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Everything posted by barnaba.siegel
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German Jazz on MPS/Mood/Inakustik re-issues, etc
barnaba.siegel replied to StarThrower's topic in Re-issues
There is some new material released through last years: two volumes of Tomasz Stańko (Wooden Music I and II), few gigs (Live In Solothurn and Live Recordings 1973 & 1976, there is duet with Albert Mangelsdorff, pretty rough stuff) and collection of his live works from series Polish Radio Jazz Archives. Oh yes. I bought this 9CD Born Free, The 12th German Jazz Festival set. Great quality of... everything, beautiful photos and top-noth music, mostly some free and early jazz-rock stuff. I wanted to but also the Balver Hohle and Altena sets, but my appetite somehow diminished after discovering it's not authorized. Bummer. No, no - it's just some kind of glimmer in my room. Apart from 2 mini-lp's here every one was unsealed and tested in action. -
German Jazz on MPS/Mood/Inakustik re-issues, etc
barnaba.siegel replied to StarThrower's topic in Re-issues
Yea, unfortunately B. Free (with its few other incarnations) turned out to be pirate :/. Too bad, this record is so good and they'd got quality stuff in general. But I hope more live stuff from this circle of German jazz-rock will unearth in the future. Nevertheless, be sure to check out the studio material. Through the years I've got the feeling, that it's considered as one of the best German jazz records from the 70's (with 2/5 band from Poland). -
German Jazz on MPS/Mood/Inakustik re-issues, etc
barnaba.siegel replied to StarThrower's topic in Re-issues
This one is a jazz-rock classic from the MPS catalogue. "Kunstkopfindianer" is credited by Hans Koller, Wolfgang Dauner, Adelhard Roidinger, Zbigniew Seifert, Janusz Stefanski and it's a great piece of a crazier European approach in terms of composing and use of electronics. The opening piece is just mad, Dauner is going crazy with all keys and synths - and Seiferts' violin playing throughout the whole record is definitely unique, he was really one of the best violinist back then. Whole album: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JkVLq95upG0 -
German Jazz on MPS/Mood/Inakustik re-issues, etc
barnaba.siegel replied to StarThrower's topic in Re-issues
This one is fabulous. European jazz at its best. But - to be honest - no album with Albert Mangesldorff is a weak one, especially those from late 60's to early 80's. Guy was a true genius. clifford_thornton - thanks a lot. A new thing and even more exciting thing is coming out very soon! -
German Jazz on MPS/Mood/Inakustik re-issues, etc
barnaba.siegel replied to StarThrower's topic in Re-issues
Oh yea, bought this LP few weeks ago. Very fine jazz-rock, I really like his playing style - a bit McLaughlin-like, but not too expansive or excessive. His second album is also interesting, a significant departure from the Mahavishnu/RTF-like music. It's much more electronic, moody and krautsy. It was re-released on CD in 2016 by Chickadisc and I've got a chance to write liner notes, based on an interview with Jasper van't Hof (great guy!). -
German Jazz on MPS/Mood/Inakustik re-issues, etc
barnaba.siegel replied to StarThrower's topic in Re-issues
I thought about starting a new topic, but then found this one :). Missus Beastly "Minden 1976" (2023) Pretty interesting jazz-rock with some psychedelic/prog/kraut elements (but definitely leaning towards jazz-rock). Very tasty jam with lots of flute and synths. Missus Beastly was a great band in general, their 1974 same-titled album is still a great krautish answer for Soft Machine. -
Oh, but you can - there are long clips straight on the Beat Club channel on YT. It was also released on DVD sometime ago https://www.discogs.com/release/3117370-Ginger-Bakers-Air-Force-Live-1970
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Cool news from German MiG label - some extended Beat Club performance in May, Airforce II with unreleased tracks in July and more. "Under the banner of the “Ginger Baker Archive,” we are thrilled to present music lovers worldwide with the first-ever complete release of the 1970 Beat Club recordings by the groundbreaking “Ginger Baker’s Airforce,” titled “What A Day,” scheduled for the end of May. The next step, slated for the end of July, will be the CD release of Airforce II, featuring previously unreleased bonus and alternative recordings in various forms and contents, mirroring the album’s original release in countries like England and Germany with different tracks. Many more releases are in the pipeline and already in preparation. The MIG team takes pride in collaborating on these projects with esteemed experts such as Peter Brkusic and Johannes Scheibenreif from Vienna, along with other dedicated supporters. Unfortunately, Ginger’s catalog has been released in a partially careless and incomplete manner, and of unacceptable quality. We are determined to change this and restore Ginger to his rightful place in the history of rock music, with due respect and devotion." http://www.mig-music.de/en/mig-music-announces-an-exciting-series-of-releases-from-the-rich-legacy-of-one-of-the-most-significant-drummers-in-rock-history-ginger-baker/
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More Sun Ra on the way: STRUT288LP - Sun Ra - Inside The Light World: Sun Ra Meets The OVC Introducing a musical treasure from the enigmatic Sun Ra's expansive discography, Strut Records proudly presents "Inside The Light World: Sun Ra Meets The OVC”. This extraordinary album unveils previously unreleased recordings from the year 1986 for the very first time, showcasing a unique chapter in the Sun Ra catalogue, officially released for Record Store Day 2024. https://strut-records.co.uk/blogs/news/rsd-record-store-day
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Whoa, that's the kind of news I've been waiting for since years! I wish it's just the beginning, would love to hear some live stuff with strings and wurlitzer.
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This is how the upcoming LP boxset looks like. Nice artwork, very much like 60/70 science-themed graphics. There is a preorder for LP's, but US only. Other areas and CD's will come later. Release: May 2024 http://www.waysidemusic.com/Music-Products/Soft-Machine-Høvikodden-1971-4-x-vinyl-lps-in-heavy-slip-case-(due-to-size-and-weight-this-price-for-the-USA-only-Outside-of-the-USA-the-price-will-be-adjusted-as-needed)__Rune-spc-530-v.aspx
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If anyone would like to fill some gaps in collection or just pick a few live gigs, by SM, I'd strongly recommend: Third the 2CD set with the absolute studio classic and a live performance at Royal Abert Hall Virtually - my personal favorite, pure fire from the most iconic line-up Noisette - on of the few recordings capturing band with Lyn Dobson, so double sax or sax/flute BBC 1967-1971 and 1971-1974 - two 2CD sets, all-killer no-filler, there is stuff with Allan Holdsworth and a big-band gig Floating World Live - peek performance with more fusion oriented material from "Bundles"; what Holdsworth is playing here is unspeakable Bundles the 2CD set the 2022 Cherry Red edition, classic jazz-rock album extended by late 1975 gig (John Etheridge on guitar) There are many, many more, like Switzerland 1974, the Montreux performance - not perfect in terms of sound quality, but it's audio with video and it's great to see Holdsworth's fierce solos or Mike Ratledge playing some modular stuff on Synthi AKS.
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So there is a new archival set of Soft Machine records coming out this year! Cuneiform have just announced this: SOFT MACHINE – HØVIKODDEN 1971 (4 disc set) COMING OUT MAY 2024 (4-disc set of archival live recordings, half of which are previously unreleased, by British electric jazz/ jazz-rock legends, Soft Machine) [UK] It seems this will be a previously known "Live At Henie Onstad Art Centre" gig, but with two new CD's. Well, maybe the 2023 Dutch Lesson wasn't that good (mediocre sound quality and surprisingly not as interesting as the live-at-studio NDR Jazz Workshop), but I'm still thirsty for more, especially for the 1970-1971 period.
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Phil Ranelin - Live in Los Angeles: 1978-1981
barnaba.siegel replied to mjzee's topic in New Releases
Sound exciting, but I'm also a bit unsure about the music/tunes and line-up - sounds like a vehicle for hard-bop revisitation, not a classic mid 70's spiritual and free Ranelin. 23$ is a great price, but with additional 20 for shipment I'd wait for the samples. -
Hi all. Yes, this is a legit release done in partnership with Tony Zawinul and NDR radio archives with their brilliant soundboard archives. "Live in Berlin 1971" will be released on 27th October, 2023. Available formats are 2CD, 2LP (black) and two different colored LP editions - one in GAD Records store and one at heavyweathershop.com. Pre-orders are available now.
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I've read reviews on Discogs, some people writing about really raw sound, so I guess it's a "no" for me. And I guess Gearbox had chosen the best stuff for LP, so the downloadable content could be even "more raw". According to this site (https://www.jazzmusicarchives.com/album/art-blakey/live-at-jazz-workshop-1970(live)), the tracks and credits are as following: Tracklist Side-A 1. Autumn in New York 2. Falling in Love with Love 3. Just in Time Side-B 1. Round About Midnight 2. East of the Sun (and West Of The Moon) Digital edition track list: 1. On Green Dolphin Street 2. The Theme v.1 3. Wee Dot v.1 4. Round About Midnight 5. The Theme v.2 6. Con Alma 7. Daahoud 8. Somewhere Over The Rainbow 9. A Night In Tunisia 10. It's Only A Paper Moon 11. Autumn In New York 12. Falling In Love With Love 13. Just In Time 14. The Theme v.3 15. Wee Dot v.2 16. East Of The Sun (and West Of The Moon) Line-up/Musicians Art Blakey; drums Andy Bey; piano, vocals Ramon Morris; tenor saxophone Isao Suzuki; double bass Junior Cook; soprano saxophone (track B2)
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Good to see it will be issued by Moosicus. This + Marion Brown is an insta-buy for me.
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Not much info, only this below. Good to know it's official, Andy Bey and Isao Suzuki sure sounds interesting. Too bad it's only on LP, maybe we will see CD after the RSD '23 craze. "Previously unreleased, historically important, a gift from the jazz gods. Available for the first time, as an official release in partnership with the Art Blakey estate, this is the only known recording with this Jazz Messengers line-up. This RSD 2023 release comes with a QR code which accesses almost five hours of content - essential for the true Art Blakey enthusiast."
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Miles Davis "Lost" records - bootlegs or not?
barnaba.siegel replied to barnaba.siegel's topic in New Releases
The thing is simple. No label can be deemed as a bootleg in general, so that any new entry will be marked as Unofficial. But a single release could be. So to kick anything out of the regular discography from Discogs, move it to Unofficial Releases column and block sales on Discogs, you need to simply edit certain release and check the "Unofficial release" box. From time to time I'm doing it, not in the obsessive way, but when I check if anything interesting was released and cross with some cheap sh*t, it goes straight to the "Unofficials". Thankfuly rarely anybody reverse it (but technically it's just few clicks). But recently I've got some change of heart and lost confidence, because of those "loophole/justification/legality" @JSngrymentioned. This music legal stuff could be crazy. I had a chance to interview John McLaughlin a few years ago and asked him about years with Graham Bond and then-recent 4CD release "Wade In The Water" with some of the earliest McLaughlins' recordings. I thought it would be a pleasant talk and would trigger some fond memories with general gratitude that Repertoire Records released this rare and old music - but John went instantly ballistic that he don't know anything about this box and they didn't pay him! Should they? Are Repertoire guys and gals acting on the edge of grey market? Thanks for your answer. Thankfully I'm waaay behind the episode, when I was buying everything that have printed cover and pressed CD, so I was asking more like "is there a chance it's legal" (especially label doesn't look that random, we even know names of its founders) more than seeking absolution 😀. I'll pass and wait . I have 3 Miles' boots, bought them in the late 2000s and I was very happy about them. Still am. There is a 1969 lost quintet album from the autumn European tour, an 1973 Olympia concert and double Belgrad 1971/1973 gigs. All this music from that period was virtually inaccessible. Plus some DVD's, I guess all of them could be from this grey market area. I was thinking a lot about "Blue Coronet", so important recording for this electric period transistion! Eventually I got MP3, but it's great somebody unearthed those tracks. -
As we all now, market is full of pirate recordings these days, so it's hard sometimes to distinguish one from another. Not to mention there are probably some levels of bootleg companies - from Dimeadozen thievies to some more sophisticated labels that seem like they're having some purpose, goals, aesthetics. So what do you think of SleepiNight Records, "Independent jazz label owned by Gary Gillies and Sean Gillies" (to quote Discogs), who released 3 Miles Davis CD's - Lost Quintet, Lost Septet and Lost Concert? A bootleg or not? https://www.discogs.com/label/245236-Sleepy-Night-Records
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Donald Byrd - Live at Montreux 1973 being released
barnaba.siegel replied to felser's topic in New Releases
Good to know, will add those to my to-hear list. Still - it's a bit odd to me. -
Donald Byrd - Live at Montreux 1973 being released
barnaba.siegel replied to felser's topic in New Releases
Oh my, that's a treasure... And after a deeper thought I'd say it's quite SENSATIONAL. I checked through his discography and it turns out that Donald Byrd have never ever released a live album under his name! (pls correct me if I'm wrong). I guess he was a "I-don't-like-live-albums" kind of guy, especially after reading this piece from Don Was press release: Well, everything comes together for me now. (Leaving the investigation) I'm quite thrilled about this album, tho I was never a huge fun of his Mitzell era. I enjoy the majority of transitions from classic post-bop jazz to soul/funk/rock driven electric version of this music, but with Mitzell's? I don't dig their singing and harmonies, as well their taste in types of synthesizers sounds. But this live version of "Black Byrd" is really promising, I hope the raw live atmosphere will take away those studio detail I don't like. -
Albert Ayler 5LP set from Elemental for RSD (April 23)
barnaba.siegel replied to romualdo's topic in New Releases
I bought also a CD set and I'm more than happy. It's and oldschool box, not a cheap clamshell one, but with hard cardboard wrapping, cut-out on side, thick booklet and two double digipack inside. And the music - stellar. Maybe the first half of first set is a bit hesitant, but the fire stars with "Ghosts" on CD2. The second set is slightly different, because of a piano, but I think it makes the music more accessible. -
Miles Davis: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 7
barnaba.siegel replied to dougcrates's topic in New Releases
You were so lucky to see those cats in a gig! I could only imagine the tension and great loudness. About "In Philharmonics" - I could never listen to this album at whole. I guess it's not the playing, but more the audio quality. I always wanted to hear this electric sitar, but all music blends together too much... (i've got a classic Columbia CD and the japan Mastersound). But maybe it was also a transitional sound between the Jarrett-Bartz band and a funky 1973 unit. Yeah, I do think so. The majority players from 80's band are still alive and kickin, Miles become a celebrity apart from the music world during that decade - not to mention this music is less demanding if we're speaking about it's promotion (or a cover bands). -
Miles Davis: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 7
barnaba.siegel replied to dougcrates's topic in New Releases
I'll buy it for sure, especially if there will be a decent amount of unheard studio music, but it's a great shame they didn't managed to get through the 70's period. Miles got a really tight band in 1971, touring over a year with Jarrett and Bartz, but there is only 1 officialy released gig. The mysterious 1972 year is caught only on a terrible "In Concert" album There are tons of great quality bootlegs from 1973-75, but there are only few releases. It's crazy comparing to the amount of 1969-1970 music on market. Not to mention unreleased 1975-1978 sessions (although I'm not sure they should see the daylight....)