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Everything posted by Gheorghe
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I liked very much what played Ricky Ford with Mingus. That last band Walrath Ford Neloms was really something. And Ricky Ford had that heavy sound of Ellington associated tenorsaxophonists......
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Though my favourite Impluse! album of Pharoah is "Karma", I like this one also very much. Here it´s more stuff with small percussion instruments. But another one I like very much "At the East" I think never made it to CD.....
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A great thing ! I love it and I love everything Philly Joe Jones did. Here´s also a fine one from 1968 recorded in U.K.
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Playing Favorites: Reflections on Jazz of the Later 1940's
Gheorghe replied to BillF's topic in Miscellaneous Music
I could not find a cover or Studio photos from the session, but I have it on "Cronological Fats Navarro": His last Studio session from late 1949 with Don Lanphere, and I think Al Haig on piano. Those tunes "Stop" "Go" Wailin´ Wall" and "Infatuation". -
I think I heard a title "Westcoast" Blues on a Wes Montgomery led session, I think the Album´s title is "So much Guitar !" . Is "Westcoast Blues" a blues in B flat in 3/4 time ?
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I don´t know what the guys from Prestige had "against pianos" , I mean why did they neglect this wonderful Instrument ? It started with the out of tune piano on Monk´s 1952 sessions, but I think that´s part of the charm of that record. I don´t have records from 1968 from Prestige, Always had thought this was a 50´s label until I bought to my astonishement a Dexter Gordon 1973 Prestige Album Tangerine and also heard the "tinny" Sound of the piano, though Hank Jones is playing….
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One of my favourite Dolphy recordings, I love all of it, the funny Jitterbug Waltz, Music Matador, and the duets with bass. A milestone in Dolphy´s career. And so great other musicians here, Woody Shaw, Bobby Hutcherson.....
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Great early work of the Little Giant ! I think this one was not so easy to purchase when I started collecting BN CDs in the 90´s . The most famous and easy to purchase Album was the "Blowin Session". This one is also very very fine ! I was lucky I saw Griffin on several occasions live. The first time was in spring 1978 in a small Viennese Club "Jazz-Freddie" , and the quartet was marvellous: Fritz Pauer on piano, Jimmy Woode on bass and Tony Inzalaco (who also recorded with Dexter) on drums. I think this was before Griff returned to the States. The last time I saw him must have been around 2004, 2005, he had slowed down a bit, but still a lot of great Music there……, on "Lester Leaps In" he was really back , sounding as sharp as 40 years earlier…... So many great memories with Griffin, I love him.
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This one is just wonderful. That´s the great quintet I saw live, with Steve Turré , Mulgrew Miller, Stafford James and Tony Reedus. Wonderful compositions !
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A very fine double CD of a latterday performance of Woody Shaw with a fantastic quartet with Geri Allen, Robert Hurst and Roy Brooks. A great deal of Monk, and just a wonderful live performance.
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It seems that Hank Mobley and Archie Shepp were quite close in Paris. A strange combination, here the hard bop Traditionalist, there the Forefront man of the Avantgarde "Angry Tenors"...…. I have read one Essay of Hank Mobley About one day he spent in Paris with Archie Shepp, Don Byas and Paul Gonsalves and that they cooked and prepared meals together. And that he stated that it was one of his most happy days. Strange, there is not much other evidence About Hank´s sojourn to Paris. While Bud was almost "overrecorded" there and you have dozens of Hours of live material and some Studio Albums, there is not very much of Hank Mobley. Did he Play at the Café Blue Note ? Was he recorded at some Paris club. Another strange Thing I´ve read About him is that in Paris or near Paris he got a room in a Kind of Hospital, a doctor who was a jazz fan arranged for Hank to stay there. Really strange, a world famous musician and he was forced to get help of that kind…...
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Great ! First in 1978 I had the Brown paper 2-LP Blue Note (LA Series) of "Fats Navarro" with almost all the BN stuff from 1947-1949, and when the CD Era started I purchased this with the additional track of Kenny Haggood singing "I think I´ll go away", and the non BN tracks "Stealin Apples" with Goodman and Gray is very fine, as is the Capitol tracks…..
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As I told earlier, I´m not really an Oscar Peterson fan, but as "We Get Requests" , this one is also a favourite of mine. "Georgia on my mind" is superb.
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Me too, for almost 45 years. My Funny Valentine really impressed me, until then I only had the "Steamin" Album from 1956 and this more open stuff and the fast Version of "All Blues" really was something to listen to.
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Maybe some of you might find that listening to those two albums one after the other is strange and unusual, but when I was a young boy, another guy from one or to grades up borrowed me those two LPs , maybe the only 2 "jazz LPs" he had. So I taped them on a 90min Cassette, but of course bought the CDs decades later. The Miles album IMHO the best from the Prestige series, and also the Headhunters is really a classic, great music on both , and last not least, it shows how our generation was, we were open to good acoustic jazz as well to the then actual electric stuff.....
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It is interesting how Stitt eventually recorded this "Bird Songs" Album. Usually he didn´t want to be too much associated with Bird, anyway he has his own unique style. I saw him live once and he played at least one tune that was on a Bird with Strings Album. The tune was "They can´t take that away from me" it sure is. I also have this Edition, but I also have the original separate 2 LPs.
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Thank you. How About the two America LPs from 1970 Blue Bird and Pyticantropus Erectus ? They are also underappreciated but I think they are quite fine and as you say, the band is great. Maybe the trumpet Player is not my first choice, but Charles McPherson, Bobby Jones, Jakie Byard and Dannie is great.
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Usually I share your enthusiasm for Albums we know both, but in this case I´m not so pleased with this record. The bass is barely audible and it´s a date from 1970 with a quite tired Mingus, the band is great but what misses is the cutting Edge of Mingus himself, his strong bass and his former fantastic bass solos. I have this record, it´s written it´s from 1969 in Amsterdam but I believe it was in 1970 since in 69 Mingus still was not touring , at least that´s what I believe. I´ve heard much better versions of "Orange" like on the 1964 tour...... Sorry to say this, but it´s not among my favourite Mingus Albums, I spinned it once, twice and that was it......
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Playing Favorites: Reflections on Jazz of the Later 1940's
Gheorghe replied to BillF's topic in Miscellaneous Music
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I wouldn´t say I am Oscar Peterson´s biggest fan, but this one is my favourite of him, because it´s more team work, he is not so overdoing the stuff, and really cute little tunes, a very very nice album.