Jump to content

king ubu

Members
  • Posts

    27,742
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by king ubu

  1. Blues for Lou is another great one! ubu
  2. king ubu

    Funny Rat

    Д.Д., I love that Bangception disc! The best Charles I heard - I'm not such a big fan of his work on the early Cecil Taylor records, and was never that much interested in his work thus. I found that disc used for almost nothing, and loved it ever since. Anybody here had a listen to the Steamboat thing, by the way? I finally came around and started with my Lyons box (well, disc one only, so far, and the first half of disc two) - it's BAAD! It really blew me! Very personal music, singular, very swinging, grooving. Beautiful! Much better than I expected (I have so far heard Lyons only on Taylor records). ubu
  3. Chris, thanks a lot for sharing your "insider" knowledge! Highly appreciated, and very interesting to read! ubu
  4. king ubu

    Funny Rat

    Interesting observations you make! Gotta grab this out and listen again. Anybody has records of Parker's Electro Acoustic Ensemble? Judging from that broadcast, they're pretty interesting. Is there only that one CD they made for ECM? ubu
  5. king ubu

    Funny Rat

    John, grab the Ayler release on Ayler! Glorious stuff, to stand right next to the Freedom album (Vibrations, or what's the title again?) and the Hilversum album. The latest is probably my favorite of the quartet with Don Cherry. ubu
  6. I can't vote here... love so many of these records. The quartets set with Sonny Clark was my very first Green set, and I still love it. Then Idle Moments, Green Street, Talkin' About, Street of Dreams, Solid, are all wonderful albums, as is Feelin' the Spirit. Born to be blue is another favorite of mine. And some of his earlier stuff is great, too! Grant's First Stand and Grantstand... hell, so many great records! Blessed be Blue Note...
  7. all the best, Moose! ubu
  8. great choice! One of my favorite Monk albums. ubu
  9. http://www.zweitausendeins.de/jmp.cfm?dsplnr=2885 here you can get (all?) of them for a good prize. ubu
  10. aric, it's not really a jazz-rock date, going from the one released track - rather a r'n'b session with more guitar than usual on similar BN projects (like the Stanley Turrentine dates). ubu
  11. Moose, wish you fun and lots of hours of pure listening pleasure with the fantastic Ornette set! Some of the most important and beautiful music ever recorded! What I got: Frank Zappa, Shut Up N Play Yer Guitar (from my sister, but obviously a wish I uttered...) Swallow, Damaged in Transit (from my father, another no-surprise thing...) and a very cool disc of solo works of Brian Ferneyhough. ubu
  12. Milan, some labels also used one row of take numbers for a whole session - so, for instance, the first tune would be tks 1-3, the second tks 4-11, the third 12, the fourth 13-15 and so on - this practice might explain some incredibly high take numbers. Where do you get the info on takes from, by the way? Online discographies? Or are you the lucky owner of one of those unaffordable things? ubu
  13. Somehow, I don't think it's that bad. I mean, I do like lots of Hancock's music, including the electric and funk/headhunters stuff, and the one track from this date is not really successful, in my opinion. Turrentine is not the best choice, and generally things do not really lock in, as I hear it. ubu
  14. I'd like to get it, but not sure I really can. Otherwise it would be interesting enough to just read the comments. ubu
  15. king ubu

    Funny Rat

    Yep, Shepik & Black - HELL! Black is such a great player! I really love him. Do you have something he made as a leader that you could recommend? I got his Willisau gig (with Chris Speed, the "Alas No Axis" band that made a Winter&Winter CD which I have not heard), but otherwise only a couple of things he made as a sideman. ubu
  16. Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs NJ Melvin Lastie, cornet; Stanley Turrentine, tenor sax; Herbie Hancock, piano; Eric Gale, guitar; Billy Butler, guitar; Bob Cranshaw, bass; Bernard Purdie, drums. tk 21 DON'T EVEN GO THERE Note: This track, used with Herbie's consent, is the most successful track from a rejected session that was Herbie's first foray into R & B. It is included for historical interest. This is the details from the discography section of the Herbie Complete Sixties BN box. That one track was included at the end of the box. Later it was also included on the Lost Sessions Connoisseur CD. This session somehow does not really fit into Herbie's developpement, it seems. It was rather the style he started with THE PRISONER which he pursued on his Warner dates. The one track from this 66 date is similar to the two large group tracks on FAT ALBERT ROTUNDA - yet those, too, do not really fit in with the rest of that album. ubu
  17. king ubu

    Funny Rat

    I have an aircheck by Parker's electro acoustic ensemble. It's been some time since I last heard it, but I remember it as quite interesting. The only CD I have is the ECM "Sankt Gerold" (with Paul Bley & Barre Philipps). I still did not pick up the other one of this trio - I think David you recommended that on AAJ sometime in spring. How do you like the Tiny Bell Trio, by the way? I have "Constellations" and the self-titled Songlines CD. I got the Songlines first and fell in love with it instantly, and then picked up the hat - and was rather disappointed with that one. One to pass by, in my opinion. They did play Willisau, last year, but I think it was not a very successful concert (I only heard a broadcast). Then anyone knows when and why Brad Schoeppach changed the spelling of his name to "Shepik"? Is that the cooler spelling regarding his links to the NY downtown/John Zorn scene? ubu
  18. Yes, but only a year after Mosaic releases them. ubu
  19. I really enjoy the few recordings I have with him on drums. R.I.P. ubu
  20. wow! I wish I would have gotten that Parker so cheap! A real great find! Hope you enjoy it. ubu
  21. SONGS FOR SWINGIN' LOVERS might be my favorite Sinatra! A hell of a set! Good tunes, too. And dig the trombone on - shit I always forget the names of the tunes... I will check out ONLY THE LONELY. I do have (and like) IN THE WEE SMALL HOURS. The Basie/Sinatra self titled studio album also has a couple of good cuts, but playing time is too short, and there's some rather weak stuff there, too (as is on AT THE SANDS, which has a killer first five tunes, nevertheless - love that version of "I've got a crush on you"!) ********* Jim, there sure are interesting things on your discs! Nice I was able to hear Silver, otherwise, much unknown territory to me, but the Monk duo, and the Perkins sure want me hear more of it! I LOOOVE Chico, by the way! (However I'm not really able to take part in the drummer's talk...) I'll read the answers again more carefully when I find the time, and may post some more. By the way: who da fuck is on that ts/b/d trio track on disc 2? bring it on, bring it on! ubu
  22. king ubu

    Funny Rat

    Chapin was the name of that saxophone player, by the way... ubu
  23. king ubu

    Funny Rat

    I heard Krauss on some broadcast of Steven Bernstein's Diaspora Soul band, I think. Cannot remember any specifics, but liked that band in general. Thanks for the work you did on the Knitting discs! The Alis, Haynes and particularly the Pope sounds like the ones to get! You got that "Alive" box we discussed earlier by that other saxophone player? btw, tonight I'll get my "Shut Up N Play Yer Guitar" And my first x-mas present I received yesterday, just after viewing a beautiful Bergman movie, is a Ferneyhough CD containing solo works, among others that terrific thing for bass clarinet! Got a good start this year! Now much eating waits for my big fat belly to get even bigger and fatter B) Wish you all a good time these days! ubu
  24. hey, keeep yuor panst up! ubu
×
×
  • Create New...