
skeith
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Everything posted by skeith
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totally disagree. THis might have been true 30 years ago, but now American Micobrews routinely win taste awards even in Europe. This article shows ignorance or arrogance not sure which. People who really know beer know that American brews are very flavorfull and certainly more varied than even in, dare I say it, Denmark.
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These are from the "Rainbow cd" 2496 spectrum series. The Emarcy sides with alternates at the end PHCE-3054 Study in Brown PHCE-3055 More Study in Brown PHCE-3056 Clifford Brown and Max Roach PHCE-3057 Clifford Brown and Max Roach at Basin Street PHCE-3058 Brown & Roach, Inc. I have all of the Obi strips. Condition is near mint $15.00 each delivered to a US address.
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$30 delivered, insured to a US address These discs have never been played.
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Lester Young/Basie Set Selling Well
skeith replied to tranemonk's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
I did pick this up and while I already have much of this material, the sound quality is fantastic. -
Did you see B. Goren's tribute thread to John Lennon?? - no free pass there.
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The Pride of Cleveland. He'll be missed.
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Lester Young/Basie Set Selling Well
skeith replied to tranemonk's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
One thing that I wanted to point out about the #1 Band set is that Disc 4 is all live tracks,many with Lester Young, which just are great. Don't think the Mosaic set has that. -
Have a great one!!
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I am a bit surprised (and saddened) so many people are pissing on this thread. I bet B. Goren's sorry he started it.
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Hope you all have a great Hanukah!!
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Nice to recognize him B. It's an awful anniversary. Very much missed by me.
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Lester Young/Basie Set Selling Well
skeith replied to tranemonk's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
THanks John L, Brownie and Lon for your helpful comments! -
Lester Young/Basie Set Selling Well
skeith replied to tranemonk's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
I am considering this set. I have the 4 cd set America's #1 Band and understand there is significant overlap between the two sets. Should I get the Mosaic anyway? why -
Cancer took my wonderful wife last week
skeith replied to Son-of-a-Weizen's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Very sorry for your loss Rolf -
Joe Henderson Trio at the Village Vanguard
skeith replied to Durium's topic in Live Shows & Festivals
I love the State of the Tenor recordings. The playing, the tunes, and the sound is not bad either. -
Assuming that the house/garden metaphors were intended as suggested earlier, why the condescending tone? It's a metaphor to which many people can relate to their own life experience, probably at least as many as can relate to "The starless night were not in vain"...that it's not "artfully constructed" assumes that it is even concerned with working the same "technical" turf as Dietz/Schwartz, which I seriously doubt is the case. That it for whatever reason "should" be so concerned is a conceit which I do not share. This specific instance is hardly a "glorious" example, but I have a very difficult time justifying why anybody "should" strive for one mode of expression over the other, especially when somebody is communicating effectively to/with whom they are attempting to communicate about that which they are attempting to communicate. I have an even greater time assuming "superiority" when I myself may very well not be able to communicate effectively with that target/group/audience/whatever. What I have no difficulty in saying is that my wife enjoys gardening, that my heart would have to ready be very hardened for me to even try to take that from her, and that if I did, her heart would be irrevocably hardened, and that, yes, that would be a pretty damn sad thing to have happen, no matter how you express it, the bottom line is that it would pretty much suck as hard as anything could suck. There's an infinite number of ways to express that, but none of them would make it suck any less. Jim -- How you can't see that both "By Myself" and "Alone Together" are powerfully about aloneness baffles me. It makes me wonder whether we can even continue to talk about this stuff, though of course we can and will continue to talk about a whole lot of other things. I'm kind of baffled, too, about your use of the phrase "linguistic ploy," as though constructing a song in which the interplay of words and music, sound, sense, and accent, were some kind of elitist lifted-pinky game. Surely it's quite common in music in general, and in jazz in particular, to set up a framework of structural expectations (harmonic, rhythmic, etc.) such that a deviation from those expectations give a particular phrase or note a meaning that comes in part from its novel "position" within that structure, a meaning different from what it would have had otherwise. That's what I'm talking about. In particular, and you do know those songs, here's where some the accents fall at key moments "By Myself" and "Alone Together": I'll face the unknown, I'll build a world of my own; No one knows better than I, myself, I'm by myself alone. Alone together the blinding rain The starless night were not in vain For we're together and what is there to fear together And we can weather the great unknown If we're alone [pause] together Surely you can see, for example, that the enforced pause between "alone" and "together" in the final line of the song gives that final repetition of the title phrase a new darker meaning, one that is set up above by the chime between "we're" and "fear." As for your "Words don't mean a whole helluva lot. Sentiments do, a little bit more..." forgive me if I mention the famous conversation between Degas and Mallarme, as related by Paul Valery: "[Degas] told me that, dining one day...with Mallarme, he gave vent to his feelings about the agonies of poetic composition. 'What a business!' he lamented. 'My whole day gone on a blasted sonnet, without getting an inch further.... And all the same, it isn't ideas I'm short of ... I'm full of them... I've got too many....' "'But Degas,' said Mallarme ... 'you can't make a poem with ideas... You make it with words.' Go tell the shade of Lockjaw that his solo on "Whirlybird" was made of sentiments, but its notes "don't mean a whole helluva lot..." Sure -- Jaws, and you and I and everyone and his uncle know about and feel the sentiments, but the actual notes matter immensely, no? As for my condescending tone about "he got the house and he got the garden, and their hearts began to harden," I have no problem with the house-garden metaphor or with the sentiment, but its verbal expression seems awfully clunky to me, rhythmically and otherwise. And if you're going to do a "but that's the way plain people talk" number, I think you'll be under-rating so-called plain people terribly. No, they may not talk in the same way Howard Dietz's lyrics do, but Johnny Cash's I keep a close watch on this heart of mine I keep my eyes wide open all the time I keep the ends out for the tie that binds Because you're mine, I walk the line" or the lyric of Patsy Cline's "Crazy" Crazy, I'm crazy for feelin' so lonely, I'm crazy, crazy for feelin' so blue... I knew, you'd love me as long as you wanted, And then someday, you'd leave me for somebody new. Worry, why do I let myself worry? Wonderin', what in the world did I do? Oh, crazy, for thinkin' that my love could hold you... I'm crazy for tryin' and crazy for cryin' And I'm crazy for lovin' you. or Clarence Ashley's version of "The Coo-Coo Bird" Gonna build me a log cabin On a mountain so high So I can see Willie As he goes passing by. Oh, the coo-coo, she’s a pretty bird She wobbles as she flies She never says coo-coo Till the fourth day of July. I’ve played cards in England I’ve played cards in Spain I’ll bet you ten dollars I beat you next game. Jack-a-Diamonds, Jack-a-Diamonds I’ve known you from old You’ve robbed my poor pocket Of my silver and my gold. My horses ain’t hungry They won’t eat your hay I’ll drive on a little further I’ll feed ‘em on my way. are crafted IMO in ways that "he got the house and he got the garden, and their hearts began to harden" are not. Craft does matter, even though styles of craft obviously vary a great deal. "Obstacles ... prompt despair in some, while they only convince others that there is something beyond." Of course you know that Willie Nelson wrote "Crazy"
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Yeah after beating the Saints the other week. Wow!!!
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I saw in a store today a new version which appears to be a UK import and lists the company on the spine as Douglas - the original label. THis has been out of print for a while - there was the RYkoDisc and then Knitting factory had it out for a while. Does anyone know if the original artwork was reproduced inside - it is not on the outside. Anybody know anything about the sound quality - never thought the previous issues sounded so great.
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thanks guys, the duster appears to have worked and for good measure I attempted to clean the lens with a spot of Windex.
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Prices reduced: Bitches Brew = $30 Cannonball Quintet in Chicago = $15
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Cannonball Adderley Quintet in Chicago - (mini-Lp style) PHCE-3065 (2496 Spectrum Rainbow edition) = $17.50 Bitches Brew- Miles Davis -Sony Mastersound Edition (DSD) (2 cd set + 1 bonus track "Feio") SRCS 9714-5 = $35.00 All discs in excellent condition and have the obi strips. Prices include insurance and delivery to a US address
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Having first watched the DVD, I have been listening to the cds on the new Legacy edition. The sound is fine, but not as warm as the Japanese Mastersound edition, even though the Japanese version I have used the US (Wilder) remaster - go figure. While the alternates are fine, I do miss having "Feio" which I think fits better with the other Bitches Brew tracks, "Great Expectations" and "Little Blue Frog"- with the use of sitar - sound out of place to me on Bitches Brew and of course, belong on Big Fun.