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Late

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Everything posted by Late

  1. Phipps: Not Jackie, but a good album nonetheless. Nice to hear Barrow stretch out. (He's the phantom participant on Blues & The Abstract Truth.)
  2. I'm not feeling the checked tie + checked shirt, but Trane knew things others did not ... But back to Jackie. Today I listened to: in its entirety. This is actually a much better album than conventional wisdom regards it as — i.e. historically not insignificant, but also passable in the grand scheme. But listen to the solos. None of them are throw-aways. This was a working band at the time, and it seems one that was hoping for a break. Everybody's slightly careful, but to good effect. Webster Young puts forth his best tone and is thinking Miles (perhaps via Fats) all the way. Jackie seems like he's trying to avoid all the Parkerisms that Mingus hated, and Ray Draper is more delicate than he is on the Prestige sessions. Gil Coggins sounds positively Monkian, and check Larry Ritchie — what happened to that guy? There are lots of references to contemporaneous music of the time — quotes of Sonnymoon, Miles licks, and Philly Joe Jones-isms. This band was tight, and they were gigging in Newark. I wonder what they sounded like live. If this album were on Blue Note, it wouldn't be as under-remarked as it is.
  3. Checking (again) to see if anyone here has purchased this particular title. $30 is no bargain, but perhaps it's worth the extra paper route $?
  4. Booyah.
  5. And for fans of the Casals recording (I'm one), this edition is the one you want. Brilliantly remastered from 78's.
  6. And check out Rochat's Cassado: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-WAc1EDl3a0 Never mind all the edits and lighting (and hair). Listen. Cassado himself would grin.
  7. Fans of Ophélie Gaillard's edition of the Suites should check out Pieter Wispelwey's third recording (2012) of the complete Suites. I have to say, I think it's very, very good; so far, I like it better than Gaillard's. Idiosyncratic at times, yes, but musical above all. Sound samples at Amazon. If Gaillard is "virile," this edition of the Wispelwey is carnal. Something like that.
  8. Late

    Dick Wetmore RIP

    Full album on now. Good to hear more Wetmore. I also dig Vinnie Burke. The stuff he did with Eddie Costa — very tasty.
  9. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JxEWa922jgc
  10. Fans here? The Sarah influence is strong, but her artistry is solid enough that she doesn't come off strictly as an imitator. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwfu4lZjD3k
  11. Very much agree. I love that record, particularly the bonus track "Tibbit." And the opening track, "W.K. Blues" (penned by Mr. W.K. himself), was my get-up-in-the-morning track for over a year. That said, what else I've heard from Strozier, which isn't everything, has never quite lived up to the same level of excitement (for me). His participation on McCoy Tyner's Today and Tomorrow, as one example, seems oddly inhibited. On that debut record, however, Strozier is in full voice and very much uninhibited. Doesn't hurt that Booker Little's on the record too. I wish Alfred Lion had found a way (or a desire) to get Strozier onto his label. I passed on the Mosaic because I already had all the music. Maybe that wasn't the best idea. (All this belongs on a Vee-Jay thread. Then we could also talk about The Beatles' first U.S. album!)
  12. Sometimes it sounds (to me) like Rollins is improvising harmonies, or harmonic counterpoint, to a melody that nobody else can hear. In other words, he's playing "under" an improvised melody that he's hearing but not necessarily playing. Does that make any sense?
  13. And now ... I can't tell if this is a terrible record or a hidden gem. But I am spinning it.
  14. The schmaltz level is so high that it's somehow, blackhole-wise, a good record.
  15. Been spinning this one (and Black Saint) all morning. The track "Priestess," for some reason, feels like a memorial track today.
  16. Important point — and the same can be said, probably not coincidentally, of a number of creative icons. Equally important to the music he made, is his power of perseverance — to keep going in the face of that one repeated word: No.
  17. I love the track order. It's one of the few best-of comps, for nostalgic reasons I suppose, that I consider an album to itself.
  18. Interesting that this Vee-Jay title is in the batch. My Japanese P-Vine copy sounds like cr@p. Will probably take a gamble on this new edition.
  19. I heard my first Ornette record when I was sixteen years old. I checked out (vinyl!) The Best of Ornette Coleman, on Atlantic, from my local library. I was entranced — some of the most natural sounds I'd heard from a saxophone. Later, I found out, his music was "controversial." His legacy will only expand.
  20. 300 Low-Price Jazz Masterpieces The above link was posted in the Blue Note SHM-CD thread, but I thought this new Japanese reissue campaign, coming out in September 2015, deserves its own thread. A multi-label reissue series, it initially seems something of a mess. Great titles for sure, but likely no new remasters. Still ... what remasters will be used? SHM-CD remasters? Rudy Van Gelder remasters? Are there titles that you'll actually buy? The price is right, no question. Some titles are more obscure than others, so there's a little — seemingly — for everyone. I'll probably (finally) pick up Blue Mitchell's Blue's Moods. I've lived with the music for some time, but not physical product.
  21. I haven't heard it. Always passed it by for some reason.
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