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mikeweil

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Everything posted by mikeweil

  1. Martyjazz - What video is this ? Is it readily available. Where can I get it ? I'm salivating. ← Same here!!!
  2. Don Ellis - Autumn Hank Mobley - No Room For Squares McCoy Tyner - Extensions Stan Getz - Sweet Rain Wynton Kelly - Piano Sonny Rollins - The Bridge Horace Silver & The Jazz Messengers Kenny Dorham - Quiet Kenny Ray Bryant - Trio (Prestige) Kenny Burrell - Midnight Blue Hubert Laws - In The Beginning Abbey Lincoln - Straight Ahead Lucky Thompson - Tricotism Miles Davis - Kind of Blue John Coltrane - Transition Cal Tjader - Concerts by the Sea (CD version) Max Roach - We Insist: Freedom Now! Mongo Santamaria - Afro American Latin Sonny Clark Trio (Time) Tadd Dameron - The Magic Touch Kenny Clarke Meets the Detroit Jazzmen Ray Brown - Walk On Antonio Carlos Jobim - Stone Flower Moacir Santos - Coisas Vince Guaraldi - Trio (with Eddie Duran, the first one) Julius Watkins - Vol. 1 & 2 (Blue Note CD) Johnny Griffin - The Cat Bennie Maupin - The Jewel In The Lotus
  3. I hope you will succeed - the band was kicking that day! I find the live quartet recordings with Frankie Dunlop are slightly superior to those with Riley, who was the more conventional drummer of the two.
  4. Well, there were Legacy CDs of previously unreleased live recordings of The Byrds and Mike Bloomfield, Miles Davis ..... so there's still some hope. I'd certainly buy them the day they're out.
  5. I have only "Remember Me", and always thought it a good record. You can't expect a 1970's record to sound as fresh as a 1960's date when this style was new. For its time, it's a very good record with spirited blowing.
  6. mikeweil

    Larry Young

    Well, Guarabe where Clare Fischer overdubs several layers of Rhodes for orchestral effect on the first track, is nice, too, but not crazy ....
  7. While these are categorized as new releases on SA-CD.net, they all seem to be reissues of titles previously available on XRCD - which were limited editions, IIRC. At least they were new to me ......
  8. mikeweil

    Larry Young

    Talking 'bout George Duke - those MPS albums he did in the 1970's have some mean keyboards on them - especiall the first one, Faces in Reflection, which never was on CD, to my knowledge. He does a live solo on it with Wurlitzer electric and Moog including several effects pedals that's really great!
  9. IIRC new age music was not a label to sell things when the Köln Concert was first released. But the newage pianists - George Winston in particular - owe a lot to Jarrett - they watered him down as far as possible. Overrated? I dunno - I think it's largely a matter of taste. But I have to admit I too prefer him as an ensemble player, especially in the "American" quartet of the 1970's. And I prefer solo piano with a little more "meat" - or more lyricism - but again, it's all a matter of taste.
  10. This was Campi's label - he has the rights to most, if not all CBBB recordings - everybody wanting to do a reissue has to lease them from him. His standards are high, and rightly so. Obviously the Schema/Rearward people have a direct line to him.
  11. Will you please report here once you've listened to it?
  12. So that Teddy Charles session with Mingus was his recording debut .... my hat off to this! What a debut! Just happened to listen to this yesterday and again this morning. What an original player! Thanks for the disco, Mike!
  13. I found four releases on SA-CD.net - all seem to have the late Ray Brown participating. Has anybody heard about these hybrid SACDs? Sexy covers, like Venus - seems to be a selling factor for jazz in Japan. "Mack The Knife" Lionel Hampton Ray Brown "I'm Walking" Ray Brown "Easy Walker" Larry Fuller Ray Brown Jeff Hamilton "Lillie" Milt Jackson Ichiro Masuda
  14. Label: Foa Records - http://www.foarecords.com/ Serial: FRGJ-2004 Title: Milt Jackson: Lillie Milt Jackson Ichiro Masuda Details: 1. I Owes Ya (Milt Jackson) 2. What You Say Dr. "J"? (James Williams) 3. Lillie (Milt Jackson) 4. Used To Be Jackson (Ray Brown) 5. Compassion (Milt Jackson) 6. Our Delight (Tadd Dameron) 7. Ne Afterglow (Milt Jackson) 8. Bags Groove (Milt Jackson) 9. The Very Thought Of You (Ray Noble) Found this here.
  15. The John Lewis "Afternoon in Paris" is still missing in my collection ..... could be dangerous for my bank account.
  16. Now how many albums will do this? Strangely enough this reminds me of an interview with - Anthony Braxton, no less: He said he wanted his music to be really useful, like what a baker or craftsman did, that people get warm feet from it ...
  17. mikeweil

    Larry Young

    If you count the mallet instrument bars .... vibes and marimba, played by Tjader, and acoustic piano, electric piano, clavinet and synth handled by Egberto Gismonti and George Duke (as "Dawili Gonga"). But all in a conventional manner. I really love this album, almost wore it out, but it's not earth shaking as far as adventurous keyboards are concerned.
  18. Though I didn't have a dad playing such music - wish there would have been - I agree that they - and Guaraldi's work in general - deserve serious discussion. We should remember how hard it is to make music that is easy to listen to and entertaining and has something to offer to the dedicated fan as well. I tend to dislike jazzoid version of Latin music, but his work well even for my critical ears
  19. There was a second two-CD box Gigi Gampi produced, that included, among others, that particular album. I got it directly from Campi. I have the first one, too. PM me in case .....
  20. Must have overlooked this the first time around .... Invitation is among my favourite Jackson records, as it is not a mere blowing session like most of his albums, but a nicely arranged date with a peculiar mood and great sidemen. Bags and Kenny already recorded together in the late 1940's (Savoy? at least there is a Savoy reissue LP I have with this) with excellent results. Long live "the King"!
  21. Those Burrell/Galbraith tracks never were on CD IIRC - they only were included on some Burrell LP compilation issued in the 1970's - I had that one for a while, they're pretty good. Would have been great bonus material for the Two Guitars album CD, but no ....
  22. mikeweil

    Larry Young

    Geoff Keezer is a crazy keyboard player of the younger generation - at least that's what Christian McBride calls him. There is a Charnett Moffett disc with Keezer and Victor Lewis that displays it pretty well, and there was a download of a concert at GMN with an electric set that's very good.
  23. mikeweil

    Larry Young

    He was with Blood, Sweat & Tears for most of the 1970's and didn't have much time for sideman dates. I love these albums you mentioned, too.
  24. Hope you had a swingin', groovin' one!
  25. Speaking of Tiny Grimes - the OJC CD of Calling the Blues does not have the two additional tracks from that session issued on a later compilation LP. As far as adding bonus tracks is concerned, the OJCs are pretty inconsistent. Most of the times they include some, in the case of a Gil Mellé reissue it was a complete session, but often some are missing. I would have added the tracks issued on the Booker Ervin LP Groovin' HIgh to the respective sessions. The Kenny Dorham This Is The Moment does not include the blues tune Optional from these sesssions. What I find equally annoying is the fact that sometimes they do separate OJC CDs where two related LPs would fit on one twofer CD without problems: I just burned me both Herbie Mann LPs with Bobby Jaspar on one 72 minute CD - a perfect twofer, but no, they reissued it as two OJC CDs. Same with some Teddy Charles material. On the contrary, the Gil Mellé or James Moody material was reissued in pefect form .... One more for the Orphan list: One track left off the twofer of Patrice Rushen's Prelusion/Before the dawn.
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