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HutchFan

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Everything posted by HutchFan

  1. MJT+3 - Branching Out (Trip, 2 LPs) I dig this.
  2. Earlier this evening: and Excellent!
  3. Disc 6: Orchestral music from Wagner's The Ring of the Nibelung - with the LSO
  4. What does that mean, Dan? Are they some sort of apparition or specter?!?! JK Pim - Do you have Ibrahim's Ode to Duke Ellington? If not, you should seek it out immediately! It's one of his best, IMO.
  5. I ordered another Mal Waldron disc, a collaboration with Steve Lacy recorded at Sweet Basil: Found a good deal on this CD. I couldn't resist. Plus this LP: I've been streaming and enjoying this. Figured it was time to get the real deal.
  6. Rösel's Brahms is wunderbar!
  7. I'm listening to the cuts from The Tender Gender on this CD. ... So much subtlety and soul! Outstanding! I need to pull that one off the shelf. Haven't played it in a long while.
  8. Somebody really needs to reissue those solo piano recordings -- especially The State of His Art and Jazz Song. They're extraordinary records.
  9. Rowles made his finest records in the late-70s & early-80s, IMO. That series with Zoot on Pablo. The albums he co-led with Al Cohn (Xanadu), Ray Brown (Concord), and Red Mitchell (Contemporary). His own stuff. ... LOTS of good things happening during that run.
  10. Yessir! While I was in college in Athens, there really wasn't any "jazz scene." Occasionally, the university would bring in jazz groups. And Athens had a jazz festival for a few years. (I remember seeing Freddie Hubbard one year.) ... The closest thing we had to jazz that you could see regularly was the jam-band groups. I must've seen Col. Bruce Hampton & the Aquarium Rescue Unit twenty times and Medeski, Martin & Wood nearly as many. To me, Colonel Bruce & MMW are similar to groups like The ABB or Santana or Traffic. They might not be making "Jazz" -- but jazz is definitely in the stew!
  11. The Max Roach LP in this set (again): Really digging this lately. Kenny Dorham especially. And Max, of course.
  12. My father was only 21 when I was born in 1968. Back then, he loved all sorts of music: rock, pop, jazz, soul, blues, you name it. He had a sizable record collection too. I still have a few of his LPs. My dad enjoys music to this day, but he's not the avid fan that he was back when I was a kid. I've dug much deeper into jazz than he ever did, but I'm sure that my early exposure to bands like Santana and the Allman Brothers Band -- two of his favorites -- had a big impact on the way I hear music. I also remember hearing jazz too. Contemporary stuff like The Crusaders and Gato Barbieri. No Ellington or Coltrane or the like. But still. Not a bad start!
  13. and Mal Waldron and John Hicks. Two musical heroes.
  14. More from Mal: Steve Lacy & Mal Waldron - Live at Jazz In'It: I Remember Thelonious (Nel Jazz, 1996)
  15. Just arrived in the mail: Mal Waldron - A Touch of the Blues (Enja/Solid Japan) Trio recording from 1972 with Jimmy Woode and Allen Blairman
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