Big Beat Steve
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Kind of Blue - Mostly Other People Do the Killing
Big Beat Steve replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in New Releases
Very much so. -
From Wild Bill Davis to Jimmy Smith
Big Beat Steve replied to The Magnificent Goldberg's topic in General Discussion
It's in JSangrey's post BEFORE the one (with the B&R excerpt) you refer to, MG. It's y 14-minute clip of a documentary on women in jazz hosted by Marian McPartland. -
Kind of Blue - Mostly Other People Do the Killing
Big Beat Steve replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in New Releases
When compared to the essence of jazz and related styles of music where personal interpretations and retransformations of the "source material" are what it is all about - certainly. Just imagine somebody in the field of classical music taking an opus of composer X and setting to recording it on the premise of "I feel like playing this in double time throughout" or other radical diversions from the original, wouldn't this be heresy to many hardcore classical music partisans? Or just be treated as a "gimmick" of no artistic value? Of course this is an oversimplification but still ... Too bad you probably don't read German, but the problem of an interpretation of a works straying too far from the original in classical music (which by the standards of jazz would amount to still being a copycat through and through ) is well described here in the section of "Werktreue" ("faithfulness to the orignal"): http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interpretation_%28Musik%29 (the English version of this entry unfortunately approaches this subject in a totally different manner). -
From Wild Bill Davis to Jimmy Smith
Big Beat Steve replied to The Magnificent Goldberg's topic in General Discussion
As you can see, MG, I had not read the entire article yet. Just the beginning and the very end. The discography, then, is an even bigger mess if the entries are presented like that and this recording session is made to look like two. Uncommon for B&R. By the way, MG: Blues & Rhythm started out in early 1985 or so. Could it be that it was BLUES UNLIMITED (of Mike Leadbitter fame) that you did not buy? -
From Wild Bill Davis to Jimmy Smith
Big Beat Steve replied to The Magnificent Goldberg's topic in General Discussion
No, not really old news. My "collection" of Blues & Rhythm is rather spotty. So - thanks for the link. Makes you wonder if maybe this would be the time to buy another load of back issues from the publishers. B&R is a goldmine of information but the discography to THIS ONE leaves me slightly puzzled: 1) Is that initial LP on that Gateway (?) label really a different recording from the Design LP listed further down the list? Re-recording the same tunes with the same (sometimes provisional? cf. Blues #xxx) titles TWICE? Did they do an aural comparison to establish that these are two different recordings? Really odd ... Hollywood was a budget label with relatively hissy pressing quality (with nice cheesecake cover pics, though) that issued or reissued various R&B and jazz tracks throughout the 50s. I have several of them (some featuring R&B, maybe sometimes retitled à la Crown, some featuring - of all places - SWEDISH jazz recordings). Design was a budget label too so who knows who shifted which masters where ...? 2) That RCA session: The EP should be the one that MG mentioned earlier. The way the LP contents are presented is rather strange, though. The way the personnel and tunes are listed this reads like it is Selby and Barton all the way, with some vocalists comng in here and there. I've listened through the LP yesterday, and unless the backing musicians changed their playing radically the tunes featuring the "Kids" and "Jimmy Sedlar" sound like different sessions and musicians (decidedly white sound, like white cover versions of R&B tunes). Will listen closer again when I get around to it but I have my doubts. I received an excerpt from another discography (Lord??) when inquiring about this Design LP and there the only RCA tracks listed among the Dayton Selby entry are the 4 feature tunes from the LP (which also make up the EP). This sounds more credible to me. Oh yeah, and lest it be overlooked: Dan Kochakian managed to sneak in a colossal blunder in the opening paragraph of that article: Vi (Elvira) Redd never was with the International Sweethearts of Rhythm. That Sweethearts' Vi (for whom "Vi Vigor" was penned) as Vi (Viola) BURNSIDE (as mentioned further down in the article). -
From Wild Bill Davis to Jimmy Smith
Big Beat Steve replied to The Magnificent Goldberg's topic in General Discussion
Well, since you wondered in that "other" thread what this album is like - am just listening to it right now. I'd say it is rather in the Lockjaw-Shirley Scott bag. A bit more conventional, maybe, and some might argue that the "change of genders" is discernible. Not bad, though. -
From Wild Bill Davis to Jimmy Smith
Big Beat Steve replied to The Magnificent Goldberg's topic in General Discussion
Some VERY belated input as I had been made aware of this thread only now: There is at least one other LP by him: "The Feminine Sax" - The Dayton Selby Trio featuring WiIlene Barton (Design DLP 37).. recorded some time in the late 50s (so the discographies say). Will have to give it a closer listen again ... According to discographies, four more tracks by Dayton Selby (org) and Willene Barton (ts) were on an RCA Victor LP in 1957. UPDATE: Ha - just checked that RCA Victor LP online, and it is one I actually have: "Teenagers Dance" (Victor LPM 1540, a compilation party-type LP to cash in on the teen r'n'r craze, also featuring studio (?) group obscurities "The Kids" and "Jimmy Sedlar"). Not earth-shaking but a nice document of its times that goes fairly well with the "Big Beat" R'nR of those years. The Selby-Barton tracks come across like the RCA in-house version of Bill Doggett and the "Big Beat" sax blowers like Sam The Man Taylor, Plas Johnson, Al Sears, etc. -
No, which one? Seriously, I haven't corrected anything AFTER reading your above post.
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Exactly ... What we're seeing here is a permanent form of musical "crossover" before that term became fahionable (as you know, if you listen closely there are a lot of instances where the boundaries between R&B and bebop blurred right from 1945), and you are perfectly right about the "art vs entertainment" aspect. This has been the plight of this segment of jazz for decades. Compared to 1945-55 R&B and bebop, soul jazz is relatively unknown territory to me (and I only have a handful of basic records from that field so far), but a book that tackles the story of post-war R&B and jazz from THAT angle to show how R&B and specific segments of post-war jazz evolved into soul jazz and how things continued from there would be a book I'd really be looking forward to.
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Ah yes, in fact it was them I was thinking of when mentioning that second address. I have bought from both in the past but Croco indeed has more to offer than Dame Blanche (though even Crocojazz is much smaller than PJC). And the one who runs the Crocojazz shop (unless the personnel has changed since i last was there a couple of years ago) is a very nice person for a little "shop talk" about matters jazz and collectionitis. Strange that PJC don't give their exact Rue Navarre shop address on their website. This has misled me too.
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From what the two of you say, this sounds like a very interesting approach. Post-war R&B has by now been covered in writing quite extensively (though of course there should be room for more) but a history of the more down-to-earth, more danceable, no-frills jazz bands and artists such as the ones named by MG (which are often given short shrift elsewhere) would indeed provide an interesting background to soul jazz (as understood in the stricter sense of the word). Maybe the book ought to be retitled "YES YOU CAN DANCE TO JAZZ - A history of "jazz for partying" in the Black community 1945 to 1975" to make yet more headlines?
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Has this ever been scheduled for anything else but a Kindle publication? As for the subject on hand, I am a bit puzzled by the period covered (1945-75). From what time did "Soul Jazz" actually become known as such? 1957? 58? 59? And by when was this no longer the commonly used term to describe this type of jazz? Late 60s? (MG, please advise! ) The reason I am asking is that I wonder about how the subject will be approached if the entire period from 1945 were to be covered in depth. Postwar blues blossoming on all those indie labels? Postwar swing-style jazz turning towards blues and becoming R&B because bebop no longer was "danceable" and "gutsy" enough for the majrotiy of the audience? Bebop unraveling into more R&B-ish jazz again from sometime in the 50s when the "intellectuals "of bebop had gone towards hard bop? Etc. etc. All interesting aspects and something that falls squarely into my key areas of interest in the history of jazz, for example, but how often has this period and subject matter been dealt with in depth before and how often can you approach the subject from YET another angle to come up with something major that is all-new just in setting the stage for the history of "actual" soul jazz as commonly understood? Or would "soul jazz " here be something to describe ALL the gutsier, more apporachable forms of postwar jazz as opposed to more intellectual, artistic, "far out" jazz? Just wondering ...
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What typo, MG? BTW - thanks, Trane, for making me check out the PJC website. That Tal Farlow book they have released looks like a beaut - could not help it and ordered it straigthaway (though I have no idea where to put it in an orderly fashion on my overcrowded music bookshelves )
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Record shops - as always: Paris Jazz Corner 8 rue de Nancy (10th Arrondiissement) Also: La Dame Blanche 47 rue de la Montagne Sainte Genevieve (5th Arrondissement) (smaller than PJC but worth checking out for records you won't find elsewhere) No idea if the new & secondhand CD sections of the GIBERT JOSEPH book and CD store still are worthwhile but if you want, do an online search fo their shop addresses and stop by if you are nearby. There are more small shops that have jazz sections but you will have to wait for answers from persons living in Paris to see which ones are still worth visiting (I am there much too rarely).
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OK, just so straighten things out: My remark about "for sale in japan only" referred to the problem of the status of Japanese (re)issues as such which somehow seems to be glossed over when discussing the status of European (re)issues. Remember that longish discussion about Bethlehem reissues thrown on the market in Japan last spring? I bought only one of them (Hank d'Amico) but lo and behold, the fine print on the back says "Not for sale outside of Japan". How come? What's up? Hard to believe this was the only one that carried that notice. Could it be, just maybe, that by whatever deal Solid Records (who??) negotiated with VMG, this reissue was okayed for the Japanese home market but nowhere else? Or what other reason would there be for such an explicit statement? At least one likely conclusion should be fairly self-explanatory yet I find it strange that no clear-cut explanation seems to have been given here. Uncomfortable discussing this at length because that would group them (and/or their buyers) too close to those oh so bad European reissues and those who buy them? Call it holier than thou, call it double standards, call it whatever you want, but short of a detailed explanation (by whomever) that demonstrates convincingly this kind of reissue is perfectly legal for sale OUTSIDE Japan the gist of the debate of when to complain about bootlegs and when not to complain seems a bit skewed to me. That's all. Now blame me for going off on a different aspect of Japanese reissues that is outside this topic if you will - I will have to admit that (but I can take it ... ) And no, I don't bitch about removing links to what is perceived as being a bootleg by some. I can live with that. But it might be argued that the term "bootleg" might possibly even extend to "items that are off-limits to those who do not buy them ON SITE within the territory where these items are sold legally". As for JOKER, those Italian LPs were all over the place (usually in the budget-priced bins) here throughout the 70s and 80s. In the 70s they did some well-programmed reissue series (Jelly Roll, Bix, and others) but fidelity was so-so (I remember buying an NORK LP on Joker - nothing else available at the time - that was virtually unlistenable due to hiss and distortion that did not come from the condition of the original recordings). In the 80s those JOKER LPs sounded better but most often were bypassed because programming of reissues often was done quite randomly and erratically and records that looked like first-time issues had a fairly cheap look and feel to them and looked more like latter-day "also-ran" recordings by an artist that had somehow been dug out and thrown on the market (many of them live recordings indeed IIRC) but obviously did not figure high on the priority lists of those who wanted to gather the key recordings by a given artist. As we see here, this may be a different matter for completists TODAY but back then and over here the Joker LPs usually were not cnsidered much to write home about. As for the bootleg status, some must have been aware of that aspect back then. I remember attending a Bo Diddley concert in the late 80s where everybody tried to get their LPs signed after the gig, and one friend had brought an Italian LP from one of those reissue compilation series (pretty erratically programmed at that, and with post-50s material at that), and when Bo Diddley saw THAT LP his face took on an utterly displeased look. It took him a while to return that LP and before he did so a roadie stepped up to my friend and asked him where he got that LP - which left my friend in a mild state of shock because of course he was unaware of what this was all about (he probably had bought that LP on a whim just because it was very affordable). He did get it signed but clearly Bo and his entourage made a note of the title, label, etc. to maybe follow up that trail later.
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Mosaic Dial set coming soon
Big Beat Steve replied to miles65's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
JLH weighed in about that track above. Yes, but ultimately that doesn't tell all that much as far as I can see: Edit: Jonathan, I just saw your comment on this thread, thanks!... I don't know what sources you used for this transfer, but are they that quiet that the Parker samples on the Mosaic website have no discernible background noise?.. ... I found some sound samples online from the Fremeaux Charlie Parker edition, and in particular the "Cool Blues" one does have more top end to the cymbals sound. Also I hear more distortion, probably because they did not work from pristine copies. Thanks. The sources we used were from Mosaic as provided. I won't go into details ... Not taking sides in this debate, just wondering (and being puzzled ...) -
And a fair number of Prestige albums were pressed/distributed by Saba in Europe. My copy of Don Patterson's 'Soul happenin'' says, at the bottom; 'Prestige records im Vertrieb der Saba-Schalplatten' etc. MG That was before Mikulski, ZYX and others came in. And probably after Metronome handled the distribution/pressing of Prestige records here. Saba also did some recordings of their own before that line of "Black Forest" recordings became MPS. To sum it up in an oversimplified manner, quite a few 60s SABA recordings/productions are "MPS before there was MPS".
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JSngry, you feel concerned? Too bad, that was not my intention. But you know as well as I do that there are others who will jump on the bootleg-complaint bandwagon anytime. No problem if you outlaw links to bootlegs. If forum rules dictate thant, then that#s fine with me. I don't need links to issues like that and can live darn well without them. But overall the situation situation often is more complicated. Just one example: Up to the present time nobody has given a clear-cut and all-encompassing answer to the question of whether ALL of those Japanese reissues (or belated first-time issues) that are touted here whenever a batch of them crops up ACTUALLY and DEFINITELY pay all those artist royalties that others (that are under fire here) do not. And nobody has explained those "For sale in Japan only" fine prints either AFAIK. Though I wonder what they are there for in the first place if they are there at all. And somehow I wonder if this ain't a case of holier than thou, for example. Crying out "Bootleg! Shame!" is easy, but looking at the ENTIRE picture seems to be a bit too much to expect, it seems. As for taking acid trips, I'll leave that to those who feel like they have to indulge in streetwise behavior in every reach of their lives. Not my cuppa. Nuff said. @Clifford Thornton: Valid point. The problem MIGHT go further when it comes to whether the artists benefit or not. See above.
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Mosaic Dial set coming soon
Big Beat Steve replied to miles65's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Low bitrate for samples put online only? Hopefully so. Because if used for the actual remastering, then - OUCH! But I think this will be impossible to be settled before one has heard an actual set as released. Afterthought: @Allen Lowe: I have not listened to the respective online sampes but since you initially said you were going to get this for the Dodo: What is so bad (comparatively speaking) about the Dodo recordings on that Spotlite LP? I am not a musician nor a sound engineer nor did I ever care to find out what would be technically possible in the digital age but that Dodo LP has been spun countless times here and within the way I tend to listen to 78rpm-era reissues I overall cannot fault it for anything. -
You know how it can be in the minds of some. Only the bigwigs among the "majors" can hold such rights - or only esteemed, revered collectors' labels such as Mosaic. European copyright laws? Not valid when there is an occasion of blasting the labels involved, but when it is convenient, we buy'em anyway. Japanese reissues marked in small print "For sale in Japan only" (guess why?)? Doesn't matter, the Japanese are the good ones, per se. Holier than thou.
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I wonder what Google Translate would come up with if somebody tried to retranslate the above back into Japanese (or whatever language) ... Now what does a roach sound like?? No, no P.C. needed here - I am not being tasteless, that quip was made decades ago in some song lyrics where "a roach named Max" was mentioned ....
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Mosaic Dial set coming soon
Big Beat Steve replied to miles65's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Basically I wouldn't disagree about the convenience of having a "complete opus" like this in one place, but seeing that just about all the Dial one actually needs is either on the usual Bird discs or on that series of Spotlite LPs done all through the 80s (and pretty nicely done IMO), this is not a case like the Keynote recordings, for example, which really were scattered piecemeal all over the place (even for seasoned collectors) unless you had that 21-LP Japanese box set. But, of course and as always, YMMV (like some are constantly wont to say here ) -
What Word Did You Learn Today?
Big Beat Steve replied to JSngry's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
One of the most inflationarily used words in recent human speech (at least in the Anglosaxon world of lingo). Probably because nothing is "held in awe" in the original sense of the word anymore these days. -
Mosaic Dial set coming soon
Big Beat Steve replied to miles65's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
Ah, the eternal debate of how to listen to 78s, even as reissues. I am not familiar with the Schaap-produced BG Carnegie Concert (I still am quite happy with my CBS twofer) but I'd almost bet that reissue has nothing on "Benny Goodman on V-Disc" (Dan Records VC-5022 - yes, JAPANESE reissue!) when it comes to hiss and crackles - not by a LONG (ear)shot! No difference of opinion here as for Davies' and Kendall's remastering of all those UK (etc.) reissues, but even they often had (to retain) that certain amount of typical 78s background noise and/or slightly muddied overall sound (to confirm, am listening to a Jazz Oracle CD remastered by Kendall as I write this) and it certainly does not detract IMO. It's just part of the game unless you have access to pristine source material. You just have to make allowances for a modicum of background or (carried-over) surface noise, depending on the source material, and even more so in the case of obscure and rare indy label 78s where the pressing quality may not have been the best in the first place and no metal masters or acetates are available anymore anyway. I'd prefer a moderate amount of surface or background noise in 78s reissues anytime to all-too-clean reissues where for each stellar remastering job that brings out unheard details you get 100 where all that tidying up has made the sound all too sterile and cuts off specific frequencies. Maybe some (or possibly many) collectors who usually listen to hi-fi era (and beyond) source recordings may just have to attune their ears to 78s listening and/or get a different set of ears altogether - not least of all because some listening expectations of today's buyers maybe don't even correspond to the way people used to listen to 50s/60s hi fi recordings back then anyway (hasn't there been endless talk and complaints about many recent CD remasterings just being too loud - does this sometimes even mean "shrill", I wonder? - compared to original releases? ). (Always talking about POST-acoustic era 78s - acoustically recorded 78s up to c.1925 admittedly are a different story, of course)
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