Guy Berger
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Everything posted by Guy Berger
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Jim Hall--among top 5 most influential guitarists ever?
Guy Berger replied to Milestones's topic in Artists
I think of him the way I think of Bill Evans - tremendously influential (including on folks that I really like), played on some records and with some groups that I love, but not somebody I get really excited about (though I "get" why others love him). My favorite stuff with him is early in his career - with Chico Hamilton and Jimmy Giuffre. -
I hadn't even heard of this album. Why was it not included in the Clifford Jordan Mosaic?
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AOTW Sept. 11-17 - Henry Threadgill Song Out of My Trees
Guy Berger replied to paul secor's topic in Album Of The Week
Yup. And certainly X-75 Vols 1 & 2 strongly anticipate a lot of the non-band experiments on Song Out of My Trees, Carry the Day, Makin' a Move as well as the two most recent Pi albums. -
I love Cyrille - one of my 2 fave living drummers - and am delighted that he is getting an opportunity to reach a potential new audience via ECM. That said, I look at this lineup and am a little disappointed.
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AOTW Sept. 11-17 - Henry Threadgill Song Out of My Trees
Guy Berger replied to paul secor's topic in Album Of The Week
Do you think any of Henry's other music has the same "pastoral" feel? "In for a Penny, In for a Pound" also has a "country" album cover and has a bit of a "country" feel. -
AOTW Sept. 11-17 - Henry Threadgill Song Out of My Trees
Guy Berger replied to paul secor's topic in Album Of The Week
I agree with uli, "Grief" is my personal highlight. How do people feel about Henry's absence as an instrumentalist from two of the tracks here? While I love him as a composer/conductor, his instrumental voice is really wonderful and really welcome when it's present. -
Can't entirely discount the personal preference element - a substantial minority of listeners genuinely prefer technically "inferior" sound. Guy
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Black Saint/Soul Note Box Sets
Guy Berger replied to romualdo's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Any idea when these coming out? Guy -
I have the first two albums as well as the most recent one. All are enjoyable though I'd say the first two are a tier above. I will say that this isn't music for people that want something reflective or "emotionally deep"; it's high-quality, fun overachiever/smart-aleck music. Guy
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RIP Bobby - you were on a lot of amazing recordings.
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Love live recordings. Not interested in this.
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Fivethirtyeight had a good article on this - Cavs were 4th best this season. Though they were the best "4th best" of all time.
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I had a fun conversation with one of my work colleagues when the Warriors were trailing 3-1 about whether the Thunder had significantly underachieved in the regular season*** or whether the Ws had experienced unusually bad luck during this series. (Also probably that Curry was still sub-par post-injury.) My colleague was leaning toward the former explanation, I thought the latter explanation was pretty important. My general opinion is that in sports (as in many other facets of human life) people tend to overweight the significance of recent unusual events. FWIW, if the 4-3 series outcome is an accurate reflection of the probability of Ws winning any given game, the probability of the Thunder going 3-1 in any given 4 game stretch is nearly equal to the probability of the Warriors going 3-0. Both are ~18%, i.e. unlikely but far from impossible outcomes.
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It's a testament to good packaging and marketing that TB&TAT has such reputational dominance relative to its 2 Prestige siblings. (Not a criticism.)
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I'm finally getting around to exploring the music of Japan & David Sylvian. I thought Japan's early albums were OK but mostly forgettable. But Tin Drum is quite good and what I've listened to of Sylvian's solo work thus far (just the 80s stuff) is damn good. If you like Peter Gabriel, the more experimental side of David Bowie, 1980s King Crimson and RIL-era Talking Heads, it's essential listening.
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Follow-up to this discussion - in the liner notes to the reissue of BEN WEBSTER MEETS OSCAR PETERSON, it's noted that Webster liked to say that he was NOT one of those saxophonists who knew the lyric to every ballad. Was this Webster just engaging in a humblebrag?
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I agree, he's extremely underrated relative to some of his contemporaries (cough Ron Carter cough)
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The Josh Redman album is great!
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So I finally got around to picking up this album. It's really good - I'd put on the same level as his best ECM work.
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I've been spending a fair amount of time listening to this over the past few weeks and am not crazy about it, TBH. When I was younger and really into prog rock I probably would have appreciated it more. BTW, I love Weber's two subsequent albums (Yellow Fields and Silent Feet).
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Out of the Getz/Dizzy collabs, I like SITTIN' IN the best. Love the contrast between the 3 tenor soloists.
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Hi all, I'm going to acquire a copy of Monteverdi's famous Vespers. The two versions I'm considering are: John Eliot Gardiner w/the English Baroque Soloists and Monteverdi Choir Andrew Parrott w/the Taverner Consort I've heard and liked performances from both groups, so I imagine neither would be a mistake, but maybe experts here have a preference?
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