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Joe

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Everything posted by Joe

  1. Apparently, the palette was Cale's idea.
  2. I now feel cheated that there no Nico / Evans collaboration was ever recorded. What textures Bill might have added to CHELSEA GIRL or THE MARBLE INDEX.
  3. I learned today that Nico is the young lady who appears on the cover of this LP. Not sure why I did not know that before today, or why it's worth posting here... but why not? PS -- however, I DID know that Mary Tyler Moore is the cover model for this big band recording:
  4. SOme of the Moers dates were released in what I remember as being official form back in the early 90s. This is how I acquired and first heard John Carter's Suite of Early American Folk Pieces for Solo Clarinet and Davis Murray's Live at Moers. Not an extensive reissue program, but it would appear many of these discs are still in print... http://www.moers-music.com/catalog/overview.html
  5. Art Mardigan's Mercury recordings: one co-led (more or less) with Bill De Arango and one a sextet featuring Don Joseph. From http://www.jazzdisco.org/mercury-records/discography-1954/:
  6. Good stuff; very smart, but not smart-aleck-y.
  7. Yes, iirc. According to the notes to the Mosaic CT Candid box (written by Buell Neidlinger? Can't recall...) "Air" was certainly performed by CT's group during productions of THE CONNECTION.
  8. Though Clay did woodshed with Ornette and Cherry during his LA stint in the mid-50s... Right, didn't Cherry play piano in one of Clay's outfits during that time? I don't recall that tidbit, but I'm far from being on expert on Ornette's earliest LA days. Wonder if this is mentioned in Spellman's 4 LIVES...
  9. Another for this one.
  10. Though Clay did woodshed with Ornette and Cherry during his LA stint in the mid-50s... If you enjoy Clay's work here, his Verve & Antilles dates from around the same era are worth tracking down: I LET A SONG GO OUT OF MY HEART and COOKIN' AT THE CONTINENTAL. Fine date, and, thankfully, among the easiest to find of the American Jazz Masters Series recordings.
  11. Another one "on record," in the spirit of my original post... Then-members of Yes Steve Howe and Rick Wakeman assisting Lou Reed on his first solo LP. I'd have to go back and listen carefully to note which tracks the proggers appear on, but, IIRC, they do more than make cameos.
  12. I believe Chabon's soon-to-be released TELEGRAPH AVENUE revolves around a record store in Oakland that specializes in said genre... http://www.npr.org/2012/08/22/158198740/exclusive-first-read-telegraph-avenue
  13. Thanks, all, for the good wishes. I guess I'll stick around for another year after all...
  14. I saw Charlie Haden in a local record store around 1980. Wasn't sure if it was he & checked with the owner after he left. It was Haden and he was complaining that the owner wasn't carrying enough of his records - even though there were several in the store. Sounds about right....... While I was at CalArts (2006-2008), I would occasionally see Haden and Wadada Leo Smith in the dining hall. Not unexpected per se, as both musicians teach at CalArts, but it was still a bit incongruous -- to me, anyway -- to have my first face-to-face brush with each musician involve cafeteria trays and plastic cutlery.
  15. Once ran into Marchel Ivery loading groceries into his car in a Kroger parking lot.
  16. Feel free to share your own. Tony Williams on Public Image Limited's ALBUM / CASSETTE / COMPACT DISC. Yes, a Bill Laswell production, but Tony does not play with anything like a "jazz inflection" here. Rather, its almost as if he's playing a theatrical role, "heavy metal drummer," complete with transformative prosthetic makeup. I.e., this is not quite like Wayne Shorter dropping in to play a sax solo on a Steely Dan record ("Aja").
  17. "The Guitarist (Wes Montgomery & James Clay, Hollywood 1958)" Kendra DeColo It is the look of terror on his face— the glossy flank of an open grand piano untouched & muscled with light behind them—that makes me turn away, the saxophonist leaning into the curve of breath, the arc glinting from his lips, almost unwieldy, thick-limbed, the precision of a volt striking the ground. He is cruel, I think, his lips gripping the brass mouth & wood tongue, because he knows he can’t be touched as the fighter who doubles inside the ring, winged fits of blood & electricity humming like a halo around the near-corpse of the man he’s whipped, fists demarcating notes into the haze between them, the guitarist’s mouth & eyes swollen with knowledge he is ill-equipped, his left hand a culled constellation, flaccid above the strings as if to form the chord of a blistering universe, the first cut into darkness, deliberate chaos of the child who pretends to play lifting the wooden body to his chest, who knows what stirs in his cells has no name, the crook & jag, blue smoke, a bud opening in his abdomen swelled to the size of hope as we become the shape of whatever we hold in our hands when asked to lift up what we cannot bear to touch. (VINYL POETRY, Vol. 5, Summer 2012: http://vinylpoetry.com/volume-5/page-32/) Also, and at the risk of being a being a self-promoting jerk, I'm happy to announce that my first chapbook -- THE TERRACES (DAS ARQUIBANCADAS) -- has just been published as part of the Little Red Leaves Textile Series. You can learn more by visiting this link. Beyond that, LRL is a great small press that makes (and publishes) beautiful books.
  18. Go in beauty. He was -- and remains -- a true original.
  19. Done, although the next opening is almost a year away! You've got June, 2013. Thanks Jeff. It might take me that long to assemble a playlist (believe it or not). Looking forward to it, J
  20. Thanks for the reminder re: MANOS. My recollection of the film's score is foggy, but I'm curious to revisit. Anything I know about this film I owe to MST3K, which made MANOS the subject of one of their all-time most memorable episodes. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9AJVZuQuD6M& (Also, if you've never seen what they do to a little exploitation film called THE BEATNIKS...)
  21. I ready to assemble another BFT. Please slot me in for the next available opening. Thanks, J
  22. A superb record. Highly recommended... and nice to know there are more tracks from this set to be heard!
  23. Terribly underrated musician... was easily the most convincingly "bluesy" / "jazzy" of the Emerson - Wakeman prog virtuoso types. He'll be missed.
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