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Everything posted by felser
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First I want to thank you for the BFT and say it was my favorite BFT listening experience ever – I think our tastes match up really well, and I look forward to finding out a lot of the answers. Comments will be selective, as I’ve learned that I just make a fool of myself if I do too much guessing, and just saying “I thought that was pretty cool” 15 times isn’t interesting reading. 2 – Loved this one, can’t wait to find out what it is and if I own it already. 4- I recognized the song from the first Three Dog Night album. A little research showed that it was written by Larry Williams, and that Williams and Johnny Guitar Watson recorded it together in the 70’s. So that version must be what this is. I really enjoyed it. 11 – Sounds very much like a lot of what Freddie Hubbard was doing on Columbia in the 70’s. 13 – I think my ears are pretty big, but this does not work for me. 20 – I think this has to be Big John Patton with Harold Alexander on tenor from one of those 1968 recordings. Don’t have ability right now to get to the CD’s and ID the tune. 21 – Interesting player. He sounds slightly “sharp” to me, as Dolphy, Von Freeman and a few others do to me also. I liked this. Think it must be 60’s vintage from the bass/drums sound, which I also really enjoyed. Other favorites included 1,10,12,24
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My bad, I got it confused with "Secrets". I really shouldn't post after 10PM. "Seeking" is a winner. "Secrets" isn't bad either, really. The FD stuff is top notch.
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Agreed. I really like the FD records, the later stuff not so much.
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Good news. That was the first full album I ever heard by him (thank you Norristown Library!) and I've always had a fondness for it.
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Pls send me links for both streaming and DL. If the streaming works for me, I"ll use that, so that the DL doesn't put easylife in my browser search default yet again.
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Are there any box bargains currently available?
felser replied to GA Russell's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
It wasn't too long ago. It was still $2.98 on my Amazon order placed April 9th. I think the new rates are too high. It's going to affect my buying patterns there. Still $2.99 at half.com, so I've started also looking there, though generally find amazon to be the better deal, even with the extra shipping cost. But it is definitely slowing me down some on purchases of single titles, especially low-end ones. -
Are there any box bargains currently available?
felser replied to GA Russell's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Th!, just ordered the Mahavishnu, Getz, RTF and second Weather Report boxes, came in under $100 including shipping. Already have the Shaw. -
1 - I like the trumpet a lot, but not the guitar player. 6 - Yes! Gotta probably be Charles Earland with that propulsion. Love the trumpet on this one also (think of it being Virgil Jones with Earland on the Prestige stuff). 8 - My kinda thing, could (and often do) spend the entire day listening to something like this. 11 - Works for me for whatever reason. I listen to ESP-Disk and vintage related stuff, though not so much to latter day derivatives. Time and place, ya know? 14 - Ouch! Overall, one varied BFT, thanks!
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PM sent on Kenny Barron Trio - Green Chimneys (Criss Cross) $7 Kenny Barron Quartet - Invitation (Criss Cross) $7 John Hicks - Nightwind. An Erroll Garner Songbook (High Note) $5 Junko Onishi - Baroque (Verve) $4
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Woody Shaw - Complete Muse Recordings on Mosaic
felser replied to J.A.W.'s topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Be sure to grab the "Louis Hayes - The Real Thing" CD, a 1977 Muse recording by the Shaw/Hayes group with Rene McLean, Ronnie Mathews, Stafford James, and Slide Hampton. A gem, and not included on the Mosaic, though it easily would have fit. -
Are there any box bargains currently available?
felser replied to GA Russell's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
We're all crazy here, but musically and soundwise, the Columbia totally obsoletes the Mosaic. Packaging and sentimental value are a different matter. BTW, is everyone hip to the 1977 Muse/32jazz album Louis Hayes - The Real Thing? That's a Woody Shaw album in all but name (he and Hayes co-led that group, with Rene McLean, Ronnie Mathews, and Stafford James, the same core group as the Berliner Jazztage concert and even has Slide Hampton guesting), and a gem. Could have easily been fit onto the Mosaic, but wasn't. A shame. -
I just picked this up to complete an order from jazzmessengers.com (they're the real dirty bastids, with the free shipping on 60eu orders), and am blown away by it. Expected to like it, but not like this. As enjoyable to me as any trio set I have ever heard, and I never even thought of myself as a huge Cables guy. His writing on this is outstanding. Highly recommended.
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Woody Shaw - Complete Muse Recordings on Mosaic
felser replied to J.A.W.'s topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
But I don't see their Muse recordings as highlights of either of their careers. Something like a Steeplechase Walton would be mighty to behold. I generally have preferred Barron as a sideman, though "Sunset to Dawn" on Muse is pretty great, but "Peruvian Blue" is nothing special, and "Lucifer" is pretty awful. -
Woody Shaw - Complete Muse Recordings on Mosaic
felser replied to J.A.W.'s topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Charles Earland, though it will never happen. Carlos Garnett would make a nice Select if they still were doing those. The aforementioned Jordan/Walton, though the Jordan sets were frustratingly inconsistent, in some cases because of overreach - Muse albums often sounded underrehearsed when they wer trying to accomplish something big. OTOH, Muse put out a lot of stuff in the 70's and early 80's that maybe never would have seen the light of day otherwise. -
Woody Shaw - Complete Muse Recordings on Mosaic
felser replied to J.A.W.'s topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Yes, was gonna comment on the same. The pre-Columbia stuff is invigorating, but I find the post-Columbia Muse stuff to be pretty "by-the-numbers" and the most disappointing of Shaw's career. Not that it's bad, but it's not compelling. I own it all, but never pull it out to listen to any more (the only Shaw that is true of for me). The Elektra-Musician dates do a lot more for me, as does the posthumous live stuff on High Note. I also agree with Rooster Ties on how magnificent the Berliner Jazztage material is, my favorite of his. -
That's a GREAT album. No, it is not typical of the BNLA series.
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It was one thing in the early days when the sets were until then unavailable on CD Blue Notes, such as the Jackie McLean, Andrew Hill, etc. It's another thing when the sets are things I would not have considered essential to my listening joy. They can still pump up the excitement in me when the material is right, like with the Mingus set, but most of what they come out with these days isn't anything I was dreaming of.
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DL, thanks! And I like your guidelines. I have wooden ears, but lots of opinions!
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What does Sonny Fortune sound like on that one?
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PM sent on Howard McGhee - Dusty Blue (Betlehem) remastered 1999 reissue, a few scratches & nicks, mostly outside the playing area $5 William Parker & The Little Huey Creative Music Orchestra - Raincoat in the River (Eremite) digipak $6
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Sarah Vaughan Divine : the jazz albums 54-58
felser replied to philtenb's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
I eventually was able to get a new Clifford Brown set for just under $10/disc. Still looking for the right deal on the Montgomery and now this Vaughan. -
I have the first couple of seasons at home. They have held up remarkably well, brilliant stuff.
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PM sent on Ray Bryant - Ray Bryant Trio (Prestige/OJC) 2010 reissue with 1993 remastering, $3 Oliver Nelson/King Curtis/Jimmy Forrest - Soul Battle (Prestige/OJC) $6
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$$ for 55 Grand Jazz Club Videos/Audio/Photos
felser replied to JMZProductions's topic in Offering and Looking For...
Sounds very cool. Best of luck on the project, and please let us know how it comes along. -
Workig my way through the big "Jazz on Vogue" box, and ran into Buzz Gardner's bop trumpet playing on the Rene Thomas set (and other places in the box, I believe). Wondered if it was the same Buzz Gardner who played (along with his brother Bunk) with Frank Zappa in the late 60's and on Tim Buckley's unhinged "Starsailor" album (talk about your artistic suicide) . Sure enough. That's quite a well-rounded discography for a trumpeter.
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