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Teasing the Korean

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Everything posted by Teasing the Korean

  1. Thanks for sharing Allen!
  2. The episode in the 5th season of "Hell's Kitchen" when someone burned a wellington and Ramsay called him a donkey. I'm getting teary-eyed just thinking about it.
  3. Yes, I love "Buddwing," maybe my favorite overall. Over the years I've found many of his best ones, but a few have eluded me. Why would any one of those titles be any harder to license than anything else? I could see the problems with a box set. Yellow Canary and Buddwing are both on Verve - that would have been a nice twofer.
  4. "Shock" and "Panic" have been reissued as well: http://www.dustygroove.com/item.php?id=wmyty47tsd&ref=browse.php&refQ=kwfilter%3Dshock%2Bpanic%26amp%3Bincl_oos%3D1%26amp%3Bincl_cs%3D1 A friend of mine told me that these used to be available through comic books and monster magazines! Allen, did you ever dig up the info you had on Hopkins from your forthcoming 1950s jazz book?
  5. It's a great record cover. If I find one with an LP inside, all the better.
  6. I won't - especially if he monkeyed with technology for the full duration of the tune instead of the first four bars.
  7. Why didn't they just spend the time fixing the opening bars, where the flutter occurs, and then crossfade this into the analog master for the rest (vast majority) of the tune?
  8. I hear you. I suspect that more and more of the music I care about will be available only through pricey limited edition CDs or cheap digital downloads.
  9. "Print" feature was greyed out. Any trick around that?
  10. I didn't mean to imply that mp3s were a superior format to LPs, CDs, or reel to reel tape. I was trying to say that the mastering on these is much better than the mastering on all that 90s Ultra Lounge stuff, which were probably mastered to match the levels of then-current rock/pop CDs (the bass on the Ultra Lounge series is artificially heavy). I'll take a superior mix/mastering job on a compressed file over lousy mixing/mastering on a CD quality file. Of course, if these superior mastering jobs were available on CD, that would be my first choice. But that is not likely to happen.
  11. I've never found a better-sounding version of this album than the original turquoise. The CD sounds like it was mastered from a cassette.
  12. Regardless of whether the mono albums were folddowns or not, I prefer everything on Blue Note through at least the late 60s in mono, and I always hit the mono button on stereo BNs. It brings everything into focus better, and you get a little more bass and piano in the process.
  13. While I appreciate those labels, and have many releases by them, their Les Baxter titles are mastered from vinyl. The downloads are from Capitol master tapes and, IMHO, sound much better, despite the digital format.
  14. The full albums are the same price on Amazon and iTunes, for whatever that's worth. If you mean the two-disc "Exotic Moods of Les Baxter," the sound on that was not very good - lots of limiting, noise reduction, fake stereo, etc. Judging from the sound samples of the downloads, they are an improvement.
  15. Just found out on another message board that Capitol has made many of Les Baxter's classic exotica albums available via iTunes. Each album is $6.99. I'd been hoping for CD reissues, but the only CDs since the Capitol "Exotic Moods" comp of 1996 have been EU public domain albums, likely mastered from vinyl. Available titles from Capitol include: Ritual of the Savage Ports of Pleasure Tamboo The Sacred Idol African Jazz Jewels of the Sea Space Escapade Skins
  16. PM sent (you better sit down) OMFG!!!!! Is that the same guy that was on Letterman for a while? He was wild! Yes, he started in the 1950s, was on Merv frequently, then disappeared for a while until Letterman brought him back in the 1980s. When asked in an interview how he described his act, Brother Theodore called it "stand up tragedy."
  17. I really LOVE this album, which may be a ringing endorsement AGAINST your buying it.
  18. I am STILL looking for those hard to find 1950S records by THE GREAT BROTHER THEODORE. They don't show up anywhere. One was on either Kapp or Cadence, I forget which. Has anyone seen them on a blog or anything?
  19. Bill Nelson's earlier response was perfect. I would only add that, when I started buying records, the process of discovery was more active than passive. In the digital era, it is too easy to stumble across something, buy it on a whim, and then let it collect dust on your shelf. I was buying all that space age/mood music stuff long before the internet. Those albums went for a quarter a piece, and there were NO PRINTED GUIDES out there to point you in any direction. There were few people to talk to also. It was all trial and error - A gorgeous record cover may have a lame record inside, and vice versa. You had to keep lists, you had to keep a lot of info in your head. It was very active, and there was lots of time to think, consider, listen, and form your aesthetics. This was the same for most genres of music, though maybe not this extreme. The passive nature of digital communication has in some ways superseded this process. I wouldn't go back, but there is something I miss about the mystery, the discovery, and the hunt.
  20. Have there been any CT reissues of note in recent years? I keep seeing the same CDs over and over. The LPs don't pop up too often, at least the ones that I don't have.
  21. In other news, there are people interested in the records Mile's made in the last ten years of his life.
  22. It's a Kenyon Hopkins album. Creed's name is on it for contractual reasons.
  23. Forget the Miles albums you had and the ones you were missing: What about the artists for whom it was a huge challenge to even know who they were, let alone own all of their music? The mystery and challenge of the hunt is gone. You see a Youtube video of the Wallace Collection, you go on Amazon, order a used copy of their album for $6.72, all in a matter of minutes.
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