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mjazzg

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Everything posted by mjazzg

  1. Transatlantic delivery achieved today. Great stuff, thanks CT
  2. Charlie Haden seems to now fall under the Americana and Tin Pan Alley umbrellas. No longer the rebel he once was. I hear what you're saying but he sounded pretty 'rebellious' with the Liberation Music Orch a year or two ago. Sure he'd step up with that suggested frontine. I'm not convinced. I read about a recent club appearance (last couple of years or so) where he was but a shell of his former self. that's a shame. That he's played so long with his hearing impairment is testament to his dedication if nothing else.
  3. thanks to Clifford T for pointing this my way. Mighty pleased he did
  4. Very true. keeps reminding me of LPs I wish I owned/had heard/need to hear
  5. Charlie Haden seems to now fall under the Americana and Tin Pan Alley umbrellas. No longer the rebel he once was. I hear what you're saying but he sounded pretty 'rebellious' with the Liberation Music Orch a year or two ago. Sure he'd step up with that suggested frontine.
  6. are we discounting Charlie Haden for any reason? gets my vote
  7. I've gone for the under-50 just because I can just still be defined as "youngish" if I do and because otherwise the list would be unwieldly, so... Steve Coleman Jason Adasiewicz Rob Mazurek Brad Mehldau Mary Halvorsen Ken Vandermark
  8. I've bought hundreds of these from Jazz Loft over the years and they really are excellent. However it does seem a bit daft to have them sent half-way round the world. Does anyone know of a UK stockist for them? Not me. Mine all come trans-atlantic. maybe we're staring a business opportunity in the face here - limited clientele, i grant you
  9. It's well worth a listen. I've had a couple of spins and CD2, a suite comprised of Greek traditional tunes works beautifully. The arrangement by Farazis does a great job of facilitating a coming-together of the two disparate music traditions. CD1 is less immediately successful, to my ears, although there's a great Dream Weaver. Lloyd's sax and Farantouri's vocals blend beautifully a lot of the time. Maybe less successfully when Farantouri is more foregrounded with the band 'backing' As you'd anticipate the playing is top drawer from everyone but Lloyd just gets better and better as far as I can hear - the tone is luxurious I am a little jealous of people who are into Lloyd. He cranks out albums at a decent pace, and yet each album seems to have its own identity through changing line-ups or themes. It seems like an exciting time to be a Lloyd fan. Unfortunately, his sound clashes with my ears. I keep hoping that the next Lloyd album I hear will be the one to get me over, so to speak. Cheers. I have a similar frustration with Jarrett not that he changes line-ups but he does crank them out - as much as any ECM artist does, anyway. I've stopped buying them to see if it's the one that will 'click'!
  10. It's well worth a listen. I've had a couple of spins and CD2, a suite comprised of Greek traditional tunes works beautifully. The arrangement by Farazis does a great job of facilitating a coming-together of the two disparate music traditions. CD1 is less immediately successful, to my ears, although there's a great Dream Weaver. Lloyd's sax and Farantouri's vocals blend beautifully a lot of the time. Maybe less successfully when Farantouri is more foregrounded with the band 'backing' As you'd anticipate the playing is top drawer from everyone but Lloyd just gets better and better as far as I can hear - the tone is luxurious
  11. see you there (I wish)
  12. yes Eastbourne was still shut in September - looking very 'austerity'. Wish I'd known about the Nash
  13. mjazzg

    David S. Ware

    nice short film about DSW here http://dlf.tv/2011/david-s-ware/#
  14. hope to be there next Monday. Only just discovered excellent pallant house after a trip to the Lucienne Day exhibition earlier in the year. My last exhibitions were very informative John Piper retrospective at Eastbourne and the John Craxton at tate britain, not forgetting a second visit to the Miro at Tate Modern
  15. The reason I don't get on with Clapton. From wikipedia entry for UK organisation Rock and Racism . Originally conceived as a one-off concert with a message against racism, Rock Against Racism was founded in 1976 by Red Saunders, Roger Huddle and others. According to Huddle, "it remained just an idea until August 1976" when Eric Clapton made a drunken declaration of support for former Conservative minister Enoch Powell (known for his anti-immigration Rivers of Blood speech) at a concert in Birmingham.[2] Clapton told the crowd that England had "become overcrowded" and that they should vote for Powell to stop Britain from becoming "a black colony". He also told the audience that Britain should "get the foreigners out, get the wogs out, get the coons out", and then he repeatedly shouted the National Front slogan "Keep Britain White". doesn't affect his ability to play guitar - rock or blues - but sure affects my intention to have anything to do with him, Wynton or not
  16. I came to his music far too late - maybe even via this board but for the last few years the BGO comps have had regular spins. Simply great music I remember his Jazz library. Such a very thoughtful and forthright commentator
  17. YES! Great album. Another vote for that one and for Worshippers come nigh
  18. Most of Paul Motian's drum solos seem to qualify to me. Also Barry Altshcul's on Paul Bley's Ballads [ECM]
  19. PM soon on following: Sylvie Courvoisier + Mark Feldman Quartet - Hotel du Nord - (Intakt) 7 SLD with Thomas Morgan and Gerry Hemingway! European Movement Jazz Orchestra - Live in Coimbra - (Clean Feed) 6 Massive. Unfamiliar dudes. Simon H. Fell - Positions & Descriptions - (Clean Feed) 7 orchestral madness with Joe Morris, Steve Beresford, Tim Berne, and everyone else. Thomas Heberer's Clarino - Klippe - (Clean Feed) 7 great trio w/ Pascal Niggenkemper + Joachim Badenhorst. Spare copy.
  20. a pleasure, enjoy. not much of a birthday present but something. many happy returns (oops here comes a moderator...)
  21. Thanks Headman. have you come across this site? http://www.vertigoswirl.com/index.html certainly done their research but I didn't investigate to see if there's an answer to your initial question
  22. I've only recently been starting to fill the huge gap in my knowledge that is John Stevens' discography. i've the two CDs you mention, Headman and I'm intrigued to know more about the Away discs. Now I know they're not on CD but how do they compare stylistically to the Nessa or Emanem (my only points of reference) or indeed to any other contemporary bands? sorry to widen the thread, not an attempt to hijack, honest!
  23. I couldn't agree more - everything he does strikes the right note with me. I'm looking forward to hearing the third Sao Paolo Underground just released on Cuneiform. Star licker also includes Adasiewicsz who's becoming a similar beacon of quality
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