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Niko

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Everything posted by Niko

  1. Thanks for that link, playing the Brennan album now... The only one from that list I'd played before was the Tyshawn Sorey album with Greg Osby which i liked a lot
  2. guess you could read Mike Zwerin's autobigraphies as meditations over this observation... what do you with the rest of your life if your claim to fame is Birth of the Cool and you still have 60 years to live after it happened?
  3. Thanks for looking up the lineups! Some of those volumes are well over 2 hours btw, so in total all 8 volumes are about 15 hours of music...
  4. On the topic of this thread, I've met King Ubu several times, Olivier and, once for 10 seconds, Larry Kart...
  5. Amsterdam actually, since this summer, I've even sneaked in ten minutes at Concerto this afternoon, it's close to here, a fresh look at letters L-P, bought the Hapless Child by Michael Mantler... Happy to hear from anyone who's around...
  6. Quite a bit of info on the Cry of Jazz is found here: http://campber.people.clemson.edu/sunra.html No indications of anything being recorded in Europe, and trumpet might be Art Hoyle
  7. The altoist for Let's Go has been listed as possibly Kirtland Bradford, e.g. here https://attictoys.com/lucky-thompson-discography-1943-1950/ (but that's not where that info comes from). Bradford was lead altoist with Jimmie Lunceford around that time and much later a teacher of Arthur Blythe. Typical Bradford features w Lunceford were not heavy on improvisation, The Jimmies was discussed in another thread earlier, another one is Meditation from a Jubilee show One session where Bradford plays a few jazzier solos is with the Joe Thomas Sextet on Melodisc, (Frontline of Bradford, Thomas and Russell Green on trumpet plus the Lunceford rhythm section) I am no expert but my hunch would be that it could be him on Let's Go, trying to make sense of stuff he heard the last few nights in New York or so...
  8. I don't know... he was something like a rising jazz star 30 years ago, recorded with Sonny SImmons (also on American Jungle), had a leader album on Columbia (link), a quartet with Bunky Green, Ira Coleman and Tony Williams... a friend pointed him out to me a few months ago, that's how I remembered... Definitely a more successful career so far than Zarak Simmons who had a similar start in a similar place... but I don't think it's embarassing not to know the name... anyway, playing this album now, thanks for the heads-up... it's nice but I do miss Tina a bit...
  9. the pianist is also playing on that last Barbara Donald / Sonny Simmons album on Arhoolie from the early 90s...
  10. Niko

    Who is this?

    here is a picture of young Azar Lawrence (left) together with colleague Ray Straughter, from here (same picture is also in the Dark Tree book)
  11. Bill Perkins - Peaceful Moments that music room looks really cool - and after moving to Amsterdam a few weeks ago, it's even kind of in the neighborhood can't compete w that room but the possibilities for record shopping after work are a definite plus, listening to one of the results from earlier today... (also brought home some Belgian craft beer with me actually, but that's gone already, records stay... Noblesse by Dochter van de Korenaar in the Belgian part of Baarle)
  12. saw that 10in album in a store earlier today and almost bought it... might still go back to get it - but I already had so much...
  13. Welcome back, it's been a while!
  14. Thanks for that tip re JPC, got my cd today!
  15. Of the recent stuff, my favorites are the Tapscott/Session Duo CD and Ancestral Echoes on Dark Tree...
  16. Indeed! worldradiohistory has some other interesting periodials as well ... The search engine is a bit more reliable on archive.org though in my experience
  17. John is almost certainly a typo, at least it must be the same guy... I collected some info about him here
  18. As a long time bft lurker (first time I participated in any way iirc), some really interesting choices in here, thanks! Highlights are the guesses on the Elmo Hope track and how everybody knew the Iyer album was something on ECM but couldn't place it.... (Will definitely investigate that Hope album which I still don't have... I like that Iyer album quite a bit actually but didn't connect the dots either when playing track 8)
  19. I have some nice clarinet solos by Royal w McVea on one of those Swedish compilations, sounds very plausible...
  20. Inspired by the smooth jazz / yacht rock thread... (Keyboard credits on two tracks: Jym Young of Search for the Black Star fame)
  21. btw, the mandatory reading here are the various posts by our former member Chris Albertson, like this one, more... the Lil Hardin session is a bit special because by accident Albertson had booked two Dixieland bands and not one (as explained somewhere there...) so everything is double...
  22. I got all of the NO and quite a few of the Chicago over the past few years... Worth it for the covers alone imho... Favorites include the Kid Thomas w Emile Barnes, the Louis Cottrell Trio, the Peter Bocage, the Jim Robinson Spirituals, the Lil Hardin... They're all great afaik... Chris Albertson was a bit more interested in uncovering the mystery behind Bessie Smith than I am and it shows in some production choices... But still, you can't go wrong
  23. David Virelles belongs into that lineage... Bheki Mseleku could be nominated for the general list
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