sgcim
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Everything posted by sgcim
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I'd heard that Phil Dwyer has become a lawyer, and retired from the music biz. Is he still playing?
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Out of the younger guys I've heard. Sam Dillon, has went through the insane discipline, sideman credit accumulation, and whatever else it takes, to earn the admiration of Ray Drummond, Joe Chambers, Jimmy Heath and a lot of other people of that caliber who he works with. He just released his first album, "Out in the Open", and from what I've heard of the previews, every note swings, the notes come popping out of his horn like Trane's did, and he wasn't afraid to include a jazz version of Hendrix's "Third Stone From the Sun" that doesn't pander to, uh, pander bears? I've had the demoralizing experience of having to follow his soloing in a big band we played in, and the only excuse I can give is that I was working an exhausting day gig during that period, and on the one day I had off, I did earn a nod from him after my solo. I think he's in his late 20s, or early 30s.
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When I heard one of those versions of Nardis it scared the hell out of me. I had no desire to hear it again. The same with his coked up version of "In Your Own Sweet Way". Unfortunately, the Evans fanatic I play with insists on playing at that coked-up tempo. It should be pointed out that regardless of the experience with the "Explorations" session, there are a lot of CDs that have been put out after Evans' death that Evans insisted not be released. Add to that the numerous bootleg live CDs that have been released, and the only sure way of assessing Evans' legacy is to go by recordings released prior to his death.
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Yum, Mike make a good fillet!
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When you google 'marches to a different drummer', and come up with a lot of images of Doomberg, the apocalypse truly is nigh, and the anti-Christ is circling your house... Buckley and Nyro were similar in that they both rejected the music of their earlier successes, and just did whatever the heck they wanted to do, but Buckley took it way further out improvisation-wise than Nyro. Bass, Marimba, jazz guitar and percussion, no song structure, one chord, improvisational vocalise...
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I don't know about filleting PS; I usually throw the little ones away. AG and EC are another story, though...
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Houston qualifies for living legend status. It was like a breath of fresh air hearing him play after everyone else seemed to be competing with each other over who could play the most notes at the Phil Woods Memorial concert. Houston swung more, got a better sound out of his horn, played perfectly in tune, played better ideas and played with more soul than guys and gals half his age. In Grace Kelley's case, 1/4 his age!
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No direction ho-me I don't know what the croaker things are about. Must be a Texas thang...
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Yeah, I always wondered how those two snot noses would feel when they hit 70. We should wheel them over to a park bench sometime and shoot a video of them, and ask them ,How Does it Fe-el?
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Did Vince Guaraldi Peanuts Scores Inspire You to Learn Jazz?
sgcim replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Musician's Forum
Yeah, he plays a lot of that type of stuff. Gives him a very West Coast sound, where he used to live. He used to play in Papa John Creach's band, in another life. -
Garfunkel completely lost his voice a while ago, but claims in his book that he's almost got it all back. I don't know, I haven't heard him in years.
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Did Vince Guaraldi Peanuts Scores Inspire You to Learn Jazz?
sgcim replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Musician's Forum
We were just talking about Vince Guraldi's influence on us as kids on a gig this week. One guy just picked up a two month road gig playing the Charlie Brown Christmas Show, and thought of it as a great gig playing "sweet jazz" every night, rather than the typical Broadway stuff he had to play to make a living. The pianist said Guraldi's music had a strong influence on him as a kid, and I can hear it in his use of those chordal fills Guraldi played in some of this pianist's solos. I fell in love with "Christmas Time is Here" as a kid, and loved the mood that it created with chord progressions I'd never heard before (bVII+11, the #ivm7b5 descending thing), and starting the melody on the maj7 really knocked me out back then. -
Garfunkel once called him a little shrimp (or something like that) and said he would always be taller than him. I don't think Paul ever got over that... In the recent bio he's always complaining that he should be happy, because he's rich, talented, has written hit songs, etc..., but he keeps complaining that he's not happy, and has to keep seeing a shrink about it. Then he thought marrying Edie Brickell finally made him happy. Next thing you know, they're in court with EB telling the judge that she can't live with him anymore because he's such a dick...
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To get a good understanding of who exactly Smith was, I'd recommend reading his biography "Moonlight In Vermont", written by a British guitarist a few years ago. The difference in Smith's approach to jazz was his very different approach to rhythm in his single line solos.You don;t really notice it until you hear his recordings with his old buddy from the NBC Studio Orchestra, Hank Jones. Smith invariably takes the first solo on most songs, and everything seems fine, until Jones comes in for his solo. All of a sudden, it sounds like you're listening to a completely different style of music. The eighth notes become the tied triplets that all boppers used, instead of the almost classically even eighth notes that Smith was playing. and the syncopation boppers achieved by accenting the offbeats of said eighth notes appears, instead of Smith's accenting eighth notes on the beat. \ The 'troublemaker' Jones finishes his solo, and we're returned to Smith's world of even, unaccented eighth note lines that sound as if they were written out beforehand. On most of Smith's Roost recordings of the 50s, he uses the pianist Bob Pancoast, who sounds like a pianistic version of Smith, so we don't notice the difference in Smith's rhythmic conception as much as we did when Jones was playing with him on some of the Verve recordings of the 60s. When a writer informed Smith that he wanted to put out a book of transcriptions of Smith's single line solos, Smith's reaction was reportedly, "Why the heck would you want to do a book of my solos? Why don't you do a book of Jimmy Raney's solos? His lines were much hipper than mine." One of Raney's students claimed that Smith used to sit incognito in the back of clubs when Raney was playing in NY to figure out how Raney 'did it'. That would have to be verified by Jon Raney. The other side of Smith was his literally perfect technique, incredible beauty of sound, and astonishing solo guitar performances, all of which pretty much establish him as probably the greatest plectrum guitarist that ever lived. Van Eps switched to finger style playing from his early days of plectrum playing, and developed what he called his 'lap style' of playing the guitar, taking advantage of the contrapuntal aspects of the guitar, in addition to a very advanced sense of harmony. He added a seventh string to his guitar to give a fuller, almost pianistic range to his guitar playing. Smith accomplished this on a smaller level by tuning his lowest string down a whole step, from E to D. In addition to playing his great solo arrangements of standards, Van Eps was also an accomplished composer of solo guitar pieces.
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Smith's amazing accomplishment on those recordings was being able to perform those classical guitar staples entirely with a plectrum, rather than the standard finger style practice. They came out too late for me to loan the CD to my classical guitar teacher in graduate school, to get his opinion of Smith's heretical use of a pick on those pieces. The last time he had anything to say about a jazz guitarist was when a hapless student loaned him some of Joe Pass' 'Virtuoso' albums. He let loose a string of epithets, which had me shaking in my shoes, Ironically, I chose a Van Eps piece for my final jury, and the guy loved it, and made me xerox a copy of it for his own use.
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I read Garfunkel's recent memoir, and he doesn't take Simon's treatment of him lying down. When I finished the book, I felt like I should go to the next Garfunkel concert just to spite Simon. Simon resented any of Garfunkel's accomplishments, a graduate degree from Columbia (when Simon dropped out of Queens College after one semester), a great film role in Catch-22 (when Simon's attempt at acting was left on the editing room floor) , and finally a starring role in a Nicholas Roeg film, which was the final straw, and Artie was kicked out of the duo. Garfunkel's listening habits listed in his book were very sophisticated, dismissing Simon's hinting that AG was a musical simpleton. I'm afraid to watch Simon's performance of 'Bridge Over Troubled Water". As Kevin said, his choice of that song was a final F-You to Garfunkel, probably after reading Garfunkel's poetic memoir...
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Ken Peplowski Duo Concert - Saturday, Oct. 27
sgcim replied to Ken Dryden's topic in Live Shows & Festivals
If it's as good as the duos Kenny used to do with Howard Alden, it should be well worth the trip. I played on two jazz records with Kenny back in the 80s, and was honored to give him rides to the gigs that we did together. One time he came up to me and said out of nowhere, "I really like your playing". I thought I was dreaming... -
Let me know why you think Simon didn't mention the duo he had with Al Kooper to the writer of his bio. Here's Simon on SNL last weekend doing a re-arrangement of one of his songs. It has his close friend Phillip Glass written all over it, considering that PS has admitted that he can't read or notate music.
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A good companion piece to read with the Al Kooper book would be Steve Katz' autobiography, 'Blood Sweat and Rock and Roll'. The amount of hate that went on between Kooper, and Bobby Colomby, and Steve Katz was astounding. Their differing accounts of the day Al Kooper was fired from his own band (BS&T) is confusing, until you hear an actual tape on you tube of how bad Al Kooper's singing sounded live back then in a BS&T concert on the East Coast. Kooper's singing improved after that, but he butchers almost every tune they played. I can understand a guy like Colomby (whose father was Monk's manager) being embarrassed to be on the stand with Kooper, after growing up on Ray Charles, Ella, Sarah, etc... That was some beautiful Peter Green playing on that video Dave posted. It's nice to hear a blues/rock player with a light, sensitive touch for a change. Nice simple, swinging drumming with an equally light touch, too.
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Speaking of Al Kooper, I read, Backstage Passes and Backstabbing Bastards, and he talked about how he and Paul Simon got their start in 'show biz' by playing pro gigs with Simon's father's band at catered affairs. Simon and Kooper (who were neighbors in Queens) would unplug their guitars when Simon's father's band was playing standards, and make believe they were playing (they didn't know the changes). Then, when the band took a break, Kooper and Simon would play and sing their little rock and/or roll songs for the kiddies, and make a nice buck for their little set. I recently read the new, Authorized Paul Simon bio, and Al Kooper's name didn't come up once! What was that about? There were other problems with the Simon bio; glossing over the fact that the IMHO genius arr. of Scarborough Fair was actually stolen from a UK folksinger Martin Carthy with no credit or renumeration given to Carthy for years, until Carthy started to make a big stink about it. Carthy still didn't get a cent till for it for years, with Simon claiming that "it must have gotten lost in the mail". As far as EC, I was recently told by a keyboard player, who was involved in that type of music, to check out what he believed to be EC's best playing, that of his work with John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers, and just heard some of his regular pentatonic stuff played faster and louder, IMHO. I'd rather hear BB or Duane Allman any day. In the words of Ginger Baker and Jack Bruce, they thought of Cream as being an electric, group improvisation, jazz-type trio, with Clapton taking on the Ornette Coleman role in the group. Clapton hit a new low in songwriting with the nauseating 'Wonderful Tonight', which I was forced to play in a band I was in, triggering episodes of pukitude immediately following said rendition...
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Clark Terry also did The Flintstones. I worked under the arranger/conductor/pianist, Leo De Lyon, a pisser of a guy, who did the voice of Benny in the cartoon 'Top Cat'. He could whistle and sing at the same time, and used to entertain the guys in the band by whistling and singing Bach Inventions. There was a lot of big band swing influence in TC and other cartoons like The Jetsons. Hoyt Curtin was the composer of a lot of that stuff for Hanna-Barbera
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Mundell Lowe did a whole LP of them called TV Action Jazz We're playing a pretty hip arr. of Mr. Rogers Neighborhood as a samba in a big band I'm playing with. I don't know which band recorded it.
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I've never been able to find a recording of Rene's Theme played by its composer, Rene Thomas. Larry Coryell and John MacLaughlin played an acoustic guitar duo version of it on Coyell's 'Spaces', but I've got all of Thomas' recordings as a leader, and most of his sideman things with Getz, Jaspar , Rollins, and Chet Baker, but RT never turned up.
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You should've waited till Halloween to post that. He look like EL Diablo!
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