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Big Beat Steve

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  1. Actually I was referring to used records indeed (and therefore to what one might be likely to find at best value for money as a tradeoff of quality/price/availability). I don't expect to see this item (or items like this) in any new VINYL reissue programs. But I was hoping you (or somebody else in the US, maybe?) might be closer to the market than I may be over here. I am not sure Discogs is fully reliable here. According to them a Boplicity reissue (UK) would be the onyl vinyl reissue. I cannot recall having ever seen that (I would have grabbed it - after all those praises in the WCJ books), but I don't recall having ever seen it as a vinyl OJC either. So ...? Just wondering ...
  2. Which would be the best, most accessible and most affordable VINYL reissue of this LP in your opinion?
  3. Which is one I had to think hard about for a moment too this morning when I followed up your initial post because I KNEW I have the Mode-related Bill Harris record. It turned out I do - but as the Xanadu reissue titled "Bill Harris Memorial Album" (so not immediately recognizable just by looking at the spine on the shelf), and it was not the first Jazz Band Ball LP, so back to step 1 until I found that Marty Paich reference
  4. I have the VSOP facsimile reissue of that Mode album, and as for "The Dipsy Doodle", the liner notes (by one Joe Quinn) specifically state: "Gibbs, Bunker and Feldman romp for two choruses each in that order, followed by a fours exchange in the same sequence." So this confirms what you read in that review ... To avoid having to write lengthy excerpts for the other tunes, here is a scan of the track listing part of the liner notes: BTW, you nearly had me stumped with this one. I checked my Terry Gibbs LPs - no Mode 110. But I am convinced I do have that "first" "Jazz Band Ball" on Mode. I would not have let this pass me by, would I? Nothing in the Bill Haris corner either, neither any reference to co-billing for Terry Gibbs with someone else in the Goldmine Jazz LP guide. Had to do an internet search to refresh my memory with the key details: The first "Jazz Band Ball" is commonly credited to Marty Paich as the leader. And there it sits on my shelf ... whew ...
  5. Which amounts to doing a "soft return" instead of a "hard return". That's how I proceed too
  6. The more I think about it and look at that LP cover scan the more I think that it might very well be that Little Richard LP on the Contour budget label. The blueish tint/discoloration of the 70s photograph print alters the colors, but if you take this into account and look at the proportions as well as the spotlight reflections to the left and right of Little Richard on this cover, things look like they match. A record I would not have thought of - despite the fact that actually I USED to own this LP (bought it during a school class Easter holiday trip to London in 1975 - coincidence ...). I sold it off long ago, though, because those live recordings were just horrible, at least to my ears. Not the real (Specialty) thing by a long shot. Thanks for your perspicacity!
  7. Strange ... Anybody else have this problem? It is there (two, in fact), and I've uploaded pics via the same image hoster here before - without any apparent problems. Just in case (a wild shot): If you do not see the pic but a link can you click on the link or copy/paste the link in yur browser to see the pic?
  8. A question to those who may have wide-ranging tastes in music from the (pre-mid-70s) vinyl era: The below photo came up on a classic car forum and of course people started wondering about the LP this guy in his very 70s-ish garb is holding. (The UK license plate of the Jag E dates from 1973 so this and the other cars in the car park might date the pic - and the vinyl) Anybody have any idea for identification?
  9. True. Not only in the field of music. At the end of the 90s my father tried to reduce his considerable library of architecture books (the result of a long professional life in that field and of hoarding books on this subject - a habit I "unfortunately" have inherited in my fields of interest ). Libraries did not show much interest and even antiquarians would have required him beforehand to draft a detailed listing of what exactly he had (as did the libraries). Neither of the two groups of potential recipients seemed to have been prepared to send someone over to have a closer look for assessment. The final result? Some of the more run of the mill stuff and/or more recent books were given to former students of his (free, of course), and the rarer/older/more collectible ones made it into my crates of fleamarket/garage sale stuff. I made some pretty decent money from those I have sold over time. As for the antiquarians - their loss .... I remember when I sold off a bunch of his more collectible 20s/30s books to a lady who turned out to run an antique bookshop specializing in architecture books herself. Musing over her finds at my stall she seemed to be truly dumbfounded by what she had discoverd there and asked me outright "Which estate did these books come from?", obviously meaning (without being that forthright) "Books like this are not supposed to end up with private sellers who might sell them directly to private buyers - they are supposed to go directly from the estate to professional sellers who can make a maximum of benefit from them". Ha, lady, your loss, and not true anyway - remember the saying: " Avoid the middleman"! So, Chuck ... while CDs are not that collectible, of course, how about participating in an occasional neighborhood garage sale first and make some happy buyers? You can still donate the leftovers elsewhere of call in one of the shops later on.
  10. And when will your lock-up unit come up on "STORAGE WARS" on TV, then? Might make for some interesting watching ...
  11. I am afraid it is the rule not all that rarely. Unless you happen to stumble upon a library that is severely understocked AND wants to add to its range in that particular field that you happen to want to get rid off. A very rare occurrence, unfortunately ... In fact I have heard about such sell-offs too (after the fact, of course ...). Lending libraries these days have a pretty fast turnover even of those items they stock for their customers and of what they discard as "no longer up to date" (read: perceived as being no longer in demand and blocking valuable space for more in-demand items that attract those who still go to these libraries). The days (such as in my youth in the 70s) when you were able to pick up long-OOP books from local/suburb libraries on historical subject matters that were of interest to you (e.g. books published as long back as the 50s that were still on the shelves all through the 70s and early 80s) are long, long over, unfortunately. You really have to go to larger, archive-minded libraries these days to peruse or borrow "historical" tomes. So you can imagine what their "life cycle" and turnover in the media field is these days ...
  12. You mean you wouldn't want to bother packing and shipping any item that wouldn't yield you at least 25 quid? My my ....
  13. Oh my ... If you lump in broadcasts (i.e. airshots) too then there is an awful lot from that period. Almost too much to be covered in any sensible maner bnecause obviously tastes differ widely. One favorite category of non-commercial recordings from that period that I have always liked are the JUBILEE radio shows emceed by Ernie "The Stomach That Walks Like a Man" Whitman, whose chatter adds some "period" spice (if taken in moderate doses). Some fine, fine music by the black stars and bands from that era there ...
  14. " What's your favorite Jazz Style? Hard Bop, Smooth Jazz, Cool Jazz, Soul-Jazz, Jazz-Rock, Jazz-Funk, Latin Jazz? " She's got a somewhat narrow-minded attitude and knowledge about what styles of jazz there are. Reminds me of that innocent reply by that backwoodsy roadside joint owner in the Blues Brothers movie: "Oh, we got BOTH kinds of music: Country AND Western!"
  15. Yes, those Musidiscs often contained wrong date and personnel info. But they DID have their advantages - they WERE available, they were affordable and they made lots of rare stuff available at a time when small labels from abroad/overseas were very thin on the ground over here. And it has to be said in their defense that they took up lots of live recordings from U.S. labels (e.g. Alamac) that included incorrect dates too. Probably a case of mistakes being copied without proper research
  16. Just wondering: Texans’ do-it-ourselves rescue effort defines Hurricane Harvey "Defines" oder "defies"?
  17. Considering how collectible (or should I say nerdy? ) labels such as Transition are by now, these "one or two" must all be in Japan or Korea by now.
  18. Ha, checked again ... that "Memorial album" reissue on Xanadu was not of one of his Time LPs but of his "Arrival of K.D:" LP on Jaro 5007 recorded shortly before Jazz Contemporary. Time to spin this and Jazz Contemporary later today ..
  19. Very interesting. Will listen closer to it again later. While I realize his "Quiet Kenny" was a major opus in his discography and that inclusion of sideman appearances with other major (VERY major) leaders are inevitable in such capsule presentations (though they might tend to relegate him to sideman status again), I regret not seeing some of his other leader dates which present a different facet of his, such as his early 60s recordings for the Time label. Maybe I am a bit biased because the Xanadu reissue of one of these dates (Kenny Dorham Memorial Album) was my first introduction to his leader dates almost 35 years ago, but I feel that quite a few of these "other" dates that some with "big name" ambitions might qualify as "journeyman" appearances do indeed stand on their own merits and deserve to be featured at least to some small extent (and yes, there is a life beyond Blue Note! )
  20. What is Hip? THIS is Hip:
  21. One horn-guitar combination (though not sax + guitar, admittedly) has so far been overlooked here: The great Eddie Durham - trombone and guitar.
  22. Stay safe so we can continue our exchanges here.
  23. I would not have wanted to be that drastic in my words but I guess it is. At least by U.S. Copyright standards. By European copyright laws (which are not retroactively applicable, despite the changes introduced a couple of years ago following the lobbying of Messrs. McCartney, Richard etc.) they are legal because the original releases date back way before 1962 so these releases are in the public domain anyway. But like I said, I have a hunch they originated from the US. At least this is where I have seen the most plentiful listings of such CD reissues. They were (and are, in some cases?) also listed on UK sellers' sites, though.
  24. It's on "R'n'B Wig Poppers" (subtitled "27 Jump Blues & Sax Honkers from the Rockin Fifties" on Lucky CD-1001 - one of those "grey label" reissues produced by collectors for collectors. Not being sure but I think this particular CD was produced on the US (for a while this and a whole slew of similar collectors' reissues were sold on eBay.com by Big Nickel Publications).
  25. Like I said, I had initially checked this (vinyl) series as this was my primary candidate where tracks by him might hide but it turned out he was not on there. The search willl have to continue ... and right now I am stumped.
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