Niko
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Dupree Bolton: An Uneven Life
Niko replied to Elmo's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
well, there are those two albums, Katanga and The Fox. Then there's the stuff in the Onzy Matthews Select, some tracks with Matthews (one or two solos) and that abandoned Pacific Jazz Session (two tracks). The latter session is also on the Bolton Uptown CD... That cd also contains a session of an Oklahoma prison band and a live session of the Katanga band that's also on youtube, e.g. this track then there's the album of that Oklahoma prison band (this one) which is distinct from the material on the Uptown cd... I don't have this but I dimly remember I once found samples that sounded like bits of Bolton on there... and finally there's the question of possible 1940s recordings which is analyzed in a really nice document here, arguing that quite a bit of what used to be attributed to Bolton comes from an even more obscure early bop trumpeter (Willis Nelson)... it's not much but it's not nothing either...- 17 replies
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when I was searching for samples from that album a few weeks ago, I ended up here
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living as a foreigner in the same country, I must say that I am really happy with how vaccinations went here... yes, the start was a bit slow, but I kept telling my friends that we will catch up because our healthcare system (with all its well-known faults) is designed to do a great job at something like this - and I'd argue that this is what we saw over the past few months... got my certificate of being two weeks past the second shot today, it's all in the same official app for everyone and if you need a pdf to print that's two minutes of extra work... and this idea of letting youngsters go clubbing or on holidays right after their first vaccine shot (of Johnson&Johnson, so only one shot needed "dansen met Jansen")... had its drawbacks (as seen in the current infection numbers) but I am guardedly optimistic that it did motivate quite a few 19 year olds to get that shot as quickly as possible ... so when I will be back to teaching in September it will hopefully be to a class of vaccinated kids or even young adults... [my friend tells this story of how his kid who'd been mildly skeptic of all the policies got the shot just so he could walk around the house saying "you can't tell me anything, I am vaccinated"... in the end, it's not the reasons that count][home in Germany, I am slightly worried that they lost the chance to get the 19 year olds on track for unrestricted, vaccinated summer holidays - which still seems to be the best motivation for this demographic]
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Dupree Bolton: An Uneven Life
Niko replied to Elmo's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
what I found a bit puzzling when I read this yesterday (great read!) was that there was no reference to the San Quentin Jazz Band book by Pierre Briancon... I know it's in French... but it does have a 50 page chapter on Dupree Bolton with many additional details (arrest records being a major additional source)- 17 replies
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in my case, youtube went right into Togashi's Face of Percussion album after that track which was right on target for me right now...
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Like I wrote, I didn't buy Rings because normally solo albums by drummer don't work for me at all (so, in particular, I only know it from the little that's on youtube)... but with Togashi, stuff that otherwise wouldn't work seems to work for me... you get into this Zen mode [or, your best imitation of a Zen mode] and the music is just so good...
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this is such a good album, kicking myself for not getting Rings which was available at the same time... but at least I got this one and it's great... and I do agree it's the kind of album one tends to forget (as a matter of fact, a significant fraction of the Kikuchi and Togashi cds is permanently stored on top of the cd player, partly due to space restrictions, but partly because it's always good to have the reminder )
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Rene Costy - Expectancy even though it's somewhat outside the scope of that Euro modernism thread, this is the record that the thread really brought back into my mind (bought it a year ago or so) ... and on some level, this is all about Euro modernism... and it's nice to finally see the face of someone whose claims to fame are a (large) handful of those anonymous library albums... and compared to that vast KPM catalogue TTK posted today, it's also kind of nice to have a curated 2CD compilation of the tracks that might still be of interest (the leader himself on violin I suppose)
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They're 75% of the international series: https://www.emipm.com/en/browse/labels/KPMINT
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I've spent the past minutes trying to figure out that discography and it seems it's an alternative version of Indo-Jazz Suite (see here)
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Wow, thanks for the heads up! went straight to the KPM international series which has John Mayer Indo-Jazz Interpolation and then those Clarke Boland albums...
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I learned a lot about the US recently when I tracked how pianist Jane Getz birth year had shifted over the years in official records (she looks great for the age she claims and even better for the age she actually has, and she did keep her birthday)... once you're inside the US there seems to be zero accountability - and the societal benefits of that feel dubious at best... I know this is super political for US people [so: sorry]... over here,,, I just gave the same ID at vaccination that I give for paying my taxes etc [even though I am not even a citizen of this country] and my doctor at home knows I am vaccinated and this "everyone claims they are vaccinated" thing is a mostly a non-issue
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Interesting to read the time Manfred Krug in there... when I was a child in early 80s Western Germany, he was the fatherly figure in the (West) German version of Sesame Street (we all loved him, really did), but 20 years earlier, he'd not only been a popular jazz singer but also the difficult guy in his then country's most difficult movie (like Michael Moore in a Michael Moore movie) (the guy with the hat and the earrings e.g. at 29:00 and at 1:22... the lone anarchist in a socialist environment)
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was about to post this, too, since my copy of the book was in the mail today (thanks for the tip!), it's mostly a photo book about guys with long hair and beards playing trombones and the like... quite an amazing window into it's time and place... what I also remembered btw was that we once had a great bft here, introducing this time and place, bft 47 by former member couw (I still miss him a lot) I would confidently buy any album that's mentioned there
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Forced Retirement sale continues - Blue Note and other vinyl
Niko replied to felser's topic in Offering and Looking For...
same here... I once walked into this record store in Rennes, France, and it was so amazing I asked the guy how he did it... he said he'd bought the contents of a bankrupt record store in Chicago and shipped all of it to France and that was his shop... there are so many 3$ or 5$ records I'd like to have but they're not available in Europe except with a super high margin... -
Jazz box set sale to "celebrate" forced early retirement
Niko replied to felser's topic in Offering and Looking For...
a very Prussian attitude btw, remember my mother telling me "when we just do our job, it has to be at least as good as what others do when they're putting their heart and soul into it" (and this line of thought comes from the Prussian roots of the family she explained)... she recently retired and felt so misunderstood when people said that she'd been passionate about what they'd been doing there -
this is such a good album! bought it almost accidentally some time last summer and would place it within the top3 or so of (way too many) albums I bought last year
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in for the journey
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I guess there's also the simple mathematics of more generations of musicians living simultaneously as jazz got older... a productive jazz musician can produce new music for about 60 years... and, indeed, in the past year, we saw e.g. two great new albums by Archie Shepp and Pharoah Sanders who appeared in the 60s... in the 40s, most people had entered the scene in the 20s, 30s or 40s so there was more homogeneity... in the 70s you had for the first time the full six decade range of people who appeared in the 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s and 70s... (and of course that's not the whole story... I do agree that with the 70s jazz started to be a bit like it is today... but for the 70s and 80s you definitely have great albums that couldn't have been made any time else, afterwards I am not so sure... but I do start to get a bit of a feeling for the 90s...)
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These perceptions of where territory starts to become uncharted are interesting... I got into jazz in the mid 90s, reading (many times) the 1989 edition JE Behrendt's jazz book... and while stuff did become a bit messier from the late 60s onwards, I thought he and his coauthor still did a fairly good job covering the 70s and 80s... after that territory is largely uncharted .... I wouldn't know how to explain how the jazz of 2000-2010 differs from the jazz of 2010-2020...
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No Herbie Hancock, no John Abercrombie, just a single mention of the Brecker brothers... somehow many of the lists don't fit very well with my image of the 80s... I mean, there is a lot of Marsalis, and Ming by David Murray and other usual suspects... but that type of album that would have Peter Erskine on drums and John Patitucci on bass (there must have been hundreds) does not seem well represented
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quite a few surprises there... Album Album as the most popular ECM album (and not a single mention of Special Edition)... almost nothing on Criss Cross or Steeplechase... e.g. what about some of those glorious late Chet Baker albums (some are mentioned but not the best ones)...
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still remember competely how my friend and me discovered this one back in school ... it was the model for our band but we didn't make it far another of those great SDBAN compilations, this one dedicated to a genius of library music
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now playing another Belgian favorite, Miles Inspirations by the Janot Morales Quartet, the rare case of a library music album that was reissued under the musicians' names because it was just so good... again, it was recorded a bit too late, in 1974, but Janot Morales (tp, flh), Gus DeCock (p) and Paul Dubois (b) have discographies that reach back to the early forties, e.g. those Belgian recordings of Django Reinhardt from 1942... the liner notes start with a memory of Dubois and Morales meeting each other in Brussels in 1944 on Place Flagey when Morales' son Garcia had just been born... Garcia, an important studio drummer in the Germany of my childhood, is on drums... It seems that the task they had for this record was something like "Can you do an album in the style of Ascenseur Pour L'Échafaud or Miles early quartets? The fuck we can!" If you see this for decent money, you don't want to leave it in the store... (the youtube clip has the alternative cover from the original library music release)
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Belgian Big Band now playing it but I thought I might as well post here... this is another crazy modernist record, millionaire race car driver Jean Blaton, "the quintessential gentleman driver" (link), bought himself a fine big band led by Fats Sadi to show off his considerable guitar skills in a program of mostly standards... recorded in 1972 so outside the strict scope of the thread but featuring quite a few musicians whose careers go back to the 40s and 50s like Freddy Rottier on drums, Frans van Dijk on trombone, "Johnny Hot" on piano, Herman Sandy on trumpet and, of course, Sadi himself... what seems really European to me is that at the same time the band has quite a bit of overlap with Placebo, the country's leading fusion band (Richard Rousselet, Nicolas Fissette and "Johnny Dover" were 75% of Placebo's horn section plus Rottier on drums) - the music was foreign anyway so there was not much of a contradiction in playing dixieland, swing, bop, free jazz and fusion with different groups at the same time - these guys were true professionals... (Han Bennink for instance was still recording with Dixieland bands by the time the ICP thing had started)
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