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Everything posted by Late
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It's too hard to say — I like all of the compositions listed. I especially like Dameron's playing on the album Mating Call. Damn hip. If you want more Dameron, check out Willie "Face" Smith's orchestrations of Dameron tunes on Joe Lovano's 52nd Street Themes. Shazam!
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This one should still be around. (I see it over here on the West Coast from time to time.) This was Volume 1 of four volumes on Barclay. The impossible one to find is Volume 3, titled "Cheryl," which has some fine Bobby Jaspar on it. I thought that Volume 1 and Volume 2 were still in-print, and that Volume 3 and Volume 4 (which was all alt. takes) hit the deletion axe some time ago. Could be wrong, of course. The original Barclay covers are glorious, and it's a shame that the Japanese market hasn't yet seen fit to release this music with new remastering and the original covers intact.
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A fine collection of poems by Caley O'Dwyer — Full Nova. In my opinion, few contemporary poets are able to integrate such understated humor into their writing. O'Dwyer achieves this poem after poem. I believe the book's out-of-print, but it's well worth seeking out.
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I think its the "sawing effect" Chambers gets when playing arco that most here are referring to. Richard Davis, to me, does sound as if he's playing "classical" contrabass when he's playing arco — very pure, almost cello-like. Still, I think very few could swing on such a consistent basis as Mr. P.L.D.C. The man could fit into nearly any musical situation you put him in when he was alive. I actually would like to have heard him with Ornette. I think their relative contrast in approach would make for some interesting listening.
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OK, decided sooner than I thought. West Coast? Allright ... The Album of the Week for August 24th-30th is: Available here. Yanow Says (which is a variant of Simon Says): For Sonny Criss this was an unusual date. The altoist is backed for the set by a nonet arranged by the great Los Angeles-legend Horace Tapscott. The arrangements are challenging but complementary to Criss's style and he is top form on the six Tapscott originals. The CD reissue includes two additional alternate takes and is highly recommended for both Criss's playing and Tapscott's writing.
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Aha! Sleeper. When are we going to start a Woody Allen thread? (Film-related discussion, that is.) Now that's a non-music thread I could get into. Maybe Alfred, as his avatar sports a caricature of Mr. Konigsberg, could lead the way.
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Pressure! Selection will be posted in a couple of days. First, however, I need to jump in on the "Nefertiti" discussion.
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I slept on this one far too long — just picked it up last week, and have really been enjoying it. Whenever I look at the cd, I say to myself: What was I thinking? Being a fan of Tadd Dameron's compositions ... and I don't buy the disc for almost four years after its release? Argh! Anyway, if any of you (like myself a week ago) haven't yet tried this one, you're in for a treat. The "orchestrations" by Willie "Face" Smith of Dameron's tunes are respectfully, and tastefully, done here, and Lovano's soloing seems to step it up a notch (as compared to, say, his Trio Fascination album, which for some reason leaves me cold). What I'm most struck by is how Lovano manages to integrate the phrasing idiosyncrasies of Sonny Rollins from around (I'd say) 1962 into his playing, and still have his solos be his own. First, I don't think anyone has successfully touched on this phase of Rollins' playing with authenticity, and, second, I can't believe (well, almost can't believe) that Lovano is still Lovano after doing it! Listen to "On A Misty Night." Lovano's whole solo, as I hear it, is marked by that sort of "tripping down the stairs" quality to meter that makes so many of Sonny Rollins' solos (from his RCA period in particular) so amazing. And, the guy is playing a wooden mouthpiece? What a wild sound! I now understand the references I've heard to later Joe Henderson when I hear Lovano on this mouthpiece. He must have had a lot of fun putting this album together. My one (minor) reservation: I wish Gary Smulyan had had more solo space. Then I find out this album won a grammy?
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Favorite Disc in the Miles Plugged Nickel Box
Late replied to vibes's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
A monster bong: + a monster bass: equals: -
I was just listening to McBee last night, on Charles Tolliver's Live at Historic Slugs' on Strata East. What a quartet that was! For anyone that hasn't yet heard Tolliver's work on Strata East, our favorite troubadors of rhyme and reason are offering quite a good price on select titles here. $6.99? Dig.
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(Kind of the right place to post this.) Question to Everyone: What will it take for the Japanese market to start releasing Atlantic sides again? The short-lived AMCY series whetted my appetite, and then ... nothing? Either I missed more releases, am not paying attention ... something! Any guesses? I'd like to see the Shorty Rogers' Atlantic sides see a Japanese remaster, as well as the Ornette's, more Mingus, another shot at Infinite Search, what else?
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Reports on the Silver? For some reason, the Borders here never gets their Blue Notes on the release date. (Well, maybe they do ... but don't stock them until a week later. )
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I was just playing Chico Freeman last night. Both Beyond the Rain ('77) and Destiny's Dance ('81), the latter title with a 20 year-old Wynton Marsalis on board. Chico's chops really shaped up in those four years, and I think I tend to play the '81 record more. Then I realized ... shame! I have no Von Freeman in my collection. Must -- be -- corrected.
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I probably should not have been the one to start this thread, as I was 0-10 in the 70's, but what the hell. For some reason, this decade has really taken hold of my listening lately (along with a large side order of Shorty Rogers, which is another thread). So, here's a new question, for those more in the know: • What would you list as three indispensable "jazz" recordings from the 70's? I've put the word jazz in quotes because of its relative ambiguity. I'd personally call most fusion "jazz," but I'll leave that up to you all. Instead of "favorite" or "most important" or "best" in this question, I thought that the word indispensable might allow for a freer range of responses — what you think is indispensable, and you would hate not to have in your collection. I wish I would have had a chance to see some of those big bands you guys are naming. The first two authentic "jazz" shows I attended were in 1984 — Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers, and the Wynton Marsalis Quartet.
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Hands down, no contest — my favorite "short" solo, which, and dig this ladies and gentleman, consists of only one pitch, is by Cecil Payne. On Coleman Hawkins's recording of "The Big Head," Payne repeats only one note (with the rhythmic figure of dotted quarter note, followed by an eighth) and somehow grooves all hell out of it. Thunder rolls down from the heavens, and even Bean is infected by the groove, picking up this figure for his solo.
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This is almost too general a topic ... but maybe not? Sometimes it seems that a lot of "jazz" fans bring down the iron gate on their listening right around 1969. Why? Now, besides the fact that a lot of the posters here were likely emulating the general template look of Andy Gibb in this decade (myself not excluded), what's the stigma? More importantly, I'd like to hear what some of your favorite albums from the 70's are. Labels too. Strata East comes immediately to my mind. And, within that label, Glass Bead Games is a favorite album from the 70's. Such a beautiful record, and it seems almost beside the point that it was recorded in 1973. The reissue market seems to have not yet fully tapped this curious decade. What gems have the archaeologists not yet dug up?
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Thanks for the heads-up, Peter! Swede — you are the mang! (Shorty-mania over here on the West Coast right now. Well, at least this little part of it.)
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Thanks to a kind soul on this board, I'm now able to listen to this set. Thanks again to you-know-who-you-are! Great music ... and I only had to wait around ten years to hear most of it! Now I'm trying to track down the song list, times, and personnel (from the Mosaic). So far, internet searches have yielded dead-ends. Could anyone point me in the right direction here? I wish that Mosaic would list this kind of information on their site — I'm speaking of the discographies of OOP sets, that is. The traffic they'd get for that feature alone ... I bet they'd see at least a small rise in sales! Thanks in advance to anyone who could help out. Late
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I think it would be even more interesting if we typed "down."
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Oh yeah? Well ... yjl7klook56! :rsly: — Sly reference to Kenny Clarke
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The alternates on Our Man in Paris aren't actually alternates, but bonus tracks ("Our Love is Here to Stay" and the minus-Dex trio version of "Like Someone in Love"), which were on the 1987 compact disc. Now, unless someone at Blue Note has discovered something new, I think this is the case! Is "Like Someone in Love" on the Dexter box? I don't suppose it would be, but I like when tunes without the leader, but still from the same session, are included in "complete" sets. For this reason, I wish that Sonny Rollins' Freedom Suite would finally be reissued in total — including the minus-Newk duo of Roach and Pettiford on "There Will Never Be Another You" (which was, admittedly, reissued on Deeds, Not Words).
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I'd go for Chicago Piano Solo. It gives you Irène straight, no chaser.
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You're right, Brownie. I was just doing an image search when you posted! I think the title is actually Shorty Rogers Meets Tarzan as well. (My mistake earlier.) Still would like to hear what Shorty came up with. Here's one (little) image I did find, that was nice:
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