Christiern
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Everything posted by Christiern
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Love this photo...
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It is such a cliché to say that someone's death is a great loss, although it usually is to close friends and family, but Humph's death is, IMO, a significant loss in every sense of the word. The work and thoughts of this multi-talented, wonderfully observant man touched so many people. Starting with his wonderful Parlophones, which I still enjoy over half a century later, Humph played a vital role in putting me on the track that has led me to this forum.
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Very sad news. Humph opened doors for me in 1953 when he allowed a naïve kid from Copenhagen to record his band and an interview. He was a superb, tasty musician with wit as great as his playing. I hope BBC Radio continues to run his radio shows.
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Well, perhaps we will be spared further hype and dreadful performances.
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"The Train and the River" Sad news. I always remember Jimmy Giuffre's response to a college student who, following a concert at the school, asked, "Where's the rhythm?" Giuffre's reply was, "It is understood." Indeed, it was.
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Best song titles you have ever seen.....
Christiern replied to BERIGAN's topic in Miscellaneous Music
Cleverest: "If Your Phone Don't Ring, It's Me" Sung by Kevin Mark, I think. Silliest: "Oh Gee, Say Gee, You Oughta See My Gee Gee From the Fiji Isle" Sung by Chuck Thomas, aka Woody Herman. -
Here's wishing Johnny a very Happy Birthday. I have known him since 1960, when I came to Riverside and here are some photos I took of him (w. Lockjaw and Curtis Lundy) in Perugia during the Unbria '84 festival:
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What do you expect from an awards business that gave Wynton M. a Pulitzer for that truly mediocre piece, "Blood In the Fields."???
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Back then, it probably was.
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My Living Stereo died many moons ago. Funny that they couldn't find an LP for the film that wasn't warped.
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You mean to say that Les Paul was down there, digging those caverns, for 3 years---and $89.95 + tax could have spared him the strain and given him more time with Mary?
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Capitol says recording quality at its Hollywood building is at risk The music firm says a proposed high-rise next door would damage its unique underground echo chambers. The developer who wants to put up a 16-story building next to the Capitol Records building has denied that the project would harm Capitol's reverberation equipment. By Bob Pool Los Angeles Times Staff Writer April 23, 2008 No! No-o-o-o! No-o-o-o-o-o! That plea from Hollywood is reverberating through Los Angeles City Hall as officials try to decide whether a 16-story tower should be built next to the landmark Capitol Records building. A Marina del Rey developer hopes to construct 93 condominiums, 13,442 square feet of commercial and office space and a 242-space underground parking lot next to the landmark, 13-floor, record-shaped building. But Capitol executives are trying to stop the multimillion-dollar project because of fears that pile-driving and excavation for the three-level underground garage will damage one-of-a-kind, below-ground echo chambers that are used for high-end recordings. The developer has denied that the project would harm the reverberation equipment and has pledged to try to limit noise and vibration during construction. The famed echo chambers were designed by guitarist Les Paul and have been used by recording artists ranging from Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin to Chris Botti, Natalie Cole -- who just finished an album there -- and Brian Wilson, who used them last week. EMI Music North America, which operates Capitol Records, has appealed the city's preliminary approval of the high-rise, which is proposed for the southwest corner of Yucca Street and Argyle Avenue. Until 2005 that was the site of the KFWB-AM (980) radio station. "As a major employer in the Hollywood area, Capitol Records is extremely concerned about the viability of us being able to continue to run Capitol Studios in the face of the admittedly significant adverse impacts that will be caused by construction," said Maureen B. Schultz, a senior vice president at the recording company. In a letter to City Council members, Schultz explained that the echo chambers are on the east side of the record company headquarters at the corner of Vine and Yucca streets. They are buried 18 feet from the proposed excavation site. "We are not anti-development, and understand and support that Hollywood is changing and new development is part of that change," she said in the letter. But "the sound in the studios is one that cannot be replicated anywhere else in the world. The echo chambers are as much a part of the Hollywood history as the Capitol Tower and the Hollywood sign." The eight concrete chambers, built 30 feet underground, vary in shape to give different sounds. A speaker pipes music into one end of each chamber and a microphone picks up the reverberation at the other end. Capitol employees say their three recording studios are booked by artists who know the Vine Street echo effect is something that cannot be duplicated electronically or at any other studio. Although it is not part of EMI's appeal, record company workers and others in Hollywood also oppose the 16-floor tower because it would overshadow Capitol's iconic building by three stories and block views of the landmark from the nearby Hollywood Freeway. The Capitol tower was designed by architect Welton Becket and finished in 1956. It was the world's first circular office building. Music fans immediately embraced its look, which resembled a stack of vinyl 45s on a record turntable. Its spire is said to blink out the name "Hollywood" in Morse code at night. EMI's appeal of the project is one of two that have been filed. A separate objection has been lodged by Hollywood resident Jim McQuiston, who has lived for 48 years across the street from the tower site. He objects to it on seismic grounds. "It would affect me when it falls over on me," McQuiston, a Caltech-trained engineer, said Tuesday. In papers filed with the city, he asserted that "the so-called Yucca strand of the Hollywood Fault poses an extreme hazard" to the condominium tower. Developer David Jordan could not be reached for comment Tuesday. However, a lawyer representing the project dismissed McQuiston's concerns. "That seems, quite frankly, like an implausible scenario," Dale Goldsmith said of the tower toppling in an earthquake. "His apartment building would collapse before this one would. It would be built in accordance of latest earthquake standards." As far as Capitol Records' echo chambers are concerned, Goldsmith pledged that they will be safe during construction. "We're confident there won't be any long-term damage," he said. "We're prepared to indemnify them. They have a right to be concerned, but their concerns are exaggerated." Steps will be taken to limit vibration and noise, he said. "There are a series of mitigation measures to be taken during construction. Muffling devices, dewatering techniques, taking noise-generating equipment as far away as possible from Capitol," Goldsmith said. An acoustical study done for Jordan by an Oakland firm acknowledged that "without the mitigation . . . ground-borne noise from construction activities may temporarily impact operation of the echo chambers." But it suggested that "digital signal processing and other digital audio recording techniques can simulate almost every echo chamber effect." Capitol officials plan to refute that when the City Council's Planning and Land Use Management Committee reviews their appeal May 13. The entire council is expected to take up the issue May 27, committee Chairman Ed Reyes said Tuesday. Digital reverberation can't compare with a real echo chamber, Capitol recording experts say. That's a claim they've shot down over and over and over again.
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I think George Formby and Hermione Gingold would have made a more suitable Porgy and Bess, but who's to say they didn't turn it down. Perhaps MG can tell us what happened, he once stayed in the same hotel as Alpha Blondy, and she never could keep a secret.
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No, when I hold a hand I fully expect--make that demand--that there be someone on the other end of it.
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It was Leher who inspired me to poison pigeons in the park.
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Yes, as any astute observer readily predicted. It will, however be a more subtle form of trash. Murdoch should never have been granted citizenship, IMO, it was obvious what a creep he is and what his motivations were. Then, of course, he works hand in hand with the D.C. decision makers. I know it sounds far fetched, but Murdoch may, in the long run, do more to destroy the United States than Bush and his crooks have. My $2 (inflation, you know).
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Shel was a funny man who made interesting observations in his songs. One that I particularly liked made fun of white blues singers with soap behind their ears--it came out during the folk music fad and was spot on
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I always thought Ed Michel diluted the work of good musicians by adding electronic elements. BTW Ed was working for Riverside in London back in 1960-61, when I was with the label.
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Ross pays no attention to the words. I liked her Motown recordings, but she should stay away from this kind of material. This is the sort of cringe-inducing rendering that Dionne Warwick killed a CD-full of Cole Porter with.
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I was a big fan of Don Pullen's music and deeply saddened by his premature departure. Here are some photos I took in Perugia, at the Umbria '84 festival:
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Jim, you keep mentioning the Mizell brothers and the name alone gives me the creeps. They were beyond horrible, IMO, but theirs was the kind of crap Butler supported--he was clueless when it came to jazz and, for that matter, the music industry..
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looking for: good cheap broadcast quality camcorder
Christiern replied to AllenLowe's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
I think it may be the incongruity of your need: broadcast quality - cheap. Now, if you could define "cheap" in this context, we might have something to go on. Give us the Lowedown, Allen. -
Jim: "I just think that it was a severe lack of imagination about how to hit that "new note", simple as that. You got it, Jim. Thanks for saving me the time it would have taken to give Dan a clearer retro glance. I think the fact and documentation (i.e. album releases) speak for themselves, so really no need for further discussion on my part.
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You bet it could! For those of us who were around and in the business at the time, this is not hindsight but, rather, first-hand recollection. Sometimes presumption might appear to be a wonderful tool, but it is inevitably conquered by that which really occurred.
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Talking to some people, nothing out of the ordinary, except, of course, that he should have been in the club.
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