Jump to content

Niko

Members
  • Posts

    5,048
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Niko

  1. Here, why not take this test and post the results: http://www.free-test-online.com/middle/8th_grade_algebra1.htm 10/10 so I did better than the 26/30... given that I could hardly read English in 8th grade I probably improved in both (while my latin has almost vanished)... the algebra test looks fairly reasonable to me while the history was just a bunch of facts most of which nobody needs to know
  2. there's also a rather unusual spelling of Bora Rokovic on the cover of the first LP (plus: it should, of course be "schlägt" and "Walzer"), if you read the original liner notes, #50 here , the impression of cluelessness and bad editing is confirmed...
  3. definitely the same person, a bit of googling (eg this biography) suggests that "Carl Drewo" is the most common spelling, followed by "Karl Drewo" while "Carl Drevo" is rarer... (how he managed to achieve multiple spellings of his name I couldn't find out)
  4. Choices were Jamestown, Queen Anne, Charleston, Plymouth, three of which looked reasonable to me - but if you know a little more about the US than I do, you can, of course, exclude more... (a little googling made Queen Anne more reasonable than I thought btw) what I found most irritating as an exchange student in the US was that exams in history and related subjects really took the form of these quizzes instead of essays and the like... (in particular, you can perform extremely well with a little effort and common sense but without really "getting a feeling" for the topic)
  5. according to the discography I linked to above, it was arranged by Willie "Face" Smith who also arranged and composed parts of Joe Lovano's 52nd Street Themes albums, see also here: http://www.cleveland.com/obituaries/index.ssf/2009/12/willie_smith_played_composed_a.html
  6. here's the Webster radio show by our own Ghost of Miles, http://indianapublicmedia.org/nightlights/the-man-before-miles-freddie-webster/ and here is a more detailed list: http://www.jazzdocumentation.ch/mario/frwe.pdf
  7. Niko

    Bill DeArango!!

    I know what you mean and agree... nevertheless, there's a nice contrast between the image of DeArango conveyed by your post and the 1973 trio live date which can be streamed on the page medjuck liked to... here is another discography btw which looks better on first sight: https://www.staff.uni-giessen.de/~g51092/DeArango.html
  8. This one's for me: 11/04 Lokal Harmonie, Harmoniestr. 41, Ruhrort, 47119 Duisburg, (DE)
  9. A requiem from wired, never owned one amd can't really connect with all the sadness, but the text is pretty good...
  10. just like any other board, it's not quite as active as it used to be, but it has been my "main forum" in recent years, not the deep jazz knowledge you have here, but still excellent discussions, and the politics section, discussion of record stores... and similar stuff are - obviously - closer to home...
  11. it's not much, but, from Ira Gitlers liner notes for Babs Gonzalez - Weird Lullaby "The first New York session is notable as Sonny Rollins' recording debut. The rest of the line-up is Jordan Fordin on alto, but only in the ensemble (Fordin, another Newarker, played organ on some Joe Holiday Prestige sessions in the early '50s)" (typed and posted by ubu on another board)
  12. buying a mobile phone without using its phoning capabilities?
  13. Thank you! there is also a brief clip of Netz in Antibes 1961 at the INA website
  14. According to Trovesi's homepage, Cinque ... and Baghet are early (ca 1980) Trovesi albums on Dischi della Quercia (not Soul Note), Electric Five and Missa are Sideman appearances on BSSN (with Enrico Rava and Alfredo Impulliti), the last one (Nivola) is a more recent (2002) sideman appearance with Marco Remondini
  15. One more single can be heard here: https://crownpropeller.wordpress.com/2012/12/20/grant-green-with-sam-lazar-and-more-on-cawthron/
  16. apparently, some "modern" recordings of Gazzeloni are on the first three discs of Vol 1 here: http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2006/Dec06/Boulez_Domaine_4769209_4768862.htm
  17. this is the track list from google translate/here: 1. The hot source 2. Bermuda Clay House 3. Dem Dirty D'Ewes 4. Country Girl 5. Naisuti 6. Blue John 7. Jean de Fleur (bonus track) 8. Chunky Cheeks (bonus track) 9. I Need You So (bonus track) 10. Kinda Slick (bonus track) 11. Untitled Patton tune (bonus track)
  18. I remember the lines more than the instrumentation. One instrument is playing the melody, and a second melodic instrument is doing an 8th-note counter-melody with descending lines and baroque ornamentation. Drums and bass are fairly minimal IIRC, until the solos kick in. In my mind, I can hear Milt Jackson and John Lewis, but I can also hear Paul Desmond and Gerry Mulligan. Sorry to be so vague... how about the Desmond/Mulligan version from Two of a Mind?
  19. same here
  20. Ted Gioia on 25 Things I Want from an Online Music Service (and Almost Never Get) my own list would look different I guess, and I can't say I agree with all but the first point "Allow me the option of making a cash payment directly to the recording artist. Many fans feel that streaming services give a raw deal to musicians, and want to make amends for using them. Make it easy for us to do so." ie some "direct transfer to the artist" button in spotify I find a really interesting idea
  21. here are some more line-up details http://www.loc.gov/item/jots.200020105 I believe Don Thompson (not the better-known Canadian bass player) was the tenor player in the quintet; most interesting line-up detail might be Michael Snow of New York Eye and Ear Control fame, seen as the pianist in trombonist Alf Jones' Quartet near the end of the film...
  22. there was a CD baby release http://www.allmusic.com/album/eagle-eye-blues-mw0001554915 and there is the Laughing Soul: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laughing_Soul
×
×
  • Create New...