
Big Beat Steve
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Grant Green / The Holy Barbarian, St Louis, 1959 (Uptown)
Big Beat Steve replied to Dan Gould's topic in Recommendations
Now that Bob Graf has repeatedly been hailed as a revelation this thread, would it be amiss to point interested listeners to THIS easily available reissue? http://www.freshsoun...ns-cd-3111.html Looks like this does NOT overlap with all of the Delmark reissue. -
"Sessions, Live" LP, featuring Buddy DeFranco Quintet and Art
Big Beat Steve replied to sgcim's topic in Discography
Thanks for that informative link. Good to be able to check out all the details on those scant few Sessions,Live LPs that I have (bought them secondhand in relatively recent years, can't recall having seen them in my very early collecting days - or even later on - when they were new or still current - and those nondescript covers would probably have made me shy away before even checking the details on the back cover). -
How is the sound on the JSP Bessie Smith Boxes?
Big Beat Steve replied to medjuck's topic in Audio Talk
Good to hear there is indeed no booklet. I had been wondering about that ever since I got that box set secondhand (with secondhand purchases something might have got lost along the way after all). Reading Chris Albertson's interesting recollections, those Columbia remasterings of the 70s, then, were as good as they could possible be with the technology of the time, and summing up the other statements the Frogs seem to be a bit better but not THAT much, it seems ... So the Columbia/CBS set will remain good enough for me. -
The Singers Unlimited Went to Hell in the Late 70s
Big Beat Steve replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in Artists
I'll invite you to my next fondue party, if it ever gets cold enough to have one. I suppose you realize fondue isn't really something linked to Bavaria but rather to SWITZERLAND. OK, OK, small difference if you use the U.S. distances as a yardstick but STILL it is a difference - and a not negligible one .. Of course, if you insist on serving steins of Bavarian beer (ask Weizy for a taster ) to go with the fondue then it might pass for something at least remotely resembling "Bavarian" tradition ... -
How is the sound on the JSP Bessie Smith Boxes?
Big Beat Steve replied to medjuck's topic in Audio Talk
Indeed, ordering from Frog is no big deal. I've ordered 1 or 2 CDs from them last year too - as well as the "Frog Blues and Jazz Annuals" Vols. 1 and 2 - great reads! Shipping costs weren't THAT over the top either. Speaking of Columbia LP reissues of the Bessie Smith opus: How does the 10-LP box set reissued in the 70s CBS Special Products series compare SOUNDWISE with the 2-LP sets (those with the colorful painting artwork on the covers IIRC) that were around back then? I have the box set (LSP 14100) that was marketed exclusively through the "Zweitausendeins" shops and mail order service. Anybody any idea and/or aural experience? Same remastering and same pressing quality as the 2-LP sets? The back cover of the box says "Produced by John Hammond, Chris Albertson" but no other specifics. They sound quite decent to me but I've never heard the 2-LP sets so cannot compare. -
Just found another one among my early US pressings: "For Jazz Buffs" - Shorty Rogers, Chances Are It Swings (LPM-1975) (stating the obvious, that subtitle, ain't it?) Were all RCA Victor LPs released chronologically during that period or were there several series running in parallel? Because I cannot find any such phrases on the LPs in the 1500 titles that I have (and these look very much like late 50s to me, contrary to the c.1955-57 1000/1100 and 1300 series).
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+1 :tup Though the others named above (such as Herman, Basie, Clarke/Boland) certainly were no slouches either.
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What vinyl are you spinning right now??
Big Beat Steve replied to wolff's topic in The Vinyl Frontier
I understand, but being a vinyl man at heart I came from the opposite end. At least the Storyvilles from that LP have long since been completed on vinyl. Enjoy your listening!! -
What vinyl are you spinning right now??
Big Beat Steve replied to wolff's topic in The Vinyl Frontier
True, good sound and great recordings. But very annoying track compilation. A bit here, a bit there, but nothing even halfway complete (neither live Storyville nor studio sessions). Bought my copy in my relatively early collecting days (29 years ago) to get a taste - which I did (and liked it), but whenever I tried to complete those sessions, this turned out to be impossible without running into just that annoying amount of overlaps that would have made it less appealing to buy those other vinyls (because it would have taken several LPs - if they could be found - to round up EVERYTHING on that LP and phase it out for good). -
Scheduled upgrade for 9am EST tomorrow
Big Beat Steve replied to Jim Alfredson's topic in Forums Discussion
I'm with Brownie here. Will have to get used to it, but am unimpressed. Too busy, too gimmicky (those miniature avatars on the overview page do not serve any useful purpose IMO). -
Never heard it called "middle jazz". I always knew it as "mainstream". Same thing. Synonymous. I just wanted to use a term that specifically coincided with the period when this music was recorded. Was in use in the UK too IIRC. Check out period copies of "Jazz Monthly" featuring Albert McCarthy's writings.
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You want to talk about which Vanguards exactly? About those that the label became famous for among fans, i.e. those done in the 50s, including releases by Mel Powell, Vic Dickenson, Ruby Braff, Sir Charles Thompson, Urbie Green, and others? In short, "middle jazz". Those shown in the initial posts above seem to point into another direction and era.
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This is getting ridiculous. Posts had disappeared en masse, and now they have been restored. Fine ... BUT - in the meantime the discussion (since that cutoff date before which those older posts had disappeared) has gone on and did yield some fruitful thoughts IMO, including on this topic. Now these are all gone. How annoying is THIS??? Why would it not have been possible to MERGE these threads, like it had been done elsewhere in the past? You know these blacklisting things are a borderline subject and seem to be colored by criteria that are far from historically objective. Who would you want to blacklist just by the name of the label alone? IMO quite a few of these "Andorran" releases have received undue fire. Yes they take FULL advantage of the European P.D. rules (a rule is a rule) but they also release a LOT of stuff that NOBODY but REALLY NOBODY among the corporate bigwigs (that pretend they hold the licenses but in fact only lock those licenses away and therefore prevent access to any of it) could EVER have been bothered to even look at for a second. Do you ACTUALLY think anybody over there at Fresh Sound will get rich and reap huuuuge rewards by releasing stuff like "Jazz From The Westchester Workshop"? Or the REALLY obscure stuff held now by majors such as the Don Bagley item on Decca (now MCA etc...)? Would those who hold the Decca catalog now EVER do a COMPREHENSIVE reissue program of their own that went far enough to include (semi-)obscure artists such as Bagley? Rehashing the umpteenth big star name reissues is no accomplishment. And why does anyone DARE to say that Fresh Sound is bad PER SE (as is often done here) though excellent releases such as the NOCTURNE label box set (another subject that NOBODY elsehwere has ever bothered tackling seriously) have been openly endorsed by the originators of the label? Whereas, OTOH, forumists around here drool openly and excessively about labels such as Proper that have nice compilations and nice prices but clearly rehash previous (and not so old) reissues. I've given this example before but will repeat it: Just compare their Accordion Jazz box set with the contents of the Accordion Jazz box set by Fremeaux Associés (the first ones around with that really old stuff) plus the fact that the Mat Mathews etc. stuff included in that Proper box set was reissued not long ago too. And now tell me - do you REALLY think that all those overlaps of the contents are pure coincidence? There would have been a LOT more worthwhile P.D. accordion jazz that could have been reissued by Proper with ZERO overlap with the Fremeaux set and THIS is what would have served the customer (but of course that would have meant a LOT more research and remastering as it would have boiled down to FIRST TIME EVER reissues in some cases). Sorry to say but it seems to me that whole debate is pretty much skewed around here, and Anglo-Saxon (U.S. in particular) forumists in particular seem to argue along the lines of "Anglosaxon P.D. label = good" and "Continental European P.D. label = bad). Neither fair nor appropriate, and lacking seriously in differentiated thinking. Whereas the basic problem IMHO is: Corporates, clean up your act and keep stuff in print, for jeez sake! Then there won't be no P.D. labels. (Yes, I am deliberately disregarding sales figures. It is a niche product for ANYBODY, particularly since I doubt seriously the corporate ones keep paying their artists of decades ago once the P.D. rule has come to be applicable due to the age of the recordings. (Or would the current holders of the Savoy catalog NOW make good for Lubinsky's royalty wrongdoings? )
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New Live - Dizzy, Zoot Sims & Mangelsdorff
Big Beat Steve replied to tranemonk's topic in New Releases
I did. No regrets. Sound is good indeed. As for the music, my subjective and admittedly superficial (for the time being) impression is that Zoot's playing (and his interplay with Hans Koller) in a way is more adventurous than in many of his collaborations with Al Cohn, for example, of that period. Don't know which way of playing I'd like better; it is probably a matter of momentary preference with me. -
Care to elaborate? @Sonnymax: You're most welcome.
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Crap singer, crap comedian. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Freddie_Starr MG I prefer to remember him as the singer of Merseybeat group Freddie Starr & The Midnighters. Nice for what that group was as part of that particular music scene (most everything that runs under "Merseybeat" has cult status among diehard collectors), nice for fans of the music but irrelevant to others who are musically and/or geographically unconcerned (a bit like mid-60s US Garage Punk or early 60s French "ye-ye" was/is irrelevant to those who are NOT fans/collectors of that particular genre). As for his later doings ... phew ...
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Another one where one probably had no idea he was still around ... RIP Will play this ... http://www.discogs.com/Jack-Di%C3%A9val-Jazz-Aux-Champs-Elys%C3%A9es/release/738619 and, for contrast, this ... in remembrance
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"Roâ übü", then? Oh my ...
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Certainly Pugh and Hugh are pronounced pyoo and hyoo on this side of the Atlantic (Pugh is a Welsh name, by the way) but we'll wait till the Americans wake up to confirm it's the same there. You know what I mean - seeing that Duke is dyook here, but dook over there. Can't imagine he's called Jim Pooh, mind you. Speaking of which and carrying this one step further, how would "King Ubu" be pronounced, then? "King Oo-boo(h)" or "King "Yewboo"? (Nah, just kidding ... )
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That's exactly what I meant, and maybe we've been misunderstanding each other. As you confirm, "Pugh" therefore is pronounced "pyoo", just like Brew Moore is NOT pronunoced "Bryoo" Moore. Hence my question. Because the key aspect to me seemed to be that the (pronounced or not pronounced) phonetic "y" is part of the pronunication of the entire WORD. See what I mean, King Ubu? I wasn't making fun at all, just trying to elucidate this: You pronounce "Pugh" like "pyoo" and NOT like "pooh", just like you pronounce "Brew" like "Broo" and NOT like "Bryoo". Therefore "Brew" (or "Fru") IMO wasn't the ideal analogy with "Pugh". And the smilie I met with my example of "pew" sounding like "Pugh" was just because Jim Pewter (google him if you like ...) was a character in music too but FAR removed from jazz.
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Yes Really? Everywhere in the anglo-saxon world? Those "Pughs" I've "heard" by their names sounded more like "Pews" or "Hughs", really ... But not like Winnie the Pooh ...
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Like in "Pew", I'd say. i.e. Like in "Jim PEWter" Or like "Hugh", if you want to stick closer to the spelling, for convenience's sake.
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@Sonnymax: Interesting and eclectic list: Re- Part 2, Jazz in Weimar (= "Jazz in pre-1933 Germany"): No. 1: The correct spelling is Saxophone Orchestra DOBBRI (artist's name for bandleader Otto Dobrindt) No. 2: This looks like a misspelling of the name of bandleader BELA DAJOS (actually his artist's name was DAJOS BELA but sometimes the name was turned around on the label and Crumb may have been unaware of which is which). This bandleader made hundreds (posibly thousands) of recordings in the 20s and 30s, only a scant proportion of which can be called jazz or "hot dance" music. No. 4: No doubt "Jack Bund" was a feebly "anglicised" version of the actual name of bandleader HANS BUND. Part 3, Early French Jazz: No. 4: Am not totally sure but very likely the spelling of that name is RANCURELL. UPDATE: Did an online seach and the name is EUDORE RANCUREL, and the tune is "Accordéon Marmelade". It is mentioned in passing here: http://www.fremeaux.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=2669&Itemid=341 No. 6: The spelling is WAL-BERG (real name Valdemar Rosenberg, a bandleader who backed up many vocalists and other featured artists in pre-war France). No. 7: Could the title of that tune actually be "SING YOU SINNERS", I wonder? UPDATE: I bet the song Crumb features really is "Sing You Sinners", and the correct and full name of the band is: FLAVIUS NOTTE AND HIS CREOLE JAZZ BAND DE LA COULOLE MONTPARNASSE It also is on this compilation: http://www.amazon.fr/Les-Grands-Orchestres-Jazz-Paris/dp/B000ZNW79E Am listening to it right now. Not bad for its time and certainly nice as background for Josephine Baker ...
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Obscure Albums You'd Give Your Eye Teeth to Hear
Big Beat Steve replied to Pete C's topic in Recommendations
Thanks David!