sgcim
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Found a tribute concert for him online with the dates 1959-2010, sadly. RIP to one of the greats.
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Jazz with Wordless Vocals - Choruses or Single Voice
sgcim replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Recommendations
I think it was from Spellbound. Thanks for the Fifth Dimension (and all of the other tracks!) track! I've always liked them and the great Bones Howe production- now I love them! -
Jazz with Wordless Vocals - Choruses or Single Voice
sgcim replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Recommendations
Sorry, I thought I cued it up to the track, which is Yearning, written and vocalised by GS himself. GS and Gary McFarland appealed to swingin' couples of the 60s so much, that they included a track of GS' in a swingin' couples party scene in "The Queen's Gambit", which incidentally was written by the same novelist who wrote "The Hustler", and "The Man Who Fell To Earth"! Despite the album cover, that Bert Kaempfert music sounds like it should appeal to swingin' couples on Geritol! -
Jazz with Wordless Vocals - Choruses or Single Voice
sgcim replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Recommendations
I do Don't know if there are words to this one, but if there are, it's in French, and it might as well be wordless to me: Then the SU came up with this one: -
Jazz with Wordless Vocals - Choruses or Single Voice
sgcim replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Recommendations
How could you possibly forget the score you posted a month or two ago TTK? Taken from a Robert Sheckley short story, with Marcello and Ursula Undress: Gabor Szabo recorded this one, and though it's not a chorus, it's got wordless vocals (like a lot of Gary McFarland things). I made up lyrics to it a long time ago about a swingin' 60s couple running into trouble, because the woman just couldn't get hip to the swingin' 60s decadent lifestyle: -
Heard some great things by him on You Tube. Anyone ever hear of this great Argentinian jazz/jazzfusion guitarist? Is he still around? He must be in his late 50's. Played with Paquito DeRivera in NY for a short time, otherwise stayed local.
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Happy Birthday to one of the last living greats!
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Right on LW; it's what makes jazz, jazz, or jazz oriented.
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Sounds great, but the article said online not onsite, so it will be accessible to everyone. They would have to contact the estates of the artists involved and work out some type of deal with them, so don't hold your breath waiting.
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Probably drove him into photography. RIP, Mr Laird.
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Yeah, he came much later, but I lump all of those guys into one big group.
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He had been using that line for ages before he used it to publicly disgrace and humiliate me. He just saw me with my head down, and spontaneously used it on me. I was working at a big theater in NY as part of the house band, along with such greats as Charlie Fowlkes, George Barrow, Steve Small, Jimmy Knepper, etc... The shows would always have three acts we'd have to play for- a comedian, an opener, and then the star. I did so many of those shows, I can't remember who the star was- Eddie Fisher, Sandler and Young, Mitzi Gaynor, Sister Sledge, Connie Francis, Al Martino, Jerry Vale, Melba Moore, Michael Amante, etc...? It's all a big blur.
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I did his show for a week, and I got tired of hearing the same jokes, so brought a book to read while I was in the pit. He saw me reading and he said to the audience, "I tell ya I get no respect, even the guitar player isn't listening to me anymore- he's reading a book!" It was a huge theater, and the whole place was laughing at me. The contractor motioned me to put the book away. He was not happy.
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My favorite one is on The Mothers of Invention album "Live at the Fillmore East 1971, On "Little House I Used To Live In", there's a lightening fast transition to a short drum solo, and Zappa exclaims, "Ainsleydunbar",condensing a four syllable name into one syllable in the space of a quick quarter note. I don't know what he did when Dunbar left the group, but I can't imagine that song without "Ainsleydubar" in it.
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Pat astounded Berklee teachers by transcribing and playing the entire Wes Montgomery album "Smokin' at the Half Note" when he auditioned for the college, so Wes' ideas are strongly implanted in his brain. I hear some Kenny Burrell ideas in his playing, from the albums that KB made in the 70s, like Asphalt Canyon Suite. He acknowledged to Jon Raney that his father Jimmy Raney was also an influence on his playing. That would also link him with grant Green, who was also Raney influenced. I thought I had a Volker K. LP, but it turned out to be Rune Gustaffson!
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Yeah, he lacks a lot of those affectations that people like Mark Murphy bring to the music. Like Bobby Hackett once said, "Just play the melody!"
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Kenton was always obsessed with being the hippest of the hip. Then he wound up with Graettinger, and he gradually realized there was a limit to hipness, when the records stopped selling, and the concert halls started emptying.
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I've used "Second Hand Songs".
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That's the only Kenton record i have!
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He seemed to write on the "Hey I'm a hip cat lookin' for a snooty little cutie" level in general, but "Daddy" was a swinging tune we used to do. He co-wrote this for Julie London, which seems more imaginative: I think he must have been responsible for the cringe-worthy lyrics to Hefti's "Girl Talk"!
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That's a nice one from the school of chromatically descending progression ("My Little Boat", "Early Autumn", "Lover" etc...) / initially happy, ultimately sad lyrics school of songwriting.
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He might have just written the main title, and farmed the other part of the score to another writer. Who would trash LITW?
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Wow! I was about to give up on it after hearing the Mercer and Lambert versions, but after that, it just kept getting better and better. That nauseating pronouncement of "It's the singer, not the song" is yet again found simplistic. It's the arrangement, It's the song, it's the singer, it's the accompanists, It's JBB! Of course Reeves and Wilson win out, but Mathis' version showed how expressive the bridge could actually be. Brooks 'came a long way from St Louis' on that one. Thanks! Yeah, I lost a lot of respect for Mundy after that phone call... My guitar teacher at the time said that ML had ghost writers working for him. He never wrote anything in that vein before or after, so who knows?
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WOW! Monday Michiru! How is she not a household name? What do people want? Everything is there, great vocalist, great tunes, great lyrics, great grooves, superb solos! You can't give them anymore than that. I guess she's doing okay considering she's 57, and has made over 200 recordings. The daughter of Toshiko and Charlie Mariano! Spanky Wilson, another 'how could I never have heard of her' vocalist. Sublime, and a great tune. Les McCann with Eddie Harris. Nice slow groove. Definitely possibilities... I've already done one Nascimento tune, the masterpiece with Turrentine and Deodato's genius string arr., and have been looking for others that are just as good, and so far "Miracle of the Fishes" is the closest yet. Thanks also for the hint on "Over the Weekend"; JBB is a huge fave of mine. I'll try to track it down. Thanks for all the great stuff! When I used to play with clarinetist Joe Dixon, I wrote out Lake in the woods from SIHH, and we recorded it. Joe had to get permission from Mundell Lowe to record it, and I was there when he phoned him up. Mundell said, "What that little POS?" I couldn't believe it. I guess he liked the faster, swing stuff more than that one, but everyone who's heard it, loved it. Phil Schaap has the only recording of it on his website for $25. A good singer I used to work with put lyrics to it, and wanted to record it too, but he was under the impression I composed it, and when he found out it was already revorded by ML, didn't want to record it because he'd have to pay ML. Thanks so much for the "Lonely Beat". I can't do anything better that SW did with it, but I'm gonna transcribe it. I love that type of stuff. Raksin has something like that for a noir film he did, but for some reason he didn't like it. The Waxman thing is also great, but it's probably been done by someone already, and you can't improve it anyway. I loved that Tenth Victim theme when I first saw the movie. Thanks for reminding me of it. The Kenyon Hopkins thing is nice. I'd have to internalize it a little more before I could think of what to do with it. Toss me a Scalpel would make another great transcription. There's really nothing I could add to a lot of these, because they've already been done so well, but some of them are too good to not transcribe them. Thanks! You've made up for your sabbatical.
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Some great suggestions as usual. I was thinking about doing something from Arthur Lee (Love) , although Bachrach wrote that one, and BB put down Love's version for getting all the chords wrong!The orchestrator of "Forever Changes went on to form his own big band, which is phenomenal. I think we mentioned David Angel's band here once.Definitely an overlooked genius: Manfred Mann's albums are a great suggestion, because they had someone in the group who was a master at taking good tunes that had mediocre arrangements, and making great songs out of them. I'll have to do some research on Mike Vickers; he was probably the guy in the group responsible for that. After reading a book on modern British jazz, I always wanted to hear Septober Energy, but never got around to it. Thanks! The Westbrook album sounds great. I'll check out every cut.
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