this is not the easiest music for a young listener, I dug it, and still dig that great "Healing Song" with those voices. And one of my favourites from the time when Pharoah played more in the traditional manner with a regular quartet is "Heart is a Melody of Time". It´s interesting that both Archie Shepp and Pharoah Sanders, once pioneers of Free Jazz, got back to more straight ahead stuff during the late 70´s early 80s.
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Yes , I also had first the LP with the trio tracks and later got the CD with the Zoot Sims stuff. As I already said, I love most of all those occasions, where Bud could play with another horn player, like here Zoot Sims, like Dexter on "Our Man in Paris", like Hawkins on "Essen Festival", Lee Morgan and Wayne Shorter on "Blakey in Paris", Dizzy on "with the Double Six of Paris", Don Byas and Indrees Suliman on "Americans in Paris", same on "Tribute to Cannonball"...... I think Bud got very very inspired if he met some horn players, Also with Curtis Fuller on "Bud!"......
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Great. I remember when I first purchased it when I was very young, I didn´t know that "Nefertiti" is the title of the Wayne shorter composition. then, in 1978 I first thought that "Nerfertiti" might be an Italian Name and perhaps some Italian film producer, so when I first saw the cover I thought this is possibly some movie score, like "Lift to the Scaffold" or later "Siesta".
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Years ago I bought about all stuff of Bud Powell but I must admit, that I have not listened to it for quite a long time. From the later period of Bud I prefer encounters with other US musicians (like "Hawk in Germany" from Essen with Hawkins, Oscar Pettiford and Kenny Clark) or "Blakey in Paris" with the exceptionell solos of Bud on two of his compositions (Bouncing, and Infidels). And from the 1962 scandinavian tour I prefer the studio album with Nils Henning. From the 3 CD set "Budism" I think the best stuff is on CD 3 which is from a second tour to Scandinavia in September 1962. The whole stuff on "Budism" is very very uneven. There are some great moments like two really fast versions of "The Best Thing for you is me" , but there are also some very weak pieces. There is a really rambling version of "Confirmation". As I said before, as I get older I prefer to listen to his records with fellow musicians from USA, or of course with great European musicians like Pierre Michelot or Nils Henning.....
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Some Pahroah Sanders live from 1981. I saw him live later, in 1985 at Hollabrunn Festival. Also a quartet, but other personnel.
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As all great tenor saxophonists, Pharoah Sanders is a great ballad player. Here is a wonderful set of standard ballads "Welcome to Love"
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Very fine Woody Herman with some great guest artists: Stan Getz, Dizzy Gillespie, Woody Shaw, from 1979. I saw the Herd also in summer 1979, they played also some Chick Corea tunes then.
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Superb concert of Chet Baker from 1979. That´s the time I saw him live for the first time. IMHO Chet sounded much better during his later career than during the time he was most famous..... I was lucky I saw him often live.
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Great !
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Again reminiscences from that wonderful Festival Velden 1979. Here Joe Henderson and Ron Carter with recordings done shortly before that festival. What a schedule it was: Joe Henderson quartet, Ron Carter quartet (with Kenny Barron, Buster Williams and Ben Riley), Elvin Jones Jazz Machine, Sonny Rollins quartet, Chet Baker Trio, Woody Herman Thundering Herd......
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I never understood why the Cliff Brown Max Roach album is titled "at Basin Street". That sounds like a live recording, but as much as I know, it´s a studio recording. Very fine and with very fine compositions by Bud´s younger brother.
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Joanne Brackeen still was not so well known then. It thing, a major step for her was playing with Joe Henderson. I saw her with Joe Henderson in late 1978 and she got a lot of attention and I think shortly after the concert there was an interview with her in "Jazz Podium". Later I saw here with Joe Farell, also very fine. This should have been a Chet Baker-Joe Farell encounter, but Chet was missing.....
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Here are three double albums from the late 70s, when there was again more interest in acoustic jazz . Those three albums were very much discussed in my jazz friend circles during the last year of high school. They came out around the same time 1978 and the most beautiful thing was that the musicians could be heard live on all bigger jazz festivals. Though I couldn´t see the Milestone Jazzstars in this formation (they were together only for US tour if i remember right), there was enough "Milestone Jazzstars" at the Velden Jazzfestival summer 1979, when Joe Henderson , Sonny Rollins and Ron Carter were scheduled, each one with his own group.
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this photo is great !