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felser

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Posts posted by felser

  1. In 1971., Mal Waldron recorded an album with Gary Peacock and a Japanese drummer. The name of the album was 'First Encounter', and it was issued on Catalyst Records in the 70's. This is my favorite Waldron recording Does anyone know if this has been on CD, and who would own the master tapes? I know some of the Catalyst Records stuff (the Gary Bartz is the one I remember) has ended up on Japanese CD, and this recording (to my ears, anyways) was the crown of their catalog. Thanks for your help.

  2. Am willing to trade for or purchase the following Mosaics:

    Mingus, Blue Mitchell, Jackie Mclean and Woody Shaw. I have the Paul Chambers and Max Roach Mosaics to trade, and could someone tell me wich albums make up the Jackie Mclean Mosaic. Could also trade these box sets: Louis Armstrong's Hot Fives and Sevens on Proper, Lee Morgan Live at the Lighthouse.......Thanks

    The McLean has 'It's Time','Action','Consequence','Right Now','Jacknife', and 'High Frequency', which is a '66 quartet date.

  3. Khan Jamal still lives here and is active.  He had around a half dozen gigs in the area this year.  (Including a free one last week at the Kimmel Center.)  He's also done some recording for CIMP.  (Plug: see phillyjazz.Jazzmatazz.info.)

    Walt Dickerson is living with his son in the suburbs.  He's still practicing.  I think he'd like to play.  I've passed his name along, but he may not have found any place that meets his requirements.

    Alan, thx for the info. I didn't know about the Kimmel center gig by Jamal. I'm way out of circulation at the moment, due to family needs. If you think of it, drop me an email if you see Jamal will be playing live again in the area.

    Your wish is my command. Announced today:

    Friday, October 21 | 8pm

    SUNNY MURRAY FACTOR

    with

    Khan Jamal, vibraphone

    Sabir Mateen, saxophone

    Odean Pope, saxophone

    Ed Crockett, bass

    Sunny Murray, drums

    Community Education Center (CEC) Theater, 3500 Lancaster Avenue | Philadelphia

    $12 General Admission | All ages

    Thx Alan. Is that the site which was the Millcreek Jazz Center in the early 90's?

    would love to make it, will be tough on such short notice, but maybe. By the way, how does one become a "groove master" or "veteran groover" or "dr. funkenstein" something similar, instead of just a "member" in this community?

  4. Eric Dolphy -- Magic

    Art Farmer -- Meet the Jazztet

    Max Roach -- Freedom Now Suite

    George Russell -- Jazz in the Space Age

    On the plus side, the Modern Jazz Quartet's "European Concert" is finally getting released on 11/15.  I don't know if anybody else is excited about this, but I am.

    Dolphy's 'Magic' was a 70's twofer reissue of Eric Dolphy - 'Far Cry' and Ron Carter 'Where'. Both of those titles have been available for many years as part of the OJC reissue series on Fantasy (now owned by Concord). You shouldn't have any problem finding them.

  5. Khan Jamal still lives here and is active.  He had around a half dozen gigs in the area this year.  (Including a free one last week at the Kimmel Center.)  He's also done some recording for CIMP.  (Plug: see phillyjazz.Jazzmatazz.info.)

    Walt Dickerson is living with his son in the suburbs.  He's still practicing.  I think he'd like to play.  I've passed his name along, but he may not have found any place that meets his requirements.

    Alan, thx for the info. I didn't know about the Kimmel center gig by Jamal. I'm way out of circulation at the moment, due to family needs. If you think of it, drop me an email if you see Jamal will be playing live again in the area.

  6. felser,

    I believe Walt Dickerson still lives in your area. Did you realize this? I would love to see him playing out again. I would travel great distances to be in the same room with his music.

    I also think he's still in Philly. This is not a good city for live jazz at this point (it was good back in the 70's, but now, don't get me started. Very few live venues here now, and none seem to have pure agenda of presenting best talent, local or otherwise), and I've managed to go 30+ years without ever seeing Dickerson or Khan Jamal live here, even though both have lived here (don't know that Jamal still does). Dickerson is like 74 years old now, I'm not sure if he's still active. I'll note it on the board if I ever see Dickerson listed for playing live.

  7. Anyone know the status of master tapes for Walt Dickerson's 'Unity'? Originally on Audiofidelity. Any chance of seeing a CD issue? Would also like to see his 'Jazz Impressions of Lawrence of Arabia' on CD. Unbelievably underrated musician. I'm so glad his Prestige/New Jazz stuff came out on CD, and that the Steeplechase sets are available on CD.

  8. Yeah, Gravatt was (and supposedly still is) a mf on the drums ...

    Lloyd McNeill - that this excellent flutist never got the recognition he would have deserved is, IMHO, one of the loudest crying shames in American Jazz. I remember hearing ASHA on AFN radio when it was released, and being enchanted right away. I got some of his LPs later, but regrettably not the first one. Now that would be a worthy subject for a Mosaic Select!!!

    Is that compilation CD still available? I'd give something to hear that piece ASHA onec again ...

    I got the CD from Dusty Groove many years ago on my first time to the site (that was an expensive visit!), but see no signs of it there, on Amazon, Half, or Ebay.

  9. Lloyd McNeill was a Washington, DC based flute player who put out three incredibile albums in the early 70's, and then three more that were nearly as incredible in the late 70's-early 80's. He was also an award-winning photographer, if I remember. He wrote beautiful pieces, and I loved his stuff. I was thrilled when a 'best-of' CD came out in the late 90's and pretty much got my favorite tracks on it (especially his first recording of 'Aisha'). Does anyone know the state of his master tapes (I suspect he owns them outright) and if there is any chance of the albums being issued on CD? He did one, 'Tanner Suite', that I've never heard (I have the others on vinyl). do any of you have that? And AMG lists a '97 release by him called 'X.TEM.POR.E' that I've never heard of. Is anyone familiar with that? thx.

  10. One Flying Dutchman I wish was reissued is the Horace Tapscott 'The Giant Is Awakened'...

    That was on a RCA Novus CD c/w a John Carter/Bobby Bradford album - one of them had a track missing on that CD, however. West Coast Hot was the CD title.

    My picks on Flying Dutchman, in addition to the Leon Thomas's. Gato Barbieri's 'El Pampero','The Third World','Bolivia',and 'Under Fire' are his best albums, with 'El Pampero' belonging on my desert island list. The Horace Tapscott is pretty fabulous, Arthur Blythe's recording debut. 'The Giant is Awakened' was the name of it. If I could only own one Tapscott album or one Blythe album, that would be the one. 'Swiss Suite' by Oliver Nelson contains an amazing solo by Gato Barbieri on the 27 minute title track. I agree with the previous post about 'Barefoot Boy', maybe my favorite Coryell (I also like 'Offering' a lot). And Gil Scott-Heron's 'Pieces of a Man' is incredible, if not exactly jazz.

  11. Not sure the Uptown fits the timeframe, but it gets my vote as well, with a close second for the Monk/Trane.  I think the Diz/Bird is a more significant find, though, personally.

    The Mosaic Select Tolliver will get my vote.

  12. While Fantasy reissued just about everything I could imagine from the Prestige (except Azar Lawrence's first two albums) and Contemporary labels (granted, I'm not all that familiar with the Contemporary catalog, and they are still missing Rumasuma by Sonny Simmons), there is a fair number of decent curiosities on Riverside they never got to, and a LOT of stuff on Milestone that would seem like it should obviously be on CD but isn't (Gary Bartz - Home, McCoy Tyner - Horizon and 13th House, etc. etc.). Any ideas on why the Milestone catalog has been so underutilized? And does anyone know what Concord's plans are for the catalogs they inherited from Fantasy (bet that's already been discussed here before my time - can any just summarize for me?). thx.

  13. I was very happy a couple of years ago when most of the Leon Thomas Flying Dutchman titles came out on CD (nice job on those reissues), especially 'Live in Berlin' with Oliver Nelson. It seemed strange to me at the time that 'The Leon Thomas Album' was not reissued then, and to my knowledge it still hasn't been. Anyone know what the problem is there? Have they lost the master tape or something? Related question(s). There is a Leon Thomas album on the Mega label, 'Gold Sunrise on Magic Mountain', which I believe was live at Montreux, 1971. I've never heard it - is it any good? Any ideas why it isn't on CD? The only other item I'm aware of on the Mega label is Larry Coryell's 'Fairyland', which I believe was also live at Montreux 1971, and which I believe also has never been out on CD. Any knowledge on it? I assume Mega was a subsidiary of Flying Dutchman? Interestingly, while the Thomas and Coryell recordings from Montreux '71 were on Mega, Gato Barbieri's 'El Pampero' (a GREAT album, to me his masterpiece), I believe from the same festival, was on Flying Dutchman proper, and has been reissued on CD (thankfully!), also a real nice job. Any thoughts on 'The Leon Thomas Album' and the Mega stuff? thx.

  14. I can't wait for the Tolliver Mosaic Select set. I cut my teeth on the Tolliver Live at Slugs material in the early 70's, and it remains a landmark for me. Very happy that the Tollivers and a few other choice Strata-East titles (Clifford Jordan - Glass Bead Games, Billy Harper - Capra Black, Pharoah Sanders - Izipho Zam) have made it onto CD, but have a few titles that I have never seen on CD that I am pining for: Clifford Jordan - In the World, Sonny Fortune - Long Before Our Mothers Cried, Charles Sullivan - Genesis, the 2LP set by Mtume, and the Ron Burton - The Waterbearers, Jazz Contemporaries - Reasons in Tonality (advanced blowing session with C. Jordan, G.Coleman, and J.Watkins as the horns!), Shirley Scott - One For Me (best album she ever did by a mile IMO), and Harold Vick - Don't Look Back come to mind right off. I know that Strata-East was run as a collective, as designed by Tolliver and Cowell. Unclear who owns the masters on these. Does anyone know anything about the prospects of these being reissued on CD? And what about the Charles Tolliver All-Stars session with Bartz, Hancock, Ron Carter, and Joe Chambers? Surprised that one hasn't seen the light of day on CD. Also, Tolliver's website for a long time has shown a CD called 'In the Trenches' which I don't think has ever been released. Any info or thoughts appreciated.

  15. I'm a fan of Frankie Dunlop with Monk - and most every other place I've heard him too. One thing I like about him is his approach to soloing, which is very much about melodic reference. I love Blakey with Monk, more for the groove because a Blakey solo is about Blakeyisms, not about the tune. I was definitely impressed with the Shadow Wilson on the new issue - would love to hear more of that. Ben Riley - totally agree that he's the most boring of the lot.

    Mike

    But I LOVE Blakeyism's! Gimme that rim shot! Monk's Music was one of the first jazz albums I owned, and to me Blakey is great on that. More than anything else, Blakey's drumming is the sound of jazz to me. Have more recordings by the Jazz Messengers than by anyone else. Saw him live for the first time in the 80's. Free concert in Wilmington, DE. Benny Green's first gig with the band. He was very nervous first solo, but then let it fly on Moanin'. Philip Harper, who I had never heard of until that night, was on fire the whole evening. And Blakey gave a great little speech at the end of the show, that I still remember, asking people to get out and support jazz. He said it was "A gift from the Creator, through us, to you". I like Dunlap OK with Monk, like him much better with Curtis Counce. Shadow Wilson and Ben Riley work well with Monk also for me, better than Dunlap IMO. I love Blakey with anyone. Max Roach was pretty great on Brilliant Corners, and Art Taylor was fine on 5 by Monk by 5. Not surprisingly, Monk never found his Elvin Jones or Tony Williams.

  16. He's here through the weekend, folks, with a matinee on Sunday!

    And, as always, no cover and no minimum! BTW, my magic moment of live music was Keystone Korner in San Fran in, I think, September 1976. Triple bill. Opening act, Bobby Hutcherson quintet. Second act, Max Roach quartet with the great Billy Harper and Reggie Workman, show closer, Dexter Gordon quintet, Dex had just returned from Europe. Only time I was ever there. Great club. What a night! Cover was reasonable (don't remember price),and I was able to do the minimum with a slightly overpriced coca cola or two.

  17. I agree with the above statements - I tend to reach for the Smith's with the horn players and the live sets. Smith also recorded too many albums in too short of time for them to all be meaningful (when's the last time anyone here listened to Jimmy Smith Plays Fats Waller for more than the first time? How often do any of us play Movin' Along?) , though that wouldn't apply to this one, since it was his first. I picked up the 2 CD set for historical purposes, but have only listened to it once.

  18. I picked up the McLean and am about to buy the Andrew Hill today...a quick question:

    I went to my vinyl collection at home and looked for "Andrew' - thought I already had.  Rather, I came across Andrew Hill's "Compulsion" album with John Gilmore, et al...a similar line up BUT WITH FREDDIE HUBBARD on trumpet.  Has "Compulsion" been reissued on cd?  Only on Mosaic "Complete Andrew Hill??"

    Compulsion hasn't been released on CD in the US except on the Mosaic box. Can't speak to what may or may not have come out on a TOCJ CD in Japan. Seems like just about everything from prime Blue Note era has, though I can't say that for sure (I'm sure someone will either confirm or correct the statement, though!). I really like Gilmore on Compulsion, also love his work on Pete LaRoca's 'Turkish Women at the Bath'. Thank you 32jazz for getting that one out on CD a few years ago!

  19. lots of good muse cobblestone stuff-

    the grubbs brothers had some decent stuff...

    In My Youth made it to a Muse CD, but that that's it. as far as I know.

    In My Youth was the only one on CD. Grubbs Brothers were from here in Philly (still live here). Amazingly, all four of the albums by the other great Philly jazz group of the era, Catalyst (Odean Pope, Eddie Green, Tyrone Brown, Sherman Ferguson) were put out by 32jazz in one great 2CD set. Bet that one sold about 12 other copies in addition to mine. Cobblestone did have some nice stuff. Not many remember at this point, but the first couple of Norman Connors albums were pretty great. Something sticks in my mind that "Faraway Lands" was on the expanded version of Art Farmer's 'The Time and the Place' that came out in the early 80's (mid-60's live recordings by the Farmer/Heath quintet),. but I don't remember for sure.

    Can't find the post on who questioned Grubbs still being in Philly, but you're right, turns out he's in Maryland now. Was in Philly for a good while (I remember seeing him listed for the MillCreek jazz center workshops, etc.). http://www.carlgrubbs.com/CARLPAGES/ABOUT.html

  20. I got the Hill, Mclean, Ervin, and Quebec cds today.  The Mclean is as good as anything else he's ever done.  Nice Woody Shaw on the Ervin date.  Excellent Andrew Hill.  Getting used to the old time organ sound on Ike's 45s.  Pretty good batch, I'd say.

    How the heck did Blue Note ever decide to keep that Jackie Mac hidden in the vaults?

    They also kept Lee Morgan's Infinity (with JMac) unreleased at the time, so it came as something of a shock in the early 80's (when both were finally released) to that they had done so much great recording together in the mid-60's. Consequences is more traditional than what Blue Note was releasing by McLean in that era (One Step Beyond, Destination, Out, Action, It's Time, Right Now, New and Old Gospel, Bout Soul), but is certainly far superior to the last two titles. As good as it is, I like 'Jacknife' even better. "On the Nile" is a great Charles Tolliver tune. Don't miss the Mosaic Select of him when it comes out - great great stuff.

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