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Everything posted by jeffcrom
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Two slightly different big band records: Stan Kenton - Birthday in Britain (Creative World) Globe Unity Orchestra - Improvisations (JAPO)
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"Yemenite Tanz," the new single from the 4th Ward Afro-Klezmer Orchestra, is available for download from Amazon. This is our version of an old Jewish Yemenite tune. I am responsible for the arrangement and alto sax solo. I've been so close to the writing, recording, mixing, and mastering that sometimes I can't hear anything but the flaws, but I hope some of you might enjoy it. For those who would prefer a physical issue of this, it will probably be issued as one side of a 7" record in the not-too-distant future.
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Found a cool two-pocket album today - Pine Top Smith: Boogie Woogie Piano on Brunswick. The album book is pretty battered, but the records are in very good shape. The label has come off the front - I'll probably glue it back on, but I scanned it in the meantime. This was an early collectors' album - they used an unreleased take of "Jump Steady Blues," so this is the first issue for that one. Great stuff. I also played: Corky Corcoran - What is This Thing Called Love/Minor Blues (Keynote, 1945) Corcoran was a decent Hawkins-influenced tenor player. This is a pretty good record, with Emmett Berry, Willie Smith, and Dodo Marmarosa - you can't have too much Dodo. Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys - Osage Stomp/Get With It (Vocalion, 1935) From what I can tell, these are the first two sides recorded by this band. This is the only Bob Wills on Vocalion I've seen; all the others I run across are on Okeh or Columbia. Bob Wills and His Texas Playboys - Steel Guitar Rag/Swing Blues #1 (Okeh) Nice!
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Down at the bottom of the forum you'll see "Click here to show filter options," which will give you the ability to go back further.
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Great stuff!
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In recent years there's been tension between clubs and neighborhood residents. In New Orleans, everything's mixed together; once you get away from Bourbon Street, clubs and bars, with or without music, are often in residential neighborhoods. Neighborhood residents, often new arrivals, have been fighting new, or even existing, music clubs. The Little Peoples' Place, a neighborhood bar in Treme, had music for years, until that section of Treme started to get gentrified; complaints from newer residents got live music taken out. I don't know all the details - I'm not sure The Little Peoples' Place had the proper license. But in any case, they had provided music to the neighborhood for years. Even now there's a neighborhood organization in Faubourg Marigny, the neighborhood containing Frenchmen Street, that wants to have at least some of the clubs on Frenchmen closed. (For those who haven't been to New Orleans for awhile, Frenchmen Street has become the musical heart of the city.) I can see being upset at moving into a quiet neighborhood only to have a disco open next door. It's another matter to move into a neighborhood and expect it to change to suit you. I don't know how all of this is going to shake down, but there are plenty of elements in the city who realize that music is the most important resource New Orleans has. It's what keeps guys like me and you visiting and spending money.
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Depressing news for all of us who love New Orleans music: Donna's has closed its doors for the last time. Donna and Charlie have had enough, for reasons given here. There are now no music clubs on historic North Rampart Street. Donna's opened sometime in the early 1990s, and I have spent many hours on a barstool there since. It was always a warm, welcoming place - you felt like family when you walked in. And I heard some amazing music there - Tom McDermott, Evan Christopher, Wendell Brunious, Kermit Ruffins, Bob French, Davell Crawford, Henry Butler. Donna's was known for brass band music - I heard the Algiers, Pin Stripe, Chosen Few, Mahogany, Treme, Hot 8, and Hurricane Brass Bands there. In the early days you had to walk through whatever brass band was playing to get to the rest rooms. You never knew who would show up to sit in - Leroy Jones, Nicholas Payton, David Torkanowsky, Kermit, musicians visiting from Europe. One night Tom McDermott was playing with the young band Loose Marbles when veteran trumpeter Jack Fine came in and sat at the bar. He stayed there all night with his horn on the bar, and whenever he felt like it, he'd pick up the trumpet and join in from his barstool. There were periods when it seemed like the city was trying to close down the joint on one pretext or another, so Donna was always sensitive to accusations of drug use in her club. I was there when a young man took Kermit Ruffins' song "Light Up" a little too seriously and lit up a joint. Donna, who was not young even then, came over the bar like some kind of action hero and had the guy out the door in seconds. Donna's husband Charlie manned the kitchen. I still think his barbecue ribs were the best I ever had. North Rampart Street is back to being a wasteland. I'm very sad today - RIP Donna's.
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Two very different vocal albums: Helen Humes - The Talk of the Town (Columbia) A 1975 recital with Ellis Larkins, Buddy Tate, and George Benson. Andrew Cyrille/Jeanne Lee/Jimmy Lyons - Nuba (Black Saint)
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I've had the Columbia vinyl for years. It's a good latter-day Bechet performance. He can't just run all over the band, like he could with his young French proteges; Buck Clayton and Vic Dickenson don't take any crap from the old man.
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I'm very surprised. And now that I know who it is, I can't let my statement stand - I can't bring myself to say that Ran Blake doesn't understand Monk's music. His essay on the Blue Note recordings alone proves otherwise. But I will say that, in my opinion, he made some unfortunate choices here. Among other things, he rhythmically decimated Monk's piece. I love Ran Blake, but I don't like this.
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A nice evening with the vinyl: George Freeman - Franticdiagnosis (Bam-boo) Thanks to The Magnificent Goldberg for introducing me to this bizarre and wonderful album. Captain John Handy - John Handy's New Orleans Jazz (Polydor International) A great 1965 album, not released in the U.S., with Alvin Alcorn and Dave "Fat Man" Williams, among others. Snooks Eaglin - Down Yonder (GNP Crescendo) The New Orleans guitar genius had recorded R & B singles and folk/blues albums, but this 1977 record was his first full-length R & B album. Ellis Marsalis, Clarence Ford and the French brothers (George and Bob) are on board.
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It's like deju vu all over again....
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The Lord discography just says "details unknown."
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Okay, my biggest "D'oh!" moment so far has been not being able to come up with the title of Silver's "Peace." And mistaking Chico Freeman for Clifford Jordan makes me want to go back and hear some more Freeman.
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Part two: 9. Monk’s music, like Bach’s, should be able to stand up to a wide range of interpretations, but this pianist shows a basic misunderstanding of what the music is all about. It’s okay to play “Eronel” slowly like this – I kind of like the tempo – but he or she puts some of Monk’s syncopations squarely on the beat, playing havoc with Monk’s musical intentions. And there’s a “prettiness” to the whole thing – some dissonances notwithstanding. I’m going to be an old curmudgeon and say that I didn’t care for this. 10. Nice – relaxed, yet intense. It’s just long enough to say what they wanted to say. Good command of their instruments, but with plenty of grit. No idea who or what this is, but I like it. 11. Well, it’s James Newton playing “Prelude to a Kiss,” but it’s not from that excellent Ellington album he did for Blue Note back in the eighties. My guess on piano would be Anthony Davis, but that’s just a guess. This is beautiful – certainly on the conservative side of what Newton could do, but none the less excellent for its power held in reserve. 12. This one drove me crazy. I can’t come up with the name of the tune. Anyway, it sounds like Clifford Jordan playing it. The bass solo is a little breathless, but everything else is just perfect. The arc of the tune – switching to double time, sticks instead of brushes, etc. – is a little predictable, but it’s so good that you don’t care. Again, some masters at work. 13. I wasn’t crazy about this, but I think that says more about my tastes than about the music itself. I kept waiting for it to go somewhere else, but to be fair, that didn’t seem to be the point. Good playing all around, just not really my thing. 14. Music that’s too clean and slick already has a couple of strikes against it, in my opinion. This one was way too slick for me. The bass sound drove me crazy – not in a good way. And the rhythm section was busy, but not in any kind of interactive or conversational way – they sounded like they were throwing in a bunch of stuff because they could, not because it added to the music. The trumpet solo was good, though. I didn’t notice when you sent me the disc that this track was chopped off, or I would have asked you if that was your intention. 15. This is “Ad Infinitum” by Carla Bley, and I think it’s her band playing it, although I’ve never heard this recording. What a great composer – or at least tune writer, which is a pretty big part of being a jazz composer. Is that Gary Valente on trombone? Nice track. Art Farmer did a great version of this tune for Atlantic in 1965. 16. One of the grandfathers of New Orleans R & B piano, Tuts Washington. His rhythm was a little wonky at times, but that’s okay – he had a lot of soul. Tuts was a big influence on Professor Longhair, and so on NOLA R & B in general. Thanks for including this one. Edit: I should have added that this is from Tuts' Rounder album New Orleans Piano Professor. Thanks for a great BFT - I'm looking forward to reading what everybody else has to say. I have this track on Mos' Scocious: The Dr. John Anthology on Rhino. They say it's Lee Allen. I knew that, and that is why I emailed Louisiana Music Factory, because the musician credits for the song on Mos' Scocious do not look correct to me. Those credits omit the trumpet and conga players, for example. Also, there is that credit on the back of the Ace Records Story LP for Alvin "Red" Tyler. The sax breaks on "Sahara" do not sound like the Lee Allen solos I know from so many other New Orleans R&B songs. It could be Allen, but I find it not obvious. I'll compare it to some other Red Tyler tenor solos from that period and see what I think.
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Thanks, Paul!
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I have this track on Mos' Scocious: The Dr. John Anthology on Rhino. They say it's Lee Allen. Your ability to identify obscure cuts is amazing to me. I just have a ridiculous record collection, and the first half of this BFT was right in my wheelhouse. The second half - not so much.
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Stopped at a little junk store out in the country today - they had some records, so I asked if they had any 78s. The owner brought out a stack - only about 15, but there were some great blues and R & B records among them. I bought eight discs; so far I have cleaned and spun these: Muddy Waters - Forty Days & Forty Nights/All Aboard (Chess) Frankly, I bought this more as an object than a record. Somebody back in 1955 loved this record - they played it over and over, but without changing needles very often. Luckily, they liked "Forty Days," which I have on CD, better than "All Aboard," which I don't. "Forty Days" is so worn that playing it is pretty much pointless, but "All Aboard" is still listenable. I love the twin harps of Little Walter and James Cotton. Kid King's Combo - Chocolate Sundae/Greasy Feet (Excello) This, on the other had, is near mint. It's a great little R & B instrumental, with a really nice alto player. Anyone know who was in this band? The Treniers - Plenty of Money/Go! Go! Go! (Okeh promo) Sweet! Sugar Boy and His Can Cutters - Overboard/I Don't Know What I'll Do (Checker) This was the real find - Sugarboy Crawford's first record, and it's a wild one. And it's in excellent condition. Part of me wanted to tell the guy at the store to sell it on Ebay for 20 times what I paid. But I'm glad I took it home. Great record. And I picked up a few more early Jewish/Yiddish records a few days ago. The best one is an outstanding klezmer disc from 1917 - Abe Schwartz's band masquerading as "Yiddisher Orchester" again, playing "Biem Reben's Sideh" and "Sadegurer Chused'l." There's some very good clarinet playing - it's not Dave Tarras, but I don't know who it is.
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As usual for me, I'm splitting my answers into a couple of posts. This will make me look better, because I knew a lot of the stuff in the first half. I listened to everything at least twice, and only looked things up in my own collection. 1. This is young Mac Rebennack, before he was Dr. John. The tune is “Sahara,” recorded at Cosimo Matassa’s famous studio on Governor Nicholls Street in New Orleans. I’ve got to wonder about this from a commercial standpoint – what was the target audience for this single? But in any case, this has a great feel. I don’t know what percentage of the tenor solos on New Orleans R & B records from this period are by “Mr. Lee” Allen, but it must be around 60%. He sounds great here. And Charles “Hungry” Williams’ drumming deserves a lot of the credit for the success of this track. I like this one very much. 2. “Carefree,” from one of Sun Ra’s last albums, Destination Unknown. For a long time it was hard for me to accept a Sun Ra album without John Gilmore, but he was ill and didn’t make this tour. Tyrone Hill is the trombone soloist, and he is very passionate here. This was recorded after Ra had his stroke, but his keyboard playing sounds pretty good. The ensemble is tighter than Ra’s bands were sometimes, but this still cooks hard. Outstanding. 3. I don’t know that many jazz oboists, but this sounds more like Yusef Lateef than any other oboist I know. So I’ll make the deeply profound statement that it’s either Yusef or someone I don’t know. What surprised me most about about this track was my reaction to it. It’s a well-played, interesting composition with good solos – and it doesn’t touch me at all. I’m not sure why, except that the slick mixing and mastering doesn’t help – the sound needs less sheen and more grit. 4. Well, Johnny Otis, I assume from the chant at the end. This is a nice, greasy big band piece, from the late 1940s, I’d guess. The solos are good, except that the tenor player sounds like he’s copying Paul Quinichette rather than Lester Young. Maybe it is Quinichette, but if so this is not his best work. Everything else about this performance is good. Another winner. 5. The John Kirby Sextet playing Grieg’s “Anitra’s Dance.” This is a lot of fun – a very clever arrangement. You can’t really tell from this totally-arranged piece, but Charlie Shavers and Billy Kyle never sounded better than with Kirby. This band could really play some jazz, but this is more or less a soufflé. Nothing wrong with that – I like this soufflé. 6. A broadcast recording of the Benny Goodman band playing Mary Lou Williams’ arrangement of “Roll ‘Em.” This band could get pretty hot, as they do here. Harry James wasn’t a genius, but in his early days could be a pretty exciting jazz player. Later on I guess he played “Ciribirbin” too many times. Great sounding sax section. I had to look up who was playing that meaty rhythm guitar – I should have known that it was Allen Reuss. I love the fact that Jess Stacy isn’t tempted to take the easy way out during his solo – I’m sure everyone was expecting some boogie. Goodman’s solo is good – not great. Overall, this is a great performance that shows what the fuss was all about. 7. Damn, I had forgotten how good this was! This is the Bennie Moten Orchestra from 1932, with Bill Basie on piano. It could almost be Fats Waller. I love this evidence that the later spareness of his playing was strictly a musical decision, not the result of lack of technique. Ben Webster is searching for himself here, and not coming up with much more than Coleman Hawkins. I like Lips Page’s spiky playing. And the band is a force of nature. 8. Three strong musicians playing “Tin Tin Deo.” The pianist sounds like John Hicks to me, but I have I feeling that’s going to just seem stupid when I find out who it really is. Nothing fancy here, but a masterful performance. I'll post the rest soon.
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John Hardy Leadbelly Old Ironsides
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Some amazing stuff, there, MG! Tonight: Sun Ra - Hours After (Black Saint) Gil Evans (Ampex promo) I've been listening to this amazing, mysterious album for over 30 years - my first copy was on 8-track tape. There are so many layers happening at the same time - it's like a Jackson Pollock painting. Beautiful.
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Agree, I have a turntable with two tonearms and two cartriges, mono and stereo. And the mono cart is really great in tracking the mono records, it's such great in cancelling the noise and pops and clicks, that I saved a lot of money buying mono records graded far less then NM, go figure. I recently bought an Ortofon cartridge for my stereo, only to find that it wouldn't fit my headshell - it's kind of oddly shaped. So I bought an Ortofon headshell, and I'm going to get a mono cartridge for my old headshell. I'm looking forward to it.
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According to the Lord discography, it looks like it was the 1985 Blue Note LP co-led by Jackie McLean - It's About Time.
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The Great Jazz Trio - Direct From L.A. (East Wind) Using this direct-to-disc recording to test-drive my new Ortofon cartridge. It sounds pretty spectacular on my modest system.