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JSngry

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Posts posted by JSngry

  1. This malady is indeed age-related, and is invariably accelerated/accentuated with marriage and, later on, having children. I've suffered from it for about 20 years now, and have loved every minute of it. Except, of course, when the lovely and talented Brenda attempts a cure....

    Oh, BTW, it's also known as "Ozzie Nelson Syndrome" and/or "Terminal Puttering". To those of us who grew up watching 50s domestic-based sitcoms, it seemed like what we were SUPPOSED to do. Little did we know that Steven Covay lurked in our future...

  2. Damn dude, you're the Organissimo Radio Shack today - I got questions, you got answers. ;)

    Any idea of a year, roughly, or what "Don Wilkerson Production"(s) was? Or why there's an L.A. Zip Code?

    Now if you tell me that you got that Marchel Ivery 45 from very VERY back in the day... :excited::excited::excited::excited::excited:

  3. Along w/THE BOSS, recently purchased from the store that shall remain nameless. ;)

    "Low Down Dirty Shame", Parts 1 & 2, Tomel Records 101 by Don Wilkerson and his Tympo Five. A division of Don Wilkerson Production (sic) says the label. 3733 So. Western Ave. 90018, Phone 734-9075 it also adds. Runoff area says T-123A (or B), and the pressing plant stamp is a lowercase "d" at an upward left 45-degree angle to a lower case "g" (adding fuel to my suspicion that Dusty Groove maybe has their own pirate pressing thing going on...)

    Tune is a walking shuffle blues, not at all dissimilar to some early 50s King or Kent thing. Bitingly nasty, somewhat Bostic-esque alto featured between vocal spots, and really, REALLY lo-fi recording quality.

    So, is this THE Don Wilkerson, and if so, what the hell is this record? Websearch turns up just a few hits, all offering the item for sale.

    Guess I'll ask Shelley Carroll if nobody here has a clue. but c'mon - surely SOMEBODY knows what this is!

  4. When it comes to the Music Business And All Things Related, musicians are (usually) a necessary evil at best. Once the music gets made, they have served their purpose. Breeders, that's what musicians are, professional baby-makers for "the industry". Why would you want to interview THAT when there are obviously more qualifed people to speak with?

    Grrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr..........

    ??????

  5. Emotionally, I dig Hank's vibe - cool but with plenty of feeling, and a lack of machismo bluster (not there's anything wron with that, but the contrast is refreshing when it's honest). He projects (to me anyway), a sensitivity and vulnerabilty that coexists in varying proportions with a sheild of inpenetrable (at least up until the late 60s) hipness. The result is an emotional tension that I, and I suspect many others, find compelling and irresistable.

    Musically, the guy was just SO freakin hip (meaning for me sophisticated and soulful, knowing and feeling, in equally highly developed portions) in every way. His timing was impeccable, his attention to detail (particularly revealed in the later recordings, where what he leaves out is at least as important as what he puts in) second to none, his harmonic awareness SO developed, his tone completely his own, just everything about him was unique and highly refined. To play like he played, in all of his phases, requires an incredible amount of focus and confidence. One misstep, one lapse in concentration or misplaced/misplayed note and you're screwed, big time.

    Hank was not an extremely extroverted player, nor was he one of those guys who played obviously and dazzlingly brilliant shit. Nor was he one of those guys who was always expanding their pallate. If anythng, he was about contracting his. If you don't "get" him, well hey - you don't get him. Probably a personality conflict between the two of you in there somewhere. Besides, nobody gets everything all the time. But there's plenty of meat there if you can make the connection.

  6. IMHO this is the BEST Jimmy Smith record he ever did. On ANY label. Simply amazing.

    I can't give it a stronger recommendation.

    This is THE record. :D

    So, is it obsure to all but hardcore Smith buffs? I mean, I'm not a completist or anything w/Smith, but I am pretty familiar with his work. You'd think that w/Benson on board that this one would have been reissued by now and would be all famous and stuff.

    What's the deal?

  7. Found this one at Dusty Groove a few weeks ago, and must say that I'd never heard of it at all, which considering that it's a live trio date w/Smith, Donald Bailey, and GEORGE BENSON (Nathan Page on one tune), seems odd.

    Seems to be a late 60s/very early 70s thing, released after FURTHER ADVENTURES OF JIMMY AND WES. Said to have been recorded at Paschal's La Carousel in Atlanta, Georgia and produced by Esmond Edwards. Benson, it says "appears through the courtesy of A&M Records" so this seems to date it in the days when CTI was an A&M thing.

    Some questions:

    • Was Benson just sitting in on this gig? The appearance of Page suggests that possibility. But what the heck was Verve doing in ATLANTA to record a live Smith date? That suggests the possibility that Benson was touring with Smith, if only for a limited time, and that somebody wanted an album out of the collaboration. Anybody know?
    • Why is this album so unfamilar to me? Is it something that all hardcore Smith buffs know about and are familiar with? I'm surprised as well that it's not been reissued at least once, what with the marquis draw of George Benson. It's a really nice record - the crowd is really noisy (assuming that the noise is real), and the music is mellow yet involved, the kind of thing that makes perfect hip background music. Until you start listening to it, that is... ;)
    • And on a side note, the LP back shows the album before FURTHER ADVENTURES as LIVIN' IT UP, another bib band date arranged by Oliver Nelson and anothe Smith Verve I was totally unaware of. Anybody ever hear it? Opinions?

    As always, thanks in advance!

  8. I can't stop listening to this album.

    It gets deeper with every listen. There's so much to ponder in Edwards' playing here, but for me it all comes down to one core point - the man is telling us the story of his life, and telling it masterfully. I keep hearing echos of other times, other players. But it's not some contrived "retro" approach, nor is it a conceptual POV thing like Raasahn or Shepp (and BTW, there are a LOT of things Edwards plays here that could easily be off a late 60s/early 70s Shepp record. But it's not imitative (in either direction), it's just the vocabulary of a certain time and a certain instrument, the lingua franca of a certain breed of musician). It's nothing more than Teddy Edwards playing his life.

    For just one example, check out how his opening notes on "It's The Talk Of The Town" somehow conjure up Hawk & Prez simultaneously(!), but still sound like nobody else but Edwards. You can't get there just from listening to records or reading books, you have to LIVE it, and Teddy Edwards spent his life living it, spent his life not just playing jazz but BEING jazz. He might have lived that life in (semi)obscurity, but it was a life that was all about music, the music of his world, his time, his people. This kind of jazz is about to be dead, if it isn't already. Oh sure, the "style" will live on, but it will be played by people who came to/by it after the fact, after it was a part of the fiber of everyday life for a community. For me, that's a subtle yet very real difference, the difference between lovingly reading Grampa's memoirs aloud and actually hearing Grampa talk to you himself. And if the people of today spend all their time obsessing over Grandpa, what's THEIR story going to be when THEY get to be Grandpa?

    The musical and social scene(s) that bred Teddy Edwards is/are all but dead, and now, so too is Teddy. That's just the way life goes - it goes... Actually, as a thriving, vital, community-based scene, it has probably been dead for quite a while now. But there's always survivors, and Teddy Edwards WAS a survivor, one of the type that remained true to who he was up until the very end, one who got to be "who he was", simply by being who he was, nothing more, nothing less, through good times and bad. How many people in any walk of life can you say that about, especially today, when it seems that "creating" yourself has somehow displaced BEING yourself as the preferred way of living?

    As fine as the other work of his that I've heard has been, Edward seems to reach a rarified peak here, almost as if he was finally at the mountaintop's highest and final peak, that level of total self-awareness and flawless execution that a lot of musicians would gladly die today for if they could just get there one time. He's 100% flawless AND 100% naturally human on this date, and there is a word for those rare artisitc achievements that accomplish this. That word is "masterpiece". I'll go on record here and now and say that in my opinon, SMOOTH SAILING is just such a work, an album that over time will surely be recognized as the precious treasure it is, and one that will only grow in stature as the years pass and those who care about such things realize what a total musical and human triumph it is.

    What a beautiful album this is.

  9. And another thing: Why the hell didn't Burns & co. interview more MUSICIANS???

    When it comes to the Music Business And All Things Related, musicians are (usually) a necessary evil at best. Once the music gets made, they have served their purpose. Breeders, that's what musicians are, professional baby-makers for "the industry". Why would you want to interview THAT when there are obviously more qualifed people to speak with?

  10. Ok, you know how the First Herd's "Caledonia" was probably the RUDEST record ever made by a bunch of popular white guys, at least in its time? How the opening trumpet plunger riff sounds like a group of hopped up speedfreak sons slapping their momma? How Flip Phillips' solo is like a man with a 13" schlong who ain't gotten any for a cuppla weeks walking up to EVERY chick he sees with his fly open and saying, "C'mon baby.Now!", and how the trumpets just egg him on, like they know that once Flip scores, EVERYBODY scores? How the ending shout chorus has Dave Tough pounding the SHIT out of his cymbals like nobody's really done before or since? How Chubby Jackson pushes the band with a drive that can only be described as hormones-without-restraint? How Woody's vocal is just so "FUCK YOU" in the most agreeable manner possible? How when the record's over your adrenaline is pumped up 20-30 higher than it was before? And how while at the same time there's all this crazed testosterone-driven horndoggy sociopathy going on, actual music of not a little substance is geting made?

    Well, that's the spirit of every great band that Woody ever had, and the mid-60s band was one of his greatest. It's a "big band" - not a "jazz orchestra", "improvisational ensemble" or anything else like that. They had charts and they played the charts like everytime was gonna be their last. It was definitely a "road" band. Not really interested in anything more esoteric than playing their ass off between bus rides and blurred-together one-nighters in anoymous towns for often clueless audiences who just wanted to dance to "Laura" one more time.

    Sal Nistico - one of the all time great big-band tenorists, a genre unto itself. That motherfucker could play.

    Bill Chase - higher and louder? No problem? You need it to SWING? Even LESS of a problem, then.

    Phil Wilson - a certified character as both trombonist and writer. Tricky Sam lives, and with the emphasis on Tricky.

    Nat Pierce - too damn old to have been out on the road at this point of his life, but there he was, and writing a bunch of charts that don't do anything more demanding than sound freakin' great.

    Jake Hanna - a drummer I elsewise have little or no use for, but the perfect drummer for THIS band. He played tight on the beat, could handle any insane uptempo, keep a ballad from dragging, and put just the right touch (and nothing more) exactly where and when it needed to be put. If Jo Jones ever got his chocolate in Max Roach's peanut butter, the resulting Reese's Cup would be Jake Hanna in his Herman years.

    And Woody? Woody? Woody Herman is proof that if you give a bunch of nuts enough rope, they'll build you a castle before they hang themselves in it. Woody was a bandleader like they don't much make anymore, somebody who was at once corny and hip, and who ALWAYS knew when to be which and to what degree. Anybody else sings those lyrics to "Camel Walk", and I'm reachin' for some heat. With Woody, it's a surrealistic cornball moment that you just GOT to laugh at. Because, like the 3 Stooges, it may be DUMBER tahn hell, but it's also FUNNIER than hell too. And oh yeah - it SWINGS like a M-U-T-T-H-A-F-U-K-K-A-H too.

    So yeah, if you want music of probing intellectual or spiritual qualities, or some other worthy qualities, look elsewhere than the 60s Herd. But if you want a quality "Boys' Night Out", one that will make you feel like a man sometimes likes, no, NEEDS to feel every so often when the shit gets a little TOO thick, but is top-shelf in every regard, then dive in headfirst and stay as long as you like. Nobody gets pissed when you leave, because they KNOW you'll be back. Oh yes you will.

    I guarantee it.

  11. The Lost Sessions is still easily found and is quite enjoyable. The Charlie Rouse tune alone is, as they say, worth the price of admission...

    As is the chance to hear Sam Rivers play a solo that I'm guessing appoximated the way he played with T-Bone Walker. Fascinating.

    All told, a worthy purchase, I think. No "lost masterpieces" or anything like tha, but some good stuff and a fun listen.

  12. We went out to hear Sangrey play with a couple of keyboard players. It was all improv, but very rigid meter. Never having heard Sangrey play before, this was a great introduction. He is a shapeshifter with his tone and the music was a challenge for him, I think. I remember the keyboard and percussion sounds to be devoid of feeling almost, where Jim's playing was all feeling. An interesting juxtaposition. Do you still play with those guys Jim? Remember it was at that little coffee house?

    I sometimes play with the keyboardist, Kim Corbett, one of the great unfettered minds of our time. What you get one time will most assuredly what you do NOT get the next.

    The other guy was an electronic drummer, actually, and unfortunately he's gotten waaaay tied down w/domestic responsibilities. Haven't played with him in over a year now. The night you heard us was one of our first times playing together, and, yeah, it was a challenge. Not because the cat was a drag or anything like that, but just because it was not what I normally play with. At ALL.

    Before we kinda lost touch though, we did a series of casual private recordings. Kim & I went into the project eager to get Chad out of his constant "groove" style of playing, but naturally - no ultimatums, laying down of the law, or any such thing. We just figured we'd overwhelm him by the sheer force of our charm and musical personality. :D :D :D

    The first time it worked, Chad was really taken aback - he felt as if he weren't "contributing" or actually "playing". When he heard the results, though, it clicked, and he realized that he didn't have to play time and groove ALL the time, that sometimes color and texture were just what the music called for. We did 3-4 more sessions of what would probably be called "Electro-Accoustic Improvisation", I suppose, and none are at all similar to the other. Some of the results are "purely" musical, others are very comedy-oriented, others are cinematic/soundtrack-like, but all are different, and nothing was preplanned. Nothing. That's what makes playing with certain people fun - the serendipity aspect.

    And to stay on topic, I've met Lon, Cary, Al, and the aforementioned Shawn & Joe Two Man Collector's Mafia. Got a phone call from Kevin B once, and feel as if I know may of you really well through e-mails and such. And summer being what it is, any invitations issued still stand, recent domestic discombulations notwithstanding, so keep your plans intact!

    I MIGHT have seen Harold Vick somewhere too, but it's too soon to tell.

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