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EKE BBB

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Everything posted by EKE BBB

  1. Curiously, I´ve been listening to George Coleman´s "My horns of plenty" today. It´s a great date, IMHO.
  2. MEADE LUX LEWIS
  3. I sometimes use it, especially when I´m not in a proper CD listening (i.e. while working) or when I know I will not have time to listen to it entirely (that´s the only way to not listening the first few tracks again and again). But when I´m in the mood for an appropiate, analytic, calm and joyful listening... I listen to the entire CD as it comes...
  4. Mike, I saw these Ocium discs in some store here. They look alright, compared to other european rip-off labels. Are they complete? Do they have all takes (I did not look that close, obviously...)? ... The Ocium volumes I have so far (Buck Clayton´s "Back to Buck" , Coleman Hawkins´s Hollywood sessions...) are very good: rare to find sessions in good sound, though sometimes from different eras. I don´t know if they include COMPLETE sessions (with alternates) in any of their releases, but I guess they don´t. Basie´s NT in the 50s (Clef/Verve) on Ocium: BASIE TALKS Count Basie big band OCIUM #28 [1952] Track listing New Basie Blues Sure Thing Why Not? Fancy Meeting You Jive At Five No Name Redhead Every Tub Jack And Jill Bread There's A Small Hotel Hob Nail Boogie Basie Talks Paradise Squat (Take 2) Paradise Squat (Take 4) U.F.O. Like A Ship At Sea Bunny Tippin' On The Q.T. Blee Blop Blues Cash Box Bootsie Tom Whaley BE MY GUEST Count Basie Sextet, Nonet and Big Band OCIUM #37 [1952] Track listing: Blues For The Count & Oscar Be My Guest You're Not The Kind Extended Blues Let Me Dream Sent For You Yesterday Goin' To Chicago I Want A Little Girl Lady Be Good Song Of The Islands Basie Beat She's Funny That Way Count's Organ Blues K.C. Organ Blues Blue & Sentimental Stan Shorthair As Long As I Live Royal Garden Blues Mike (or anybody else): do you know if Ocium has planned to release more volumes? Well, for now they should stop on 1953 (or early 1954) due to copyright laws, shouldn´t they?
  5. Thanks, ubu. Following your recommendations, I will give Chick Corea another chance.
  6. Not a fan of Chick Corea here. Saw him live with Origin, some years ago (Auditorio de Madrid, by the end of the 90´s, I guess) and was very impressed by the overall sound of the group and by his playing. I remember it as a very good concert. Oh, but I was so much older then, I´m younger than that now Through the years I´ve picked a bunch of his albums, here and there, and I must recognize that I haven´t been impressed at all... not my kind of stuff... though the guy has been involved in many musical developments. The only disc I really dig is "Now he sings, now he sobs", a great trio date. And from your comments, I´m sure I would like "Tones for Joan´s bones - Inner Space" (I don´t have this one). But a classic such as RTF´s "Light as a feather" is so.... boring to me!!! That´s one of those classics you (I) can never get into! And what to say about "Friends" or "My Spanish heart"... I can´t stand those two discs. They rarely, very rarely, are pulled off my shelves. Maybe I should explore him a bit more...
  7. Two for the price of one... GENE AND COZY ...and being a drummer, and only for your eyes , one more:
  8. PUD BROWN... ...and his sticks in Pirate´s Alley
  9. (blushed roboticon EKE) I searched through many New Orleans / Brass Bands sites, did some Google research and found many pictures of early (very early) NO Brass Bands, but not THE NO Brass Band with Black Benny
  10. Help required! Couldn´t find a single photo of BLACK BENNY!!!
  11. EKE BBB

    Joe McPhee

    I was about to start a new thread on TENOR/FALLEN ANGELS disc, which I have been listening to during the last week on my car stereo... but I found this thread and thought this was the place to post it: My thoughts on this CD oscillate BETWEEN: "what the fuck is this guy playing?", "this is what my two years old child would do with a tenor sax" or "is this guy playing a chain saw?" AND "hey, I should listen to this kind of stuff much more, laying aside my Duke-addiction", "this is some of the wildest discs I´ve ever listened to" or "free jazz to the people!" I´ve read Jim Sangrey´s post and he has answered some of my questions, but I would appreciate any further thoughts on this disc, or on this kind of stuff... as I´m not much into what I call "NMON-jazz" (No Melody, Only Noise jazz)
  12. Not that I´m an expert in "Young lions"... (quite the opposite). Not that I dare criticize or praise Payton, Hargrove, Pelt, Blanchard or even Marsalis, but I really dig "Gumbo noveau" and "Fingerpaintings" (mentioned above), and some of his earlier work with Elvin Jones, such as "Youngblood". Guess he´s too "classical" for some of our members
  13. DIZ DISLEY Diz Disley, Nic Jones, Phil Beer (Norwich Festival)
  14. Mercer´s book is an interesting one. He shows mixed feelings, IMHO: on the one hand he had a total admiration and respect for his father; on the other, he had wounds regarding the attitude Duke had with him.
  15. OK. That was Tete´s photo . Now here´s Tootie in the spotlight
  16. Yeah, Tootie! Great drummer, who was part of Tete Montoliu´s trio and recorded in some of the most outstanding Tete discs, basically for Steeplechase. TOOTIE HEATH Ferdinand Povel, Tete Montoliu, Albert "Tootie" Heath, Henk Haverhoek
  17. Old Jimmie Rushing in the frontline...
  18. Count Basie, Ray Bauduc, Herschel Evans, and Bob Haggart, Howard Theater, Washington, D.C., ca. 1941 (from Gottlieb´s website)
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