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John Tapscott

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  1. Thanks for posting this a week in advance. I've considered this CD several times, but finally ordered it this morning on the basis of the strong recs. I'll have it in time to take part in the discussion next week.
  2. I agree with Brownie. This is a very good set, with excellent playing throughout; the only quibble being the mediocre (but very listenable) sound quality on the first couple of sessions. But overall
  3. Today - Hank Mobley - Discs 1-3
  4. I've listened to them both recently and I think "Far Away Lands" is a significantly better date than "The Rajah. " To me Byrd sounds just fine on "Lands." The band is tight and Mobley is in excellent form. Great comps, too. For some reason I've never dug Lee's playing on "Rajah" all that much. To me, he doesn't really dig in as much as usual. It's like he's skimming the surface. I really dislike the long quote from "And the Angels Sing" in his solo on the first track. Seems overdone and out of character. All IMHO, of course.
  5. I just remembered that Steve has a nice straight ahead session called "Smile" on Red Baron - w. John Hicks, Christian McBride, and Marvin "Smitty" Smith. Going to listen to that tomorrow.
  6. Indeed. Steve can be heard and seen in action on several Buddy Rich CD's and DVD's. A great player, whose tenor playing reminded me a bit of George Coleman. Wonder if Steve ever studied with him? Anyway, in jazz musician heaven, Steve is the bandleader and Buddy is the sideman!
  7. Wow! Agree 100%, but man,
  8. I'm got to agree with Jim's take on this, and maybe even go a bit further. I'm not trying to defend Columbia when I say this. But the fact is that in the time when fusion and disco were king, Columbia recorded and released FIVE albums of pretty straight-ahead, often fairly ambitious modern jazz albums by Shaw. Not bad. Brubeck, Hubbard, Gordon, Davis and many others, some lesser lights and some greater lights, were all dumped by Columbia sooner or later. The truth is that straight ahead jazz albums, even by the giants, and on widely distributed labels, rarely sell all that well. Even Wynton's sales at Columbia were apparently in the dumpster. Nothing happened to Woody Shaw, label-wise, that hasn't happened to at least 90% of jazz musicians. Seems to me that when you sign on with a label like Columbia, you've got to be realistic. This is not a life-time deal by any means. It's like a professional athlete signing the best deal he can with a team for a certain period of time. It's going to come to an end. So do your best, and reap the benefits of it while you can.
  9. I suppose we could also mention bassist Steve Gilmore and drummer Bill Goodwin who have been with Phil Woods for 30 years now.
  10. Tenor saxophonist Steve Marcus with Buddy Rich for 12 years, which, given Buddy's nature, would seem to be a VERY long tenure. Steve says somewhere that was fired by Buddy a number of times, but simply kept showing up for the next gig, and Buddy seemed to have forgotten all about the firing.
  11. When I was really discovering jazz in the decade of the '70's, Woody Shaw was one of the musicians I listened to most. He really did have a pretty high profile in those years (and though Columbia eventually dumped him they record 5 albums under his name, which let's face it, was not bad at all) Yes, his life story is sad and tragic on many levels. But the music still stands and it's great. Listening to it helps to overcome the morbid and depressing thoughts one might have in reflecting on his life. And he was playing very well (perhaps even better than before) right up to near the end of his life. I think of how well he played on Neil Swainson's "49th Parallel" album (from '87, I believe). I read somewhere that he couldn't read the music for that date because of his eyesight, but learned it by ear.
  12. Joe Lovano - Joyous Encounters (Blue Note) Also ordered Joe Locke's new CD "Rev-elation" from the Sharp Nine website.
  13. Thanks, Paul. My fault for the off-topic.
  14. Woody Herman got run over by the IRS, not a train. ← Paul, did the guys on Woody's band generally know about Woody's problems with the the IRS, or did it only come out after he had left the road? (and then in even more detail after his death). Thanks
  15. Gee, I feel like a fool. All day yesterday, we kept hearing dire media reports that the price of gas would double today from its current high level of $1.03CDN per litre. In fact, a couple of rip-off gas stations jacked the price up near $2.00. Some people just can't resist taking advantage of others. Anyway there were long line-ups at the stations last night. At 10 PM I waited 20 minutes to fill my car at $1.03, then went home, took my wife's car and waited another 20 minutes to fill it. Finally got home for good at 11 PM. Guess what the price of gas is this morning? $1.03 per litre. No line-ups. Sometimes the media does us a disservice.
  16. Kid Ory - Disc 5. Surprised more aren't picking up on this enjoyable set.
  17. It's strange that this one is not yet up on the SharpNine website. Also agree with jazzydaddy earlier rec. of 'Bout Time. Worthy if you can find it.
  18. I have the Verve double LP "Dizzy Gillespie - The Sonny Rollins/Sonny Stitt Sessions" from 1976. I believe it has everything that's on the CD. Literate liner notes by our own Christiern ( though I wish he had spent a bit more time discussing the music, rather than Dizzy's life and career - minor point perhaps, but a few more comments about the music would have been helpful). Anyway, listened to Record 2 last night which has the tracks with Stitt and Rollins together. A very nice set, with Stitt at the top of his game, and the others not far behind at all. ET is a great track, but the track I really dug last night was "After Hours" - terrific rhythm section work on this. Perhaps even more than the uptempo things, these kind of long, medium slow blues tracks separate the pretenders from the masters. No pretenders here.
  19. Just got my Ory set today. It is only # 955 0f 5,000. I know they don't always ship by strict numerical sequence, but still this is very low for a soon to be out-of-print set. This set must have been a money loser for Mosaic. I'm really looking forward to hearing it. My guess is that many people are overlooking a very fine set.
  20. Speaking of Kenny, does he still have that Saturday night big band radio program going? I've never heard it, of course, but remember reading about it in one of the jazz magazines 10 years ago or so. It also mentioned Kenny's huge jazz collection. I may disagree with Kenny about "Far Away Lands/The Rajah" (that was his opinion 20 years ago; we can hardly hold him to it now), but this guy is REALLY into the music. Gotta to give him credit.
  21. Happy Birthday, Dan! Enjoy a few Gene Harris sides, as well.
  22. All the best, Vibes!
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