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Everything posted by Rooster_Ties
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COVID-19 III: No Politics For Thee
Rooster_Ties replied to ghost of miles's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Check all the details of what is a qualifying medical condition. Diabetes (maybe even “pre-diabetes”) counts, so does high blood pressure, or a BMI over 30.0 — plus some others I’ve forgotten the details of. Not everyone does, but there are a lot of ways to qualify. -
COVID-19 III: No Politics For Thee
Rooster_Ties replied to ghost of miles's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
My 94 year old dad got his 3rd Pfizer shot last Friday, and my wife got hers the Saturday before that. I got a J&J shot originally, so I’m still waiting to get another booster — hopefully in the next 2-3 weeks, and hopefully Pfizer!! -
Don’t know about the Herbie Nichols, but Third Season looks like it does/will… https://www.dustygroove.com/item/992282 I’ve got the 2012 CD issue of this, btw, which also has this bonus track. A Slice of the Top and Third Season are my two favorite Hank leader-dates, so I bit on getting the bonus track. Here’s the details of the 2012 CD issue I have… https://www.discogs.com/release/8646582-Hank-Mobley-Third-Season
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Did you ever have any dealings with Sam, by any chance, Chuck? Yes, I’m trying to suss out a story from you, if there’s any to tell. Thx!
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Sales and Distribution of Jazz LPs, circa 1948-1964
Rooster_Ties replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Discography
True, but the date for the TV show happened in-between (in the midst of) the recording dates for KOB, iirc. -
Are there any box bargains currently available?
Rooster_Ties replied to GA Russell's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
That looks like the standard US (non-UK) price too, also w/ free shipping. Serious bargain! -
Bird and Diz playing ‘Hot House’ extended
Rooster_Ties replied to Hardbopjazz's topic in Miscellaneous Music
From the YouTube description… >> Here’s a historic TV broadcast of the founding fathers of bebop, Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, playing together in 1952. It’s one of only two known sound films of Parker playing–and the only one of him playing live, rather than synching to a prerecorded track. The performance is from a February 24, 1952 broadcast on the pioneering DuMont Television Network. The segment begins with a brief ceremony in which Parker and Gillespie receive awards from Down Beat magazine (Earl Wilson and Leonard feather). Follows a performance of the bebop standard “Hot House,” composed by Tad Dameron around the harmonic structure of Cole Porter’s “What Is This Thing Called Love?.” I thought there wasn’t any actual “live” with live-sound footage of Parker in existence — or am I misremembering? I’m pretty sure I’ve seen this footage before (just not colorized), so this isn’t footage that’s new to me — just the claim that the sound is ‘live’ and not mimed. (Or maybe I’m conflating two different clips, which is entirely possible too.) -
Andrew Hill went by Andrew “Hille” purporting to be from Haiti, and with the spelling change — all to sound a little more exotic. This even made it to an album cover (or two??) early on…
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True! But my example with William Rosso and Lee Konitz, wasn’t all polite — or at least not this semi-monstrous 15-minute track.
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What about William Rosso? I think(?) I only really know him from An Image: Lee Konitz with Strings — recorded in early 1958.
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Dug out my Turrentine Mosaic, inspired by this thread, and I intend to spin the entire thing today — for the first time in ages.
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Turns out “Marvin’s Song” was written by brother Tommy, but there’s nothing in the liners specifically about it. All the liners are visible in the release images, here… https://www.discogs.com/release/3567716-Stanley-Turrentine-If-I-Could
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The first search hit on: Stanley Turrentine “Marvin” (W/ quotes only around “Marvin” to get better results) Edit: AND, this guide to famous internments at the cemetery where Stanley was laid to rest, mentions a brother Marvin, who is also referenced as playing drums… http://alleghenycemetery.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/turrentine.pdf This source (perhaps needs verification, it’s a ‘wiki’ style database, but I have no reason to disbelieve it) says Marvin died in 2002… https://www.wikitree.com/wiki/Turrentine-532 And this next link might be as interesting a lead as any, but I’m on my phone, and can’t access the pages of the issue in question very easily on such a small screen. https://issuu.com/michronicle/docs/npcourier2.19.20 This next one says he died in Vietnam… https://jazzprofiles.blogspot.com/2016/12/stanley-turrentine-texas-or-pittsburgh.html?m=1 This one has a reference to “famed Pittsburgh drummer Marvin Turrentine”… https://newpittsburghcourier.com/2020/02/26/a-dream-come-true-mobutu-and-charlotte-ka-open-moka-art-gallery-in-the-hill-district/
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Plural? Who else, besides Tommy?
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There really were two Stanley T’s, no? Obviously two sides of the same coin, but his fast, bop-ish playing, brimming with ideas — seemed almost distinct from what he brought to his soul jazz sessions. (No value judgement implied, and I’m not exactly trying to suggest his soul jazz playing was ‘lacking’ — even if I’ll admit a preference for the former). He did seem like two different players — or his playing on different kinds of dates even within the same year — could easily be mistaken for being two different people. Here’s one, with Stan firing on all cylinders right out of the gate… vs a different, more soul and swingin’ approach…
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Re: my prior observation, I was listening closely to both “Intuition” and “Digression” a few times each yesterday walking home from work — and I was struck how Hindemithian (Hindeminty?) “Digression” seemed to me especially. I don’t know enough to argue why (in a music theory sense) — all I know is I’m left with the very same feeling I get listening to any number of the numerous sonatas for solo instrument + piano that Hindemith wrote. Both of them crackle with moment after moment after moment — that, *if* it was all through-composed, would nearly all be fascinating ‘ideas’ (by which I mean premeditated compositional decisions) — but of course, that wasn’t what was going on. Also, neither track relies on the nervous energy one usually associates with free-playing. “Digression” feels like a relatively calm, self-assured (collective) tightrope walk.
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I had either “Intuition” or “Digression” come up randomly on Pandora the other day (with my earbuds on, out walking) — and “refreshing” is *PRECISELY* the right word to describe the experience of hearing it out of blue like that — meaning NOT having it preceded by an hour of other Tristano and Marsh material (as it’s programmed on the 76 minute long Intuition CD).
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So what’s the story on Dot Time? I was about to say I’d only heard of them before, but I see I do have this one release of theirs — an album by Phil Markowitz (piano) and Zach Brock (violin, very much out of the Jean-Luc Ponty school, and very favorably so imho) — which I quite like… https://www.dottimerecords.com/product/perpetuity/
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Hope springs eternal, for this!!!! Date: February 11, 1971 Location: New York City Label: [television broadcast] Andrew Hill (ldr), Carlos Garnett (ts), Woody Shaw (t), Andrew Hill (p), Victor Sproles (b), Roy Haynes (d) a. Grass Roots (Andrew Hill) b. Bayou Red (Andrew Hill) Broadcast on WNET-TV program "Live! On Soul"
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