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Late

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Everything posted by Late

  1. Late

    Mingus News

    There's supposed to be an unissued live Cornell University date with Eric Dolphy in the band that Sue plans to release. No telling when that may happen, however. The Japanese reissue of Mingus at Monterey is fairly affordable through Hiroshi Tanno. If you have 13 Pictures already, though, I'd say it's not an essential purchase. The anthology, in my opinion, has the best track from the set ("Meditations on Integration"). The sound on that track (from the anthology) is comparable to the Japanese reissue as well.
  2. Late

    Mingus News

    No kidding — good news for those silly cover art purists! (I include myself in that batch.)
  3. Late

    Eddie Gomez

    I love Gomez' playing on Bill Evans' Montreux set with Jack DeJohnette. Did Gary Peacock ever sub for Carter in that Miles band?
  4. Late

    Mingus News

    I kinda wish they'd stuck with the original black-and-white cover. Still looking forward to the music!
  5. These discs (especially Vol.s 1&2) are great for people who "don't get" jazz. 20-something females also seem to like to dance to this stuff — never a bad thing.
  6. Felser — if you like most of the tunes that are on that compilation, you'll probably like the Eddie Gale stuff. The two selected tracks do have vocals, but they're ensemble vocals ... not like the vocals on United States of Mind. Gale isn't the strongest of trumpet players, but his two records on Blue Note (reissued by Water with great sound) communicate a lot of power — some very impassioned playing on those records. Gale's wife does get some solo vocal features on those records, but she's a fairly good singer. Overall, and at the price, the Gales on Water (Blue Note) are definitely worth checking out. They represent an interesting angle from the period: somewhere between Strata East sessions of the time and Horace Silver's and Bobby Hutcherson's later Blue Note work — perhaps with a dash of Sun Ra ... and the lightest sprinkle of Earth, Wind & Fire?
  7. Here's the full track listing: Disc: 1 1. Phantom - Pearson, Duke 2. Black Rhythm Happening - Gale, Eddie 3. Black Heroes - Hutcherson, Bobby 4. Hey Hey - Hill, Andrew 5. Psychedelic Pi - Smith, Lonnie 6. Emperor - Byrd, Donald 7. Riot - Hancock, Herbie 8. Sweet Pea - Shorter, Wayne 9. Soul - McLean, Jackie Disc: 2 1. Message From The Nile - Tyner, McCoy 2. Slow Change - Hutcherson, Bobby 3. Acid Pot Or Pills - Silver, Horace 4. I Have A Dream - Hancock, Herbie 5. Illusion - Hill, Andrew 6. Peace - Silver, Horace 7. Psychedelic - Morgan, Lee 8. Slow Drag - Byrd, Donald 9. Fulton Street - Gale, Eddie Just drop "Soul" from Disc 1, and add a Grant Green tune (which one?), and it really is "Righteousness"!
  8. I think I have most of those tracks, but that actually looks like a good compilation!
  9. I ordered this one with the Mingus UCLA set, so I won't be getting it until after the 26th! (And, while I was at it, I had to throw in Baker's Broken Wing and Hutcherson's Happenings.) The end of the month will be good over here ...
  10. Philly — I'd go with one of the recs that Bentsy and Nate are suggesting above, and then I'd get one of her ECM sessions. That way, you could have at least two discs of hers representing both "faces." Additionally, if you like Anthony Braxton, that's another good avenue to explore Crispell's work. Braxton's quartet with Crispell, Gerry Hemingway, and Mark Dresser is heavy duty. Their stuff on Hat and Leo is top-notch.
  11. I almost sold Storyteller a while after I'd purchased it, but I'm glad I didn't. I'm listening to it right now — expressive, but subtly expressive stuff. I like Peacock a lot better with Crispell than Helias (though I think Helias is great in other contexts), which is one of the initial reasons I thought about dumping it, but, the more I listen, the more I hear Motian stepping up without Peacock on board. Interesting how the dynamics between a group can effect such change. I personally think nothing ever was, anyway is by far Crispell's best record on ECM, and I'd credit that to Annette Peacock's compositions — so much more tension in the playing on that record, but tension spread over a lot of space and quiet, not the tension one hears (or feels) in Cecil Taylor's playing. When I heard Crispell live (promoting Amaryllis at the time), her set, which was solo, was entirely in her "free" context. I wondered what audience members who weren't familiar with her playing thought. Did they buy Amaryllis afterward? I didn't see many copies moving off the sales table. To be fair, the set was supposed to be a trio outing, but Peacock had to pull out at the last minute for health reasons. I thought, wow, it's going to be a duo concert with Paul Motian ... but he decided not to show either. (I still enjoyed the concert.)
  12. I've purposely not been listening to Ellington in preparation and anticipation of this set. I even went a little crazy and sold all the discs I owned that contained this material. Now it will be (um, kind of) like owning this stuff for the first time! I think I'll even purchase a pound of Ethiopian coffee beans for the occasion of the set arriving. Then, when I open the box set, the first scent it will experience (because of course Mosaics are living, animate things) is freshly brewed coffee.
  13. Late

    Robin Kenyatta

    Clifford — I don't know definitively about Kenyatta's actual name. I'm going to assume you're right. But check out this Google search: http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=...rince+Haynes%22 Weird. Now I have to track down The Girl from Martinique. Sounds like something I should hear.
  14. Late

    Bobby Hutcherson

    I was just trying to steer the conversation back to the album in question (— not a drop of offense taken, Guy!). As for Herbie's organ playing, I agree with what ep1str0phy wrote — it does fit in well with the second part of that album. Still, maybe because of the recording year or because Hancock ostensibly preferred acoustic music at the time, I always find it a little surprising, and in a good way. I wish there more samples of it, but it seems really a one-off. I bet if Larry Young happened to have heard that track from the record at the time, it made him smile.
  15. Late

    Jonas Kullhammar

    Anyone like his playing?
  16. Late

    Bobby Hutcherson

    Like a trooper, dumb or sincere, I payed full price for every West Coast Classics title, partly because I couldn't find them on sale anywhere, and partly because I actually thought: "If Blue Note's going to reissue this stuff, I'm going to give them my money." (Tries to verify memory ...) Wait a minute — I did buy two of them on sale through Dusty Groove. Still, it's good to own the whole lot, and I'm glad they could make an appearance. I have a friend in SF who only casually likes jazz, and he bought the Cy Touff title on my recommendation and loves it. Now ... back to Hutcherson's Components. What do you guys think of Herbie's organ playing?
  17. Late

    Jonas Kullhammar

    Thanks, Ronald. I must have misspelled Kullhammar when doing the search -- I guess? Anyway, I suppose now we have two threads. Has anyone checked out his most recent recording?
  18. Late

    Jonas Kullhammar

    I thought there was a thread on this guy already, but the search function didn't bring anything up when I tried it. At any rate, Jonas used to post, way back in the day, on the BNBB. I knew he was a tenor player, but I had no idea how accomplished, or how relatively young, he is. To my ears, when it comes to contemporary tenor players who favor "hard bop" or "post hard bop" or however one might label more mainstream playing, Kullhammar is hands-down one of the best playing on the scene today. And he's only 28! For one, he absolutely nails Sonny Rollins ... let's say circa 1963 — but, more importantly, it's not just that his playing can imitate such a difficult-to-imitate master, it's that he can freely, and unabashedly, infuse his own sense of "soul" (or passion, or enthusiasm, or what have you) into his music. The result, to put it simply, is a lot of fun, and sometimes quite inspiring, music. Check out his stuff on Moserobie (distributed by Dusty Groove). I'd personally recommend this one as a great starting point: Some wailing big band charts on this set. Even better, the diversity of tunes (up, ballad, medium, even quasi-boogaloo) is especially attractive.
  19. White Lightning — if you don't already have this one, it's definitely worth seeking out: This one sets the bar high for arranging. I only wish that it might be remastered again for compact disc reissue. Right now, the sound is only so-so. The music, however, is amazing.
  20. Late

    Bobby Hutcherson

    That makes sense ...
  21. If the music is in the genre of electronica, however, it does qualify as electronics — no discount. I actually used the 30% coupon to purchase Tomasz Stanko's Lontano. An over-priced $17.99 became a reasonable $12.59. (Funny how math works that way.)
  22. Late

    Bobby Hutcherson

    Following that logic, wouldn't the West Coast Classics series be easy to find? Every rant I've ever read about that series makes them out to be the worst selling line of all time. Of course, the music is great ...
  23. Marcin Wasilewski Hard to pin his style down (from an American perspective, at least) — somewhat like Marilyn Crispell with touches of Paul Bley?
  24. Listening to Lontano right now. Superbly recorded — in France this time, rather than Norway — with very fine playing. For me, the pianist Marcin Wasilewski is the centerpiece of this band. Stanko's playing is very atmospheric, but without Wasilewski behind him, the record wouldn't be the same. Wasilewski is a pianist to look out for in the future. I wish this group were making it up to Oregon. They did for the tour for Suspended Night, and they were great then.
  25. Late

    Robin Kenyatta

    Robin Kenyatta's actual name is Robert Prince Haynes. He was originally from South Carolina. I believe he passed away in 2004.
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