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Everything posted by JSngry
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Just found this on the PBS Roku station, Joni Mitchell was on there too, from a few days ago, and am just fixing to start Herbie. Also lurking there is Dave Koz, who I will skip, and Al Jarreau, who I will not, because I think Al Jarreau has thought a lot about what he was doing, and I wonder if he's thinking the same thing that I thought he was thinking when I was thinking about him thinking about it. But Wayne was a hoot! I say as long as you're not crazy, you can be as crazy as you want/need/feel, Hello, what do you say after "Once Upon A Time"? !!!!
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Who remembers Eddie Gladden these days? Hello, cymbals to Heaven!
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News from home - post your own news here!
JSngry replied to The Magnificent Goldberg's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Your family thanks you! It's just me and the little woman these days (well, there's still the dog, but you know dogs, they revel in the funk), and her sniffer's not as particular as it once was, so between the Roku and the Ambien, the key word there really is "probably". Definitely by Friday, though. Gonna go to Fred Moomey's on Saturday to buy a Christmas tree, it's an annual tradition (as opposed to a bi-weekly tradition, I suppose), gotta smell good for that, at least goin' in. Fresh pine can only cover up so much, ya' know. -
B-List Hans & Franz Brian Pumper
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News from home - post your own news here!
JSngry replied to The Magnificent Goldberg's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
I'll probably be taking a shower this evening! -
Bought comparatively cheaply as an object, very pleasantly suprised that it's in much better condition than the one I borrowed/nearly ended up stealing from my band director, except for an unrepairable scratch/needle-stick on "Lover Man" which really sucks, but hey, $12 for an object, carpe diem. Also bought as an object, because I remember the first time I saw this in a record store, I so did not understand the concept of bootleg labels releasing unissued stolen studio stuff from 40 years previously, I just thought well, this is WEIRD, every bit of it, and seeing this cover again, yead, it still looks weird. And there's a drawing of a dachshund on the label, part of the design. The more you know, the more you know you don't know. Bought for the music, enjoyed for the music, and jesus, it sounds like there's an L.A. studio band involved on Side Two, either that or a Carla Bley band recorded really well. Delightful!
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Heard this on a podcast today, sounded really interesting. Stuff like this can be had dirt cheap used at Amazon.
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Import Cds - the online retailer - what do you guys think of them?
JSngry replied to skeith's topic in Miscellaneous Music
Did they actually charge it or just preauthorize? I've stopped ordering from them directly, but truthfully, there's never been an issue that they didn't resolve soon enough. I just don't like taking the time to do all that. -
Crystal Illusions is a darn good album as a whole, you can proceed with confidence, imo.
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Not sure I get your reference to the Salvador "fusion" dates, Jim. They're pretty straight ahead IIRC. Might be a faulty memory at play...for some reason I recall them being "contemporary" or some such.
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Uh oh. DNA says the Queen is a usuper!
JSngry replied to GA Russell's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
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Ornette Coleman In Canada
JSngry replied to Late's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
Did not know that, and find it interesting, especially with James Clay in the picture. Thanks for that. Another piece of the puzzle! -
Order a Spring Roll while you're at it, rite?
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Ornette Coleman In Canada
JSngry replied to Late's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
Am I reading this correctly, a Don Cherry-led group with James Clay playing Canada in 1957? -
Post-Milestone Bartz?
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Jackie McLean's Post-1975 Recordings (All Labels)
JSngry replied to Mark Stryker's topic in Recommendations
The firemen (one in particular, our man Higgins) were nice enough to bring me some of Cornbread from the kitchen, which is where the fire started. "I Should Care", but that's a Consequence of not having a home fire extinguisher. -
Oh crap, that's Eric Kloss with Hannibal! DUH! I should have recognized that, didn't sound that much like George Adams, but it was the only name who came to mind with Hannibal, and I made myself believe it. Sorry But I am confused about Not Jean Carn on Azar's "Bridge into the New Age"...really? On #1, does "not Spaulding" mean IS Bartz, or wrong on both counts?
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Horace Silver Tentet- rejected '63 "serenade" sessions
JSngry replied to chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez's topic in Artists
Maybe there were technical problems. -
Jackie McLean's Post-1975 Recordings (All Labels)
JSngry replied to Mark Stryker's topic in Recommendations
Don Draper, prophet. Ray Draper, not so much. Destination Out & Hipnosis, the half with Grachan. But if my house really is burning, I grabbing my tenor first. -
You've been peeling an orange wrong.
JSngry replied to GA Russell's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Use a lemon. They're good for that. -
Jazz Mission To Moscow was one of the first 150 or so jazz albums I owned, found in the black hole of the Treasure City cutout bins ca. 1971-2. It's good, spry, and frisky, but also a little...huffy-puffy full of itself. for that reason, I dumped it at some point and always think I want to hear it again until I do. Let me put it this way - the "spiritual leader" of the record seems to be Phil Woods in full "fuck you" mode, with no humility around to check him. As much as I love Mel, Mel is just egging him on here. Everybody, even Willie Dennis, seems to just want to piss on the corpse of what they had just gotten away from. That BG USSR tour must have been a tortuous experience for a lot of people in a lot of ways. But considering all the genuinely horrific atrocities that humans have committed against each other, ancient and recent, I don't know that it would rank in top half-million, if you get my drift. So, a lot of the horror seems to me like maybe more bruised egos than genuine human rights violations, although, yes, Goodman was by all accounts King Self-Absorbed Asshole. Then again, perhaps the band just resented being topped in that area. Phil Woods screaming FUCK YOU KING OF SWING on a hotel balcony, I mean...yeah, right. If that sort of thing sounds appealing in whole or in part, then this is the record for you!
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Jackie McLean's Post-1975 Recordings (All Labels)
JSngry replied to Mark Stryker's topic in Recommendations
Pepper/McLean? Parallel, at best. Let's try Rollins/McLean - neighborhood buddies, went through a lot of life-shit, came out on the other side, let their wives manage their career because that's about the only place the trust was, and both always having to, for some, live up to their past music while having a no doubt infinitely preferable present personal. and are ya' like me, were you listening to No Problem for the first time in a room with somebody who heard those squeals and said "Lennie Pickett!" and then you had to say, no, dumbass, Jackie McLean! -
Waking from the BFT coma long enough to take a day off work, sleep late, listen early, all thanks and disclaimers nailed to the floor, here we go/ TRACK ONE - Wanting to say Gary Bartz, but not 100% sure, the tone, at least on my computer speakers, is not as "dry" as what I normally associate with Bartz.. No matter. I like it Not as many altoists get as into the overtone vocabulary as do tenor players (or so it seems), and whoever this is has it down and is speaking it naturally. Also very much dig the rhythm section, very natural in their space. One lick in middle of the alto solo hit a James Spaulding vibe, so this might be a Spaulding date, maybe? TRACK TWO - Thought it might be Adele Sebastian, but no. Very familiar early-mid 70s "spiritual" thing, I always liked that, still do, and now we have the soprano player, who is probably also the flutist, pretty damn fluent on both axes. and...I don't know who this is, some Strata-East thing, maybe. And maybe the poet is the flutist is the soprano? Sounds familiar, though....Ah, ok, this makes sense, Google "complete the circle" and "jazz", and there you have it, JuJu, Nia, Strata-East indeed. This is one of the Strata-Easts I didn't find until later on, have only heard it a few times, but yeh, Plunky always brought it, no exception here. TRACK THREE - Freddie with the Wayne Shorter Orchestra! I love this record, Wayne writing for big band, and only sometimes being realistic about what he writes .The chart on "Chocolate Shake" is a real grinner, Wayne was always one foot where he was, one foot where he was going to be, and both feet always moving. This is not a perfect record, but it's a great one, just because of who is doing what is being done and how they are going about doing it. Anything else is just...details. TRACK FOUR - Oh my...I want to wear white and billowy...and be surrounded on stage by dancers and sweaty percussionists shooting love bullets at Donnie & Marie, love bullets aimed to kill, but kill with love...but nevertheless kill. Ok, period-ness aside, this is a pretty nice cut, true to it's conception from top to bottom, no weak links or betrayals of not really getting it. almost sounds like a Gato Flying Dutchman side, but that's not Gato, nosiree. And it's not Azar Lawrence (is it?). nor Harold Vick(?) but it does have a kind of Earth Wind & Fire vibe to it, the Latin rhythm/R&B attitude/Jazz harmony gestalt that was EW&F at its creative peak. So, no idea, but it sounds better as it plays through the second and third times, and honestly, i wasn't really expecting that to be the case. Good one! TRACK FIVE - Well, that sure sounds like Hannibal on trumpet, and George Adams on tenor, this is what you need to get up get goin', and stay goin', so much energy, not frantic not edgy, just...goodness, energy to get good stuff done well. Can't say that I know this album, but sure would like to! TRACK SIX - Pretty sure that's Jean Carn(e), but on what record, I don't know. Hope it was at the end of an LP side, because, where do you go from there except either turn the record over or let that side play again? I love this little blip in the commercial/jazz zones, I mean, it's almost a pop song, almost a "spiritual jazz" song, ant the hook is all these fourth-y intervals, and ultimately, it comes out like something taht you could play for anybody anywhere - during that window of time when you could. I'm wanting to say that Norman Connors would be in the mix here somewhere too..oh hell, yeah, I remember this! Slewfoot! Yeah, at the time, this felt to me like Connors was going pop (but who saw You Are My Starship coming on?), but in retrospect, that thing, this style has hung around, keeps being fed upon by new generations, usually those with roots in dance music. So hell yeah, this. THIS! TRACK SEVEN - Well, that's Jean again, with Azar Lawrence on Prestige. Hell yeah. That's all there is to be said about this one - hell yeah. That, and whatever happened to Woody Murray? TRACK EIGHT - Sergio Mendes, Lani Hall, Vera Cruz retitled as "Empty Faces". My appreciation for Sergio Mendes and what he did within an overall pop environment has more or less ballooned over the last few years based on overall albums strength, and this cut is a prime example. This might(?) have been the first American recording of a Milton Naschimento song, and where did it happen? On a freakin' Sergio Mendes album. Not just that, but they played the shit out of it, Lani Hall, hey, outside of a certain zone, no thanks, but inside her zone, like this, and whoa, you got something there, something good. All those A&M albums are worth checking out for the deep cuts, as are some of the post-A&M albums, I'm thinking in particular of the "soccer" album that's got some super dope stuff on it (as well as some super dopey stuff), the one where Stevie Wonder contributed a few songs (The Real Thing + 1 more), but there's a Clifford Coulter(!!!!) thing on there that is all-time excellent. But this - this is so damn good, so hello Sergio Mendes, hello Lani Hall, and hello Milton Naschimento. Y'all c'mon it! TRACK NINE - Oh crap, I think I have this record...but can't call it..hate it when that happens. Anyway...cats sound kinda drug, not really hitting on it. It's a familiar tune too...but it seems just a bit saggy to me. But dammit, I know I have this record! TRACK TEN - My only guess would be a very aged Leon Thomas playing with a young-ish retro-band, but I can find no evidence of such a recording. Good vibes, though. TRACK ELEVEN - Terry Callier, "Dancing Girl", What Color Is Love. Hello, Charles Stepney, one of the unheralded geniuses of a comparatively narrow window in time, but genius, definitely. Terry Callier's cool too, very, but as to why this record sounded like this, Charles Stepney, RIP Genius. Thanks, John, this was a very nice day to begin an off day. I was supposed to be having a rehearsal with my band today, but the drummer's got the flu, so not gonna waste a day going to work when I don't have to, and besides, this is better than that, just better, period, than going to work, at least that work, not the rehearsal, that's work too, but that's my work, the other is jsut a job-work, and yes, this is a lot better than that, so again, thank you, sir!
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