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JSngry

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Everything posted by JSngry

  1. Ray Davies Man Ray Mandrake the Magician
  2. Such a part of my youth, first Barney, then the movies. I remember back when Comedy Central used to have B&W Sundays and the old Steve Allen Show was part of the programming. It amazed me to see a relatively urbane Don Knotts. So long.
  3. Little Lulu Bill Evans Yusef Lateef
  4. That's a question for your ears to answer. i can't tell any difference. Then keep both until you can, then cull. Win-win!
  5. Lee May George Will Immanuel Kant
  6. Mavs had no business being 24 down in the 3rd, but as long as they were, they might as well go ahead and win in OT. This coming from behind crap is getting old, though. Avery's gotta put his foot up sombody's ass(es) to stop it. And he no doubt will.
  7. That's a question for your ears to answer.
  8. True, but the world around it does, so it's really like drinking from The Fountain of Youth.
  9. I'm quite fond of Blue Moses myself. It's got that CTI production thing goin' on, but it's still Weston through and through.
  10. Eddie Money Money Johnson Dirk Diggler
  11. Billy Preston Don Preston Eddie Preston
  12. Sorry, but the sound on the Left Bank stuff doesn't bother me at all. I've heard, and enjoyed, far worse...
  13. Yeah, I think it's got a "populist" flavor to it, and I'm ok with that. It's not like they dumbed down either the playing or the material, they just presented the music in a different format as far as arrangements and soloists go. Of course, Bobby's center stage all the way, but think about it - that's what the "general public" likes to be presented with, an identifiable "focal point", a "name" to put to the music. It's my understanding that the Hutcherson/Land band was actually pretty popular up and down the Pacific Coast in the late 60s/early 70s, so BN was no doubt trying to expand that popularity into something less regional. This was a time when such things were possible, and Bobby probably wanted it too, seeing some of the later albums he made for the label. Some of those albums, like Montara & San Francisco were obviously aimed at reaching a broader market, and actually achieved that goal (although neither really do too much for me, even though for some San Francisco is a stone classic), and others, like Natural Illusions didn't. And some of them, like Waiting just tend to fall flat to my ears. There's no real "there" there, if you know what I mean, even though none of them are truly bad. But Cirrus works for me. Good tunes and good playing by everybody, no matter how the solos are allocated. I just wish it had been recorded/mixed with more of an "up front" quality. Mileages, though obviously vary on that. The one that's a real trip is Head On, where Hutcherson let Bayete Todd Cochrane have his head. As on Hadley Calliman's Iapetus the results are pretty unorthodox, moreso actually. And yet again, the thing is not recorded/mixed in a way that favors the music being played. Blame the producer, George Butler, I guess. Pretty sure that one didn't do too well at all.
  14. Von Freeman Young & Foolish
  15. Theodore J. Mooney Harrison Carter Curtis McGibbon
  16. "Hey Bubba, Reebok!" - - Tag line for a commercial trying to sell athletic shoes to redneck Lionel Hampton fans
  17. Charlie Wilson Harold Wilson Billy Graham
  18. Actually he was, but "Colonel" Tom was really his uncle, so you can see where adjustments would be needed to be made.
  19. Another fine Weston/Liston collaboration is Tanjah. I bought the Polydor LP back in the day, but now I see that the now-OOP CD had alterante takes included. If only I had known...
  20. Adlai Stevenson Adelle Davis Johnny Funches
  21. Oh yeah, Ignat. He's one Krazy Kat.
  22. Airto Hermeto Jobim
  23. Yeah, that's one of the highlights, as is the aforementioned "Let's go to the motherfuckin' hop" , albeit in a totally different way. Just the delivery...And there's a thing called "Viagra" that is in no way about what you think it's going to be about... Yeah, the man's still got it. If anything, he's got more of it now than he ever did. He's old, his voice is half-wasted, and he's gotten even more unabashedly hedonistic, which makes for some rather, uh, "raw" lyrics here and there. But oh well!
  24. From what I hear, Solzhenitsyn wanted 50% of the gross, and that was a deal-killer. Don't let the public image fool you - that Solzhenitsyn's one tough SOB when it comes to business.
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