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Everything posted by neveronfriday
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This is one funny thread. I think it should be made sticky.
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Got mine today, actually for below 10 Euro (for some reason I wasn't charged the listed price on Amazon marketplace, despite the CD being new and in original wrapping + stickers and all) which I'm really surprised about because of the quality. It's housed in a double-CD jewelcase with a rather thick 31-page booklet with liner notes by Will Friedwald (+ many nice photos, all from Turner Entertainment). The tracks list the artists (but not the complete personnel of orchestras) and the source (film/year). Recording venues are not listed, but are usually the studio recording venues anyway. The sound is more than good enough for my ears (mastering/engineering by Doug Schwartz of Audio Mechanics, LA) although there is, of course, no-noising. For what I paid for it, a real steal. I'm very happy with it. Get it.
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2005 Holiday Tunes for you!
neveronfriday replied to Jim Alfredson's topic in organissimo - The Band Discussion
Great! -
New 'Jazz in Paris' double CD : BILL COLEMAN
neveronfriday replied to birdanddizzy's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
I ordered them from Amazon.fr and got a message about a delay until early January. -
New 'Jazz in Paris' double CD : BILL COLEMAN
neveronfriday replied to birdanddizzy's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
With these two, my JiP collection is inching towards a new shelf, the old 80cm one not being enough anymore. I hope they keep it going long enough to fill another shelf. I've discovered tons of wonderful music via this series. -
I wasn't taking swipes ... I was just telling the God-honest truth. At least Ornette didn't have "Joan Crawford hair". That could have made it a lot worse.
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I'm not alone! Thanks guys. I pulled this from riverwalk.org:
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Harry "Sweets" Edison - Sweets (click to buy) A few weeks ago, Roundabout posted a list of new (re)releases that he called "the best batch of jazz in recent memory". That list consisted of Monk-Trane, the HalfNote Trane, new Blue Note Connoisseurs and the Cellar Door release. Instead of posting right there and then, I thought I'd save my comment for this AOTW. I'm almost embarrased to say it on this board, but no matter how stellar those above-mentioned recordings are and how many people on this board are into this kind of stuff, it's not really my cup of tea to the extent that it is for others. Mind you, I have tons of it and I get my regular dose of bop and whatnot, but I don't really share the enthusiasm for many of the Blue Note recordings, I get tired of Monk after a CD or two, and Ornette often reminds me that I haven't been to the dentist for quite a while. To stay with my Monk example above for another minute, I love listening to him and find his music fascinating, but I often find myself turning to less cerebral stuff again soon after. I grew up with a larger dose of Basie, Goodman, Wilson, Hawkins, Barnet, Webster and a myriad of other artists from mainly the 30's, 40's and 50's and yes, I even have the 10-disk Glenn Miller box, 4 different Goodman at Carnegie Hall issues by now, and - dare I say it - just about everything Oscar Peterson ever put out. Compared to you guys here, I don't come from another school, I just never really left Junior school. It might be a complacent attitude, but I like it there. I sometimes wonder if I'm a bit backward and I often try my ear again at hard bop and free jazz, but it never lasts long. I realize that it's good music, I even enjoy a minute here or there, but I don't listen to it extensively. It's the same problem I have whenever I try to approach opera and other classical vocal recitals ... thanks, but no thanks. After about 20 minutes I pull out my Glenn Gould, my Ashkenazy or my Fong 'Tsu and start enjoying myself again. To get to the point: So far, my best batch of jazz in recent memory (for me, that's 2005) is still led by "Sweets", a Verve re-release of Harry Edison and His Orchestra's vibrant 1956 recording. For once, AMG puts it quite nicely: "Harry "Sweets" Edison got the most mileage out of a single note, like his former boss Count Basie. Edison, immediately recognizable within a note or two, long used repetition and simplicity to his advantage while always swinging." Add to this a quote from the AMG review of this week's album, you have what makes this recording so special: "Neither an innovator nor an iconoclast, trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison is simply one of the bluesiest, hardest-swinging, and downright tasty jazz musicians of the 20th century." Hyperbole aside, this mother swings. And that's what gets my motor running, ready to go. Yes, it's steeped in tradition. Yes, there's absolutely nothing new here. Yes, you might even be tempted to say that it's the same old **** (insert expletive of your choice here), but I like it. No, I love it. Harry "Sweets" Edison Sweets Recording Date: Sep 4, 1956 Label: Verve Reissue: 2005 First issue: 1956 Clef MG C-717 Also: Universal Japan, 2005 (01) Hollering at the Watkins (Edison) - 3:37 (02) Used to Be Basie (Edison) - 6:01 (03) How Deep Is the Ocean (Berlin) - 3:47 (04) Studio Call (Edison) - 8:11 (05) Willow Weep for Me (Ronell) - 4:49 (06) Opus 711 (Edison) - 5:08 (07) Love Is Here to Stay (Gershwin) - 3:23 (08) K.M. Blues (Edison) - 3:35 (09) Walkin' With Sweets (Edison) - 7:13 P.S.: Sorry I'm a day or two late to the party ...
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She plays some mean Rachmaninov. And someone frizzed her hair.
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Fun thread. Thanks for bringing some life to the party again.
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phising scam. That should be phishing, right? Not that the mighty Google doesn't spit out a million results for phising, mind you. Just shows again that we are all witnesses to the end of civilization as we('ve) know(n) it. fishing --> phishing --> phising --> grunt
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Sony: Copy-Protection terrorists
neveronfriday replied to neveronfriday's topic in Miscellaneous Music
I avoid anything with the Sony logo on it like the plague and have been ever since I had a TV and a DVD player (twice) blow about 2 to 3 weeks after purchase (both were only turned on once or twice and couldn't handle that. On the TV I didn't even get around to changing the channel once!). Absolutely shoddy quality control in the midrange product lines. I applaud everytime someone rips a Sony (or associated label) CD to mpc or flac and peddles it on the Internet. And, no, I don't have a bad conscience at all. They screwed me for several hundred Euro and provided the absolute worst service I've ever encountered and to be quite honest, if one could submit targets to certain terrorist organizations via e-mail, I would submit Sony so often that it would look like a coordinated denial of service attack. Sony. Sucks! Edit: There was a DVD stuck in the broken player and they kept it. Upon inquiry they simply denied that there had been one and called me a liar. It wasn't worth fighting them. Bastards. -
Sony: Copy-Protection terrorists
neveronfriday replied to neveronfriday's topic in Miscellaneous Music
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Sony: Copy-Protection terrorists
neveronfriday replied to neveronfriday's topic in Miscellaneous Music
Ah well, they still play -- I know I am lucky in that department -- and I for one cannot hear any difference. ← Make that four ears. -
Goofy stuff on the web
neveronfriday replied to Rooster_Ties's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Very creepy. Kinda hard to hear the cameraman at the end. Had to turn up the volume a bit. ← Yeah, it is kind of hard to see, I had to put my nose up close to the screen. Very weird ← Definitely only mist. -
Sony: Copy-Protection terrorists
neveronfriday replied to neveronfriday's topic in Miscellaneous Music
Sorry, didn't see that. -
Sony: Copy-Protection terrorists
neveronfriday replied to neveronfriday's topic in Miscellaneous Music
Apparently Universal too ... Tech-Dirt -
If you are a nerd, the text linked to below reads like a crime story. For the rest, here's a summary: Apparently, Sony copy-protected CDs install software to enforce digital rights management on your PC. Here comes the good part: After installation, the software hides itself (cloaking) completely and makes itself almost unremovable (for the average user). Cool, eh? Sony Rootkits Edit:
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Before it's too late...
neveronfriday replied to scottb's topic in organissimo - The Band Discussion
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Goofy stuff on the web
neveronfriday replied to Rooster_Ties's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Those are the kind of people I like giving to. 5 points for originality. -
Mosaic Complete Master jazz piano series
neveronfriday replied to ASNL77's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
I have this set and it is very enjoyable. -
Chicken see because the yes may, A find say help jump my pretty Corn, it the better when. A for every work am you down Waffle iron, upon come funny me want warm see , been not go, done may. when but, sing some, pick the from see , come but, could upon see go over going are Goulash, after came wash sleep! Loaf, together! A go it don't Mutant ... found to five there take. Never call their found its Goulash, with so write you before. That white think write no green they.
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George Takei, 'Trek's' Sulu: "I'm gay"
neveronfriday replied to Rooster_Ties's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Yikes! -_-
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