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felser

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Everything posted by felser

  1. +1, I also saw 715 off Al Downing (a very good pitcher) live on TV. Incredible how long he stayed on top of his game. RIP.
  2. I'm sure it's a nice set, but at a price tag north of $100 for 7 CD's, I'm out for the present.
  3. No, it's awesome! My first cat was "Mingus", and our current cat is "Aisha".
  4. Koufax (replaced by Bill Singer), Drysdale, Osteen, Sutton. That works.
  5. That's how they were meant to sound. Overall aural impact, no clarity of specific instruments.
  6. I can't imagine "All Things Must Pass" without the Spector touch. Makes the set for me. And I do love how "Instant Karma" sounds as a record.
  7. Various thoughts on the discussion: 1 - "Hung on You" is not hard to find on 45. It was a surprisingly failed A-side following the two classic Philles hits, but some DJ's flipped it, and the semi-throwaway B-side, a 50's retread they didn't even bother to have Bill Medley sing on, did OK. That was "Unchained Melody". 2 - The climax of "Just Once in My Life" ("I Can't Give You The World" etc.) is probably the most goosebump-inspiring moment in all of music for me. 3 - I am constantly shocked at how "otherworldly" a lot of 50's records sound. Check out something like Bobby Freeman's "Do You Want to Dance" on youtube.
  8. I'm also a stereo guy if originally done that way, but it wasn't.
  9. Essential for any 20th century music collection. Transcendent stuff.
  10. No. Bottom fell out on last two albums. Did well through 2016 though each album sold exponentially less than the one before.
  11. +1
  12. Anyways, back to Phil Spector. Even after Rachelle Short, he still was worth 50 million at death.
  13. Great, groundbreaking musical talent, dispicable human being. It's complicated, isn't it?
  14. Hutcherson/Land, including the Land albums on Cadet and Mainstream. I had suggested that to them 10 years ago.
  15. felser

    Byard Lancaster

    The Sunny Murray on ESP-Disk And the second album on this:
  16. Andrew White in there anywhere?
  17. +1 Easily rectified for under $10 https://www.ebay.com/sch/176984/i.html?_from=R40&_nkw=joe+henderson+page+one&_sop=15
  18. This looks great to me, that band was on fire! CD's available https://originarts.com/recordings/recording.php?TitleID=82810 HAL GALPER LIVE AT THE BERLIN PHILHARMONIC, 1977 ORIGIN 82810 PURCHASE ITUNES - $10.99 (Mike & Randy Brecker) comprised a blistering front line. Galper was in aggressive form, playing with an energy reminiscent of McCoy Tyner, a spirit of embellishment reminiscent of Art Tatum and a harmonic knowledge reminiscent of Bill Evans. Dockery and Moses formed a heart-pounding tandem. OWEN CORDLE, JAZZTIMES Captured during a pivotal, trailblazing period of his five decade career, pianist Hal Galper had come off the road with the Cannonball Adderley Quintet looking to establish his new working band. Pulling in Michael & Randy Brecker, whom he had recorded & worked with in the early '70s, along with bassist Wayne Dockery and drummer Bob Moses, Galper set up Sunday matinees at NY's Sweet Basil jazz club for a year to woodshed the group concept and new compositions. In the studio, 1977's "Reach Out" displayed an astonishingly original collective, all matching Galper's chance-taking, high-spirited, free-wheeling approach to music making. 1979's "Speak with a Single Voice" captured the energy of the quintet live, but on this 1977 Berlin Jazz Festival performance, the band shifts into an other-wordly overdrive. From the opening salvos of Galper's "Now Hear This," the mission is defined - jazz giants, in the prime of their youth, set free to blow, pushed to the limits by Galper's facility, full-bodied sound, and fertile imagination. TRACK LISTING: DISC ONE 1 Now Hear This 13:59 2 Speak with a Single Voice 24:36 3 I'll Never Stop Loving You 12:56 DISC TWO 1 Triple Play 14:04 2 This Is the Thing 12:33 3 Hey Fool 9:31 PERFORMERS: Hal Galper - piano Randy Brecker - trumpet, flugelhorn Michael Brecker - tenor saxophone Wayne Dockery - bass Bob Moses - drums PRODUCTION INFO: Produced for release by Hal Galper & John Bishop Recorded live at Berliner Jazztage '77, Berliner Philharmonie on November 4, 1977, except Disc 1/Track 3: Recorded at Berliner Philharmonie on January 11, 1978 Berlin Jazz Days Artistic Director: George Gruntz ZDF concert telecast produced by Reinhard Knieper Mastered by Dan Dean, Dan Dean Productions, Mercer Island, WA Liner notes by Paul Rauch Cover design & layout by John Bishop REVIEWS OF LIVE AT THE BERLIN PHILHARMONIC, 1977 Midwest Record (Chris Spector) One of the great you wish you were there moments is finally getting it's long over due release, this live date finds Galper fresh off the road from three years with Cannonball Adderley now fronting a band with the Brecker Brothers blowing away. With echoes of Miles in the air, along with a finger pounding that could only have led to early arthriti ...
  19. This of course puts us into Alan Douglas territory, which is always tough sledding from an ethical standpoint.
  20. Bootsie Barnes was an inspired choice for Philly, then. Larry McKenna also would have been.
  21. I would expect that that 32 Jazz CD reissue in 1997 was legit. Unless that had something to do with Muse having released it under Chick Corea's name as "Bliss" without proper clearance (thought I read that somewhere), and 32 Jazz put it out as part of their Muse rights purchase. Really interesting album, regardless. And a chance to hear John Gilmore (and Corea, for that matter) in a very different setting.
  22. Agreed. With them, you get what you pay for. Even in PD-land, there are much better places to go.
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