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Everything posted by JSngry
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There's a great version of "In The Heat Of The Night" with McGriff on The Dudes Doin' Business on Capitol. The rest of that record...not so much.
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Rachel Robinson Rachel Ray Dinah, With Whom Someone Is In The Kitchen, Although For More Or Less Than 30 Minutes, I'd Rather Not Say
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Ok, fantasy wish - Mosaic gets, culls, and releases Paul Bley's private tapes, everybody makes money, and there comes world peace. In that order.
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10,000 posts...only took me 11 years.
JSngry replied to Shawn's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
and the aging classic rock audience! THERE ya' go! -
Well, so much for the joke...
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Marine Biologist Seattle Mariner Perry Como! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tTkDE_AkZ5Y
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10,000 posts...only took me 11 years.
JSngry replied to Shawn's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Geez Shawn, I knew you when you weren't yet a member of the aging jazz audience! -
Concord Music Buys Catalog of Vee-Jay Records
JSngry replied to bluesoul's topic in Miscellaneous Music
There will always be some commercial that thinks it needs "Raindrops"... -
It's the pink one, right? I've had it for years, and agree it sounds great, natural. I figured it was mono, actually. But on the inside jacket, after the liner notes, in fine-ish print, it says "Electronically re-recorded to simulate stereo". Mine's a radio station promo copy, KG 33341. And the white promo labels all say "Stereo" Maybe there was an actual mono issue? Or maybe they just lied about it because it was 1975 and they figured that real mono would turn people off. The only place I see any mention of that re-recorded business is that one spot at the end of the liner notes. No matter, somebody should buy this. It's a really, really good collection of Ellingtonia, and with "The Clothed Woman" & "New York Blues" leading it off, a pretty damn important one. Definitely a transition period for Ellington, the shift from Greer to Bellson, and from Hodges to Smith occurs right in the middle of Side 3, and, yeah, it's sudden, to put it mildly. But even the "curiosities" like "Joog Joog" are quirky in the way that Ellington's lesser works often were. And oh yeah, You also get "Snibor" and "Monologue". And the original "Jam With Sam".
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Concord Music Buys Catalog of Vee-Jay Records
JSngry replied to bluesoul's topic in Miscellaneous Music
Billy Vera got involved the last time any concerted Vee-Jay reissue program occurred, and good things happened while that lasted iirc. As to why they would buy it, my hunch is for licensing as much as actually issuing. -
DP Combo El Gran Combo Felsy Jones
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Just checked all three of 'em, and yes, apparently so.
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Anything for a laugh!
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(Date Of Sexual Awakening x Date Of Increased Earning PowerJob Stability)/Date Of Fantasizing About The Sitter And It Bringing About Potentially Illegal Behavior = Beginning Of Classic Rock Era Of course,, Classic Rock is only sometimes = classic rock, but that's another article to which I doubt there's any meaningfully sensationalistic link.
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Ok, not really. You go, Boomers, you GO!
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One of the very first jazz records I heard was an Atlantic 45 of "Una Muy Bonita". Instant imprinting occurred., in, literally 10 seconds, less than 10 seconds, to be honest, more like 4 seconds. Yes, it's a loss, but not really. As testified to in this thread, the guy changed so many of us in ways that are irrevocable. Such a thing is never really lost as much as it is transferred. So RIP, Charlie Haden. You have not been lost, you have merely been transferred from the finite. Thanks, love, and won't forget, can't forget.
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Not really...Farrell was in a different place as far as "vision" goes, I think. Grossman/Liebman were, at that time, pretty much into getting as far into Tranemath as possible as quickly as possible, full speed "ahead", no looking back, whereas Farrell, although also into doing the Tranemath, was at heart such a confirmed "hard bopper" that I don't see it. To say nothing of being at a different place in his career path as the two younger guys. What would have seemed more "logical" to me would have been for Horace & Elvin to have swapped tenor players on that gig. But then again, Elvin almost always used a very specific type of tenorist in his bands, and Farrell was more of that type that Maupin. Still, in 1968, I don't know how much that mold would have been hardened...
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MLB 2014 Season - Always Take Your Glove To The Ballpark!
JSngry replied to JSngry's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
A.J. Pierzynski: Baseball's Hate Sink http://www.sbnation.com/mlb/2014/7/11/5859442/aj-pierzynski-red-sox-white-sox-dfa-release HAHA! -
Yes, "Carol/Three Points" is added as Cut 2 of Side 3 of In Transition ("released here for the first time", they say). But it's subsequently been added to the CD version of Love For Sale as the last cut. Even if you have the CDs, I'd recommend buying the LP set anyway. Nice package (if you're a tactile-oriented person, those "paper bag" BN twofers are a real treat!), and it sounds great as well, especially the Transition date.
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Squatty Roo Records - What Kind Of A Bootleg Label Is This?
JSngry replied to JSngry's topic in Miscellaneous Music
http://wwX.emusic.cXm/browse/album/all/label:1042149/?sort=downloads Please keep in mind that the above is NOT an exact link to the site, as that would be against board policy. So, just...you know, improvise. -
Recommendations, suggestions on a Complete Satie's Piano Music
JSngry replied to porcy62's topic in Classical Discussion
The Barbier CD-Box arrived today and due to time restricitions I could only give it an earfull.....the most striking aspect is the harshness, not to say bulkiness not witnessed before in a Satie interpretation....very intriguing for sure....look forward to hear the complete set later...reiterating my thnx for subject recommendation !!! Yeah, I've been hitting this one all week...the word "bracing" keeps coming to mind, as in WHOA! Like, out of nowhere, didn't see that coming STOP WHAT YOU'RE DOING. Fun rides, these are (keeping in mind that for me, "fun" simply means getting fully engaged without explicitly either asking for it or trying to). Another "thank you" to Mike, for real! -
Those Wild Beboppers...
JSngry replied to sgcim's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
I guess Tony Bennett was there? http://www.theguardian.com/culture/2013/oct/17/tony-bennett-never-worked-day-life -
Not sure that this has been mentioned before, but here's a variant on the You Got To...band, with Bill Hardman on trumpet. Cobham is much more...assertive than he was on the studio date. You can decide for yourself whether or not that's a good thing, but either way, one more indication that Pandora's box had been opened, and all the king's horses and all the king's men couldn't put them back in the bottle again. I really dig both Maupin & Hardman here, for totally different reasons. It seems like neither is really interested in what the other is doing, even remotely, but here they are on the same gig, so, hey, gig it is. And Horace? Hey, Horace ended up using Michael Brecker, Bob Berg, Larry Schnieder, Ralph Moore, Ron Bridgewater, definitley NOT Benny Maupin. Horace wanted a certain sound, period, experiment on somebody else's gig, ideally your own, if you can do that. But for tonight, we have Bill Hardman & Bennie Maupin, so this is the gig. Right now. = this is life, that's what it is. It ain't very seldom ever clean, best efforts to the contrary. And Elvin has Joe Farrell! Jesus, Elvin and Jimmy Garrison. Win, always.
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"Enchantment"! I have a dream that there's a universe somewhere in which "Total Response" as issued as a 45 with the solos edited out, or severely down. Because I love the groove that's gong on while the singing is happening.
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