Jump to content

Niko

Members
  • Posts

    5,048
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Niko

  1. on spotify... the reed section is pretty good on paper (Danny Turner and Charles Davis), the trumpet section is insane on paper (Blue Mitchell, Howard McGhee, Eddie Preston, Dizzy Reece)... otherwise it's what you would expect from the cover...
  2. Philly Joe Jones - Round Midnight live 1969 with Dizzy Reece, Bent Jaedig, Larry Vuckovich, Isla Eckinger...
  3. it's this one https://www.discogs.com/Jon-Eardley-Jazz-From-The-States/release/3178918 a Jon Eardley album produced in the Netherlands with a mostly Belgian band... some of the tunes are actually new interpretations/titles for old Jon Eardley compositions from 1950s prestige albums (forgot the details), the producer reused some of the song titles (but not the music) on this record here https://www.discogs.com/Walt-Lemon-Und-Rhythmusgruppe-Dreamin-Piano/master/1204392 There is also a Finnish record, this one, https://www.discogs.com/Suurorkesteri-Tanssin-Iloa-Suurorkesterin-Tahdissa/release/1395897 that combines tracks from the Eardley album with tracks from another Dutch/Belgian production https://www.discogs.com/The-St-Tropez-Jazz-Octett-Jazz-Goes-Swinging/release/2688989 I wouldn't consider these hoaxes but rather a business model that seems strange to us nowadays...
  4. this one has Serrano and Nicky Hill, it's the second album on the Serrano Freshsound twofer (the other, Serrano's Blues Holiday, has Bunky Green)... discogs also shows previous Japanese issues...
  5. Another amazing collection of Kenton radio recordings is found here http://allthingskenton.com/table_of_contents/radio_broadcasts/ many more and including discographical info etc
  6. Niko

    Bob Dylan corner

    Lips first six probably refers to this box set... https://www.discogs.com/The-Flaming-Lips-Seeing-The-Unseeable-The-Complete-Studio-Recordings-Of-The-Flaming-Lips-1986-1990/release/12199546
  7. seems like you can listen to 30 minutes (out of 5 CDs!) at the bottom of this link http://www.bbemusic.com/downloads/mingus-jazz-in-detroit/ have to work and can't listen properly but this sounds good to me!
  8. Gary Peacock lived in Japan for a while and recorded both as sideman and leader... some great stuff... Joe Henderson has several nice albums with Japanese bands, Helen Merrill, too... there's Gil Evans with Kikuchi, Jack Dr Johnette has a fine album with Maupin Peacock and a Japanese pianist... I would just look at the discographies of Kikuchi, Togashi, Hino, Sato... to find collaborations...
  9. Ah, that's yours! I've actually used it at least twice in the past few weeks... have been waiting for those revisions for a long time on jazzlists.com there many artist and label discographies with the level of detail varying a little from list to list - nevertheless I find this a very useful tool Musicians: http://www.jazzlists.com/index.html Labels: http://www.jazzlists.com/SJ_Labels.htm and one more, Michael Frohne has posted quite a few discographies on his blog (Booker Ervin, Hans Koller... loads of interesting stuff) http://jazzrealities.blogspot.com/ see the list on the right for some guidance
  10. what was funny was that the festival is in that trade fair type complex where everything is named after rivers and other places (Congo, Nile, Madeira, Mekong, Maas ...) and the band really played in "Hudson". I haven't heard the album but am definitely curious - the concert had its moments but did not seem completely coherent/tight - and the sound was pretty bad, too. Organ+Bass+Guitar is not easy. The one concert that really exceeded expectations was Mathias Eick - expected the kitschiest, most relaxing side of ECM and got it but: I had a good time and, after the train ride, the metro and walking through thousands of people, I was amazed to hear music that restored me to calm and collected within five minutes max. Plus: This was not a "cool" band but a playful one, even though the music is what it is.
  11. Yesterday a rare meeting with the world of jazz mainstream at the North Sea Jazz festival, 75 minute sets are a definite plus - and I enjoyed what I heard, sometimes unexpectedly: Mathias Eick Quintet, Hudson (deJohnette, Scofield, Medeski, Colley), Mulatu Astatke (including our own Alexander Hawkins), Vijay Iyer Sextet (and before parts of a bft with Iyer)... not a bad package at all
  12. Team Green here, sorry, but thanks for the headsup!
  13. what I strongly dislike about downloads is this need to organize and store files on a computer, make backups, whatever... streaming takes that task out of my hands, CDs and LPs can stay on a shelf for years... occasionally I rediscover the music that's on my harddrive, some real cool stuff in there, but that happens maybe once every two years... if I have to keep files in good order for work, I can do that, there are people whose jobs depend on software I've written and I won't let them down.. it's just not something I enjoy doing.
  14. heard this spanish freshsound reissue in a store when I came through Paris last week https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/ricard-roda-albums/5463-asteriscs.html?search_query=montoliu&results=54 Ricard Roda - Asteriscs I thought it is was excellent.
  15. Tommy Jones - Bow Legs featuring the legendary Chicago pianist Willie Jones in one of his last recording sessions from the 70s... and before MJT+3 - Make Everybody Happy both recent acquisitions among quite a few others from Groove Rennes in Rennes, France. Didn't have clear expectations when I walked in from the street and was mildly shocked to find a Chicago used record store transplanted into Northern France. Definitely one of the top soul/organ jazz stores in Europe - and very nice prices, too.
  16. Haynes is only on the first three tracks, about 30 minutes, see also the enthusiastic summary here http://www.jazzarcheology.com/artists/frank_haynes.pdf
  17. I found this LP with Haynes recently - also highly recommended... https://www.discogs.com/Walter-Bishop-Jr-Bish-Bash/master/764019
  18. if you scroll down to approximately the middle of this page http://www.barrykernfeld.com/aop.htm you'll find a more detailed description starting with "Unissued session of March 6, 1963". This contains among other things the details on soprano vs tenor...
  19. before: Walter Bishop Jr - Bish Bash (Xanadu) now: Ahmed Abdullah and the Solomonic Quintet (Silkheart) that Ahmed Abdullah album is such a nice surprise - took it with me recently because you just can't let a Silheart CD lie around for 2 Euros... forgot about it for a few months and now had the hunch that this might just be the perfect music for, well, right now - and it is... wish that would happen more often.
  20. Benny Waters featuring Art Taylor - Ziging and Zaging my copy is signed by Waters and dated 23 May 1971 which was the Saturday evening of the first edition of the Breda Old Jazz Festival where Waters was one of the headliners (besides Jabbo Smith). Given that this is 15 minutes from where I found the record, I guess Waters signed it after the concert... (That's Waters on 23 May 1971.) I guess, starting a new "Old jazz Festival" was kind of anachronistic already in 1971... incidentally, I was at the festival's 47th edition yesterday afternoon, it's not only Dixieland but also some Swing, Western Swing, Blues, Rock'n'Roll... still amazed that even after more than 45 years they can still invite fresh "Old Jazz" bands from the UK etc to meet at a festival like this...
  21. really don't know how Steve could be misunderstood... in my view, the Savory set is far more attractive: Savory: this is core material to pretty much any jazz fan. Some of it was previously available in a format nobody prefers. Don't think there is a "download generation". There was only a short moment in history when record companies tried to get high-priced downloads to work before streaming took over. Beehive: I like what I've heard. What I've heard, I've heard from the original LPs which are usually available in the 2-6 Euro range (huge difference to the Tina Brooks BNs). Wouldn't even say that original LPs are my preferred format, but I do like to get to know the individual albums one by one. Plus: From what I can tell, these are nice albums but they're not Lester with Basie. They're not even Sam Noto Xanadus.
  22. Thanks guys!
  23. Niko

    THIS!!!!

    there's more discussion of this series in this thread
  24. Maybe Giuffre with Django Reinhardt in place of Jim Hall? You can still hear a few tracks from the Spotlite album on Mike Zwerin's homepage (http://mikezwerin.com/) if you click on Music and scroll to the bottom...
×
×
  • Create New...