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Tom in RI

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Posts posted by Tom in RI

  1. Indeed, from what I have read in other lp liner notes, the idea was the producer's to bring together a group who had all been in jail. It's hard to imagine a more insulting premise or marketing concept (an album by a group of all child abusers?).

    I haven't heard this record although I am on the look out for it.

  2. Two Letter Word is not a stricly acoustic show but rather a typical show fom that tour that includes both solo, duo and band (electric) pieces. Happy to say I saw that tour at Lupo's in Providence, RI. RT's take on Season of the Witch shows up on a compilation disc of songs used in the tv show, Crossing Jordan that my local cd purveyor talked me into. Anyone heard RT's arrangement of Duke's Rockin in Rhythm, it does. Live RT is traded quite a bit and pretty easy to get a hold of. Still I am glad to see his response by putting out his own. I'd like to see more artists do it.

  3. I'd second Timeless as a favorite ECM release. It was the first ECM title I bought, Ithink they were typically $1 more than most other releases and I would guess that meant it cost my $6.00 or so new. Still sounds good. I seem to remember a thread at the old BNBB that mentioned a problem with Illusion Suite and that it was unlikely for cd reissue. I've since picked up a second copy as a result of that.

  4. As to an ECM sound, I agree there is one, and I was fascinated to read Jim Sangrey's comment re: George Adams (my current avatar). I'd also add that ECM vinyl was quieter than most in my experience. Speaking of John Purcell, I noticed over at AAJ that a couple of Jack DeJohnette's lps featuring Purcell (Tin Can Alley, Inflation Blues) have yet to make it to cd! Both recommended highly.

  5. A google search shows Irby started his own label in 2000 or 2001 but you can't find his release, Black Warrior, at Amazon, cdnow ect. I did find a place to order it from. Tough enough trying to make a living as a jazz musician, looks like getting his label distributed is an uphill struggle also. Anyone know what Irby is up to?

  6. Live Bird, you buys your ticket and you takes your chances. I started picking up Bird boots on vinyl in the '70's and since they usually mixed sessions you could get great fidelity (relatively speaking) next to pretty indifferent sound. Pressings generally weren't too good either on these. One of these was Invincible Bird which included the session with Chet Baker and Sonny Criss, that has since been out on cd also, 4 tunes in good boot sound and exciting performances too. Another, Parktec 4627, included notes from "Dr. Claude Donkke" who was proported to have an additional 12 volumes to issue (this was part of the Boris Rose stuff I believe) and included a great sounding live Dance of the Infidels.

    Jim, I agree on Bird Seed, I bought it and could not listen to it after several tries. Some of the other Stash issues are quite good including Early Bird (wonderful sounding broadcasts with Jay McShann) and Rara Avis and The Bird You Never Heard. Another lp that my small circle of young jazz addicts considered essential listening way back when was Bird on the Air which had the Parker, Benny Carter, Willie Smith broadcast where each takes a feature with the Nat Cole trio, Cherokee in Bird's case.

    I don't know its status on cd but I have a fine sounding Carnegie Hall concert from Nov. 14, 1952 that features Bird on about 20 minutes of music, 3 cuts with strings and 2 in quintet with Dizzy. Along the same lines is The Birdland Allstars Live at Carnegie Hall that was issued on vinyl on Roulette. This dates from Sept. 25, 1954 and has three very good sounding Bird cuts.

    Great to hear Uptown has more live Bird on the way (and Don Byas too!). I'll be looking for the Allen Eager also. Thanks for the news, Chuck.

  7. I saw Wayne Shorter Sunday night in Boston. Here's a reveiw from the Boston Globe.

    I thougt Wayne sounded a little tentative on tenor and more forceful on soprano. Short night, 50 minute set or so and one encore.

    MUSIC REVIEW

    Shorter Quartet: four brains, one being

    By Steve Greenlee, Globe Staff, 4/8/2003

    ayne Shorter, jazz's greatest living composer, for the most part eschewed form for the entirety of his quartet's concert Sunday night at Berklee Performance Center. Instead, the group engaged in a free-flowing exchange of ideas that created a long series of peaks and valleys that only hinted at composition.

    It was an enthralling event.

    Anyone who expected the saxophonist and his rhythm section -- pianist Danilo Perez, bassist John Patitucci, and drummer Brian Blade -- to ''play'' selections from their new album, ''Alegria,'' was in for a shock. Not only does the album revel in the composed form, but half of the compositions don't belong to Shorter, and they aren't jazz tunes, either. Also, the quartet creates only the core of the disc's music; woodwinds, cellos, horns, and percussion round out the sound, which is equal parts jazz, classical, and world music.

    What they played Sunday may not have technically fit the definition of free jazz, but it came as close as you can without crossing that line. The quartet seemed less a collection of personnel than a large organism with four brains. One musician introduced an idea, another picked up the thread, and all conversed over it, until someone decided how to alter it.

    Shorter's ideas were clearly there, though it would be wrong to say that any one of the five pieces the group played was a ''song.'' Snippets of composition served as only the barest of frames for improvisation. Shorter wanted the audience to know right from the beginning that something was up. It wasn't immediately clear whether Perez and Patitucci were warming up their fingers, adjusting their instruments, or actually starting to play -- until Blade started striking the rims of his drums with his sticks, and then Shorter furtively blew a few notes. Aha, this is the first tune.

    Shorter hadn't led an acoustic band in three decades before he assembled Perez, Patitucci, and Blade a couple of years ago. Not only is he making better music than ever, but at 69 years old he's one of the most relevant, exciting artists around.

    Wayne Shorter Quartet

    At: Berklee Performance Center,

    Sunday night

    This story ran on page D7 of the Boston Globe on 4/8/2003.

    © Copyright 2003 Globe Newspaper Company.

  8. You can't go wrong with any of the the Art Farmer dates from the '80's that featured Clifford Jordan on Soul Note and Contemporary. Another date on Strata East that I tend to reach for more than "In the World" is a live date called "Reasons in Tonality" which features Jordan along side George Coleman and Julius Watkins. I think it was primarily drummer Keno Duke's date.

    Tom in RI (formerly Happyguy-99)

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