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RDK

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Everything posted by RDK

  1. If anyone is concerned and so inclined, virtually the entire OJC catalog is available for downloading at emusic.com. I know it's not the same thing, but still...
  2. It's also much more practical than the others when you really have to go...
  3. I hear he's a smart guy too...
  4. Same thing happened to me. So I sold it and bought a promo copy instead. It came in a standard jewel box. Much better!
  5. Woody Allen?
  6. From what I've heard I have to agree. My write-in would be Holman.
  7. The fact is, musicians make music with the intent of it being heard... and hopefully making some money off of it (it's their job). It does a great disservice to them to tell them that they're "above" such commercialization, that they're "selling out." If an artist is extremely successful - the Beatles, lets say -and if they object to using their music in such a way, well more power to 'em. But it's their decision to make. For most artists - and especially jazz artists, with sales relatively low - this sort of licensing income can be significant. We should all be thrilled that Coltrane is being heard on TV everday, by millions of potential new listeners.
  8. That was my thought exactly.
  9. Found this on audioasylum. This guy "deconstructed" Coltrane's ALS album... I mean that I sat down at a keyboard and followed the whole composition note by note. I mean I looked at the phrasing or should I say figures since there wasn't a coherent thought long enough to be a phrase, and I looked at the lack of any melodies, I looked at progressions, and I concluded that aside from what I called "noodling" this composition actually didn't go anywhere. I concluded that Coltane's supreme love was a love of heroin. Here's a excerpt of the review I posted. There may have been some minor changes between the draft and my actual posting but this is the gist of it:..... As for the music itself, that was the biggest disappointment of all. It is a suite written in four movements for a quartet consisting of saxophone, piano, drums, and fingered string bass. I’m going to give a very detailed description of it because I want to explain exactly why I didn’t like it. The entire suite seems to be written in several different keys, e flat major (not e major as the liner notes say), e flat minor, and c minor. The tempo is almost constant from one movement to the next except the last, which is slightly slower. The first movement “Acknowledgement” in e flat major starts out with Chinese gong and a short flourish on the sax accompanied by piano chords and drum cymbals. If there is a rubato here as the liner notes claim, it isn’t much of a rubato. Then a 4 note figure; (f, a flat, f, b flat) I can’t really call it a melody or even a phrase, it’s just too short for that, is introduced by the bass. The sax then introduces a 6 note figure; (c, g, f- f, c, b flat.) What might pass for a development by the sax continues for two thirds of the rest of the movement but it never goes very far consisting mostly a few runs, arpeggios, and flourishes in different keys. At one point 3:51 to 3:56, Coltrane apparently tries a trill but flubs it. The final part of the movement consists of the sax returning to the 4 note figure with a similar flat development in various keys. Coltrane’s voice is overdubbed singing the words “a love supreme” 19 times accompanying the four note figure near the end (what clever lyrics!) and seems to go off key about a half tone flat the last four times. Was this deliberate? In this kind of music, it’s often difficult or impossible to tell. The piano part consists of a series of chords and is almost entirely drowned out by the drum cymbals, which play an almost constant unvarying beat. The movement ends with the bass repeating the 4 note figure accompanied by the cymbals. The second movement “Resolution” in e flat minor starts with the bass playing a series of 4 similar 3 note figures; (b flat, e flat, e flat-d flat, d flat, d flat-f, f, f- e flat, e flat, e flat) strung together in what really can’t be called a melody. You can hear a very brief tape pre-echo of the sax just before it enters with the drums. Coltrane plays the closest thing to a melody in the whole suite but it is really only a phrase; (e flat, b flat, e flat, d flat, b flat, a flat, a,---a flat, g flat, f, e flat, d, b flat, f, g flat, f, f, g flat, g flat, e flat, d flat, e flat.) Its development by the sax drones on flatly in the same way the first movement did but with some syncopation, although still melodically going almost nowhere. The piano gets what may be the only really interesting solo of the whole suite displaying some fine playing in a developmental segment that shows plenty of syncopation and blue notes, some very difficult (three against two?) rhythms accompanied by the drums, the only truly fine jazz segment of the music IMO. Unfortunately the drummers’ cymbals are too loud and the piano isn’t well recorded. The sax returns with more of the same type of development, which at times does seem to bounce along in tempo but again melodically still goes almost nowhere becoming monotonously repetitive. The movement ends by just sort of rolling to a stop with a short drum roll. The third movement “Pursuance” in e flat major begins with a surprisingly anemic if loud drum roll solo that lasts for about 90 seconds. The sax introduces a 6 note figure; (c, e flat, g- g, a flat, b flat) which was actually heard in the first movement as a variant of the original 6 note figure which is followed by a 3 note regression to; (b flat, d flat, e flat.) This is developed in a way that is reminiscent of the first movement. The piano gets another very nice developmental solo but its sound is too muted and the drummer’s cymbals are still too loud and are therefore a mere annoying distraction, however, it isn’t quite as bad as in the second movement. The sax returns with more of the same as before and although the tempo is fast and there are a lot of notes, it still seems to drone on and on with endless repetition and not going melodically very far. This is followed by another drum roll solo and then the bass plays a variation of the original 4 note figure it introduced in the first movement followed by a long soliloquy which I confess completely baffled me. There may be something like a melody there but it is so low in pitch, it is hard to follow. The fourth movement “Psalms” switches to the key of c minor and proceeds without any interruption from the third movement with the sax playing what suggests a kind of forlorn melody in a minor key at a slow tempo; (c, e flat, c, g- g, f, g, f, e flat, g, c e flat, g flat, f, e flat, d flat, e flat), but it never seems to pull together and becomes just a series of mostly half notes and whole notes strung together without apparent melodic purpose in what may be intended as a funeral dirge. Again it just drones on and on and on and on with the piano playing a series of accompanying chords and the drums adding to the droning. 30 seconds before the end, the engineer overdubbed an additional sax track on the right channel and a drum track on the left adding to the sax normally being on the left channel and the drums on the right. This was very obvious through headphones so try a pair if you have this recording and listen for that. It came as a surprise when the music just suddenly seemed to end. No buildup, no climax, no warning, just a brief drum roll, a few solo notes by the bass and it just stopped. The most accurate single word I can think of to describe this music is “flat.” For me, it says nothing and goes nowhere. The utter lack of phrasing, build up of tension and release are two of the elements that run through this music that added to its flatness and my boredom with it. It is fairly abstract having no apparent true melodies anywhere. The closest thing it has to melodies are what I would call figures of several notes repeated again and again sometimes in different keys with slight variations, these figures being mostly different in each movement. It has absolutely no dynamics, playing at almost exactly the same loudness all the way through even though instruments do pop in and out. No matter how loud or soft I played it, it was still boring. It is the audible equivalent of a featureless desert. Does this genre try to portray a sense of unfocused purposeless, aimless emotionless, droning we associate with heroin addicts in a nodding stupor? If it does, it succeeds. Perhaps this suite is a metaphor for the life and death of a heroin addict. In that context, both the title of the music and the names of the movements make perfect sense to me. The music often seems to deliberately have a droning quality especially in the 4th movement Psalms. The sax plays a lot of what I call “noodling” which some may think of as interesting and virtuoso like but it isn’t. IMO, the liner notes as they pertain to the technical aspects of the actual musical descriptions of the composition are pure bull. On my sound systems, the cymbals sounded exactly like metallic cymbals, not aerosol hair spray cans. The sax is recorded OK but I think I would have preferred it slightly closer miked and it sounds a little bass shy in the lower register. As I said, the piano was IMO, too far out of balance and therefore drowned out, its bass tones when they were there are entirely lost (This is not always too apparent because it is usually accompanied by the string bass for reinforcement so listen carefully.) Listening through headphones there are occasional very brief tape dropouts but they are not obvious or even evident listening through speakers. I liked the way the string bass was recorded very much. Even by 1965 standards, overall this was not a well recorded or well mastered job, not at all equal to the better efforts by the major studios. There are some musical differences with the live monophonic recording on tracks 2 through 5 on disc two recorded about 7 months later. Some are quibbling, such as the sax instead of the bass introducing the 4 note figure in Acknowledgement. Others are more significant such as an expanded piano section in Resolution although the added part IMO detracts from the better version on disc one. Coltrane experiments with the tone of the sax to a considerably greater extent but it is neither pleasant nor interesting and often no longer recognizable as a saxophone but could be a clarinet squeaking when the tone cracks up. Coltrane was smart to completely omit his singing solo from the first movement. I liked the drum rolls in Pursuance better in the live performance though.
  10. I can't believe the Lou Donaldson (at least) doesn't merit a Blue Note release. If it's not an RVG or a Conn, can we expect all future BN "deep catalog" titles to be released by Water? (Not that it would bother me mind you.)
  11. Oh, the "avant" I can handle. It's the "garde" part that often throws me...
  12. You're right, Chris, any kind of exposure is good, but I am thinking of statements like "Isn't this that song for the KMart commercial" whenever I play that tune around someone who doesn't know what it is. If it prompts someone to check out Coltrane, great, but if it turns into "that TV commercial song" I don't know how good that could be. Maybe I just don't understand marketing! I honestly think more people will say "Hey, isn't that that 'Sound of Music' song?"
  13. I've got a bunch of Leo discs - mostly Braxton and Sun Ra - but don't think I've heard any of the "Lab" discs. What's their m.o.? I would assume a-g, but to be honest I sometimes have a difficult time telling the "good" a-g from the "bad." What exactly does "dreadful" mean in this case?
  14. Does anyone know if Kenny uses a hard or soft "G?"
  15. Think I read his say somewhere that it's a Turkish name, thus the "unexpected" pronunciation. Maybe I should post this on the "Definately" thread, but I believe it is spelled: MOTIAN I've always pronounced it "Mo-tee-un" as well, but I swear I've got a live recording somewhere where Charlie Haden (who knows him well) introduces him as "Mo-shun."
  16. RDK

    Favorite

    I'd have to agree that it's CC - at least among the artists listed and/or who I've heard. Prefer Jarrett and Hancock as pianists, of course, but I love Chick's playing on those early RTF albums.
  17. RDK

    #1 Worst

    Connick is a pleasant enough vocalist. Seems to have gone the NKC route for the simple reason that people dig his singing. He's also modest to a fault. Read some of his liner notes a while back and all he did was sing the praises of other jazz artists that he considrerd "better" than him.
  18. Cool! I think I finally understand this...
  19. I know you don't like to hear this, Chuck, but "free" downloads - much like the blindfold tests here - have exposed me to new artists and more styles of music than I would have discovered otherwise. And as a result my purchases have gone up. Way up.
  20. Anyone ever try Rachel Ray's stuffin' muffins? Look tasty! (And yes, I know there's an easy joke there, but I'm not biting!)
  21. Consider me in!
  22. RDK

    Link Wray

    Oh yeah!
  23. No. I'm watching it. (Though not too seriously.)
  24. Now THAT is a viable working philosophy Well, it works for wine, women, and music anyway...
  25. Jeez, Leeway. Did Aric write that?
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