Big Beat Steve
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Which is great indeed, and the styles (different at first glance) do go together quite well.
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The Robert Capa of his time, it seems.
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Would vinyl be a way out for that Brew Moore release? I might bump into one significantly cheaper than that.
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Highly recommended: Blues Images calendars and CDs
Big Beat Steve replied to J.A.W.'s topic in Recommendations
While we are at it, may I throw in a word for THIS ... http://www.frogrecords.co.uk/ ... in the same vein? The FROG Blues & Jazz Annual (Vols. 1 and 2 are out) also comes with a CD so it not only makes for nice listeinng for those who go for early blues and jazz but also for hours and hours of very interesting reading. Recommended! -
jazz films from the mark cantor archive
Big Beat Steve replied to bichos's topic in Jazz Radio & Podcasts
Yes, excellent! Thanks for that link! -
Same here. Except that I cannot yet bring myself to "cleaning out" among my own stuff (apart from a scant few items which won't amount to much). But my latest vinyl and CD purchases made me realize the ceiling has definitely been reached now. What is more, I am still far from finished with dealing with the "leftovers" of my parents and grandparents. One's junk is another one's treasure indeed, which is why I hate throwing out too much unseen/unchecked, but disposal/sale progress is slow. BTW, the hoarder phenomenon is given coverage in a TV series here too, including the inevitable "reality TV" interludes of how an antique dealer comes to the recue of the hoarders (who finally want to get rid of their accumulated odds'n'sods) and shows them how to sell, set up stalls at fleamarkets, etc). Though (thank goodness) I am a million miles away from the "hoarders" (in THAt sense of the term) all too much of it sounds strangely familiar. The affinity is inevitable ...
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I have far from all the CDs from that series (I have mainly concentrated on purchasing those by FRENCH artists) but I remember purchasing one other (with a street scene with a 30s-50s Paris bus on the cover IIRC) that featured accordion music that I found I could do quite well without (though I really like Gus Viseur etc.) so I gave it to a friend who had taken up accordion lessons.
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Oh yeah ... Having liked some of the other Crollas from that series of course I picked up that one too and was BITTERLY disappointed. And still am.
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I have the "Piano à la Mood" (the one with the poodle jumping the fence on the cover) LP. It is nice but rather ... well ... mood-ish tinkling indeed. Not the most out-and-out hardcore jazz LP ever. Not sure if it is that essential on the reissue market.
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78 RPM single from Canada, in the 70's????
Big Beat Steve replied to BERIGAN's topic in The Vinyl Frontier
Yes they did here and there - towards the end of the 78 rpm era when vinyl had already been going strong for a couple of years. This 78rpm marketing gimmick was revived elsewhere too. I remember one particular release by a Dutch rockabilly group named The Chevy Cats. They released one of their 45s concurrently in 78rpm format at the end of the 80s. As far as I recall it sold out pretty quickly (collectors are easy to assess after all ... ). -
Considering the really out-of-this-world reputation that JRT Davies enjoys (rightly so IMO), what would be the (technically valid and justified) point in applying additional noise reduction? No doubt JRT Davies in his mastering did go as far as he could in restoring fidelity and reducing noise without sacrificing range. Maybe those more familiar with the finer (technical) points of how to ideally remaster recordings from the 20s could set me wise?
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Dick Clark (American Bandstand) Passes
Big Beat Steve replied to BeBop's topic in Miscellaneous Music
At any rate now Dick Clark can meet up with Alan Freed again up there at that DJ's Turntable in The Sky and they can both discuss it out as to who was shrewd enough to make token admittances and therefore back out of tha Payola business in time and save his butt before everybody started to dig deep enough to hit pay... no, not dirt but ...smut. -
@Clunky: Any vinyl-only releasse/reissue of interesting collectible music deserves to be supported, but would you happen to know which would be the best buying source for this? I've seen it on Amazon UK at 27.99 GBP which is a bit ... er ... steep (but admittedly not totally unlikely for such a collectors' release).
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Ouch ... duplication time again - I already have the original Heliodor LP with tracks 1 to 6 of CD2. But as the price seems to be right CD1 should be reason enough ... Thanks for the info!
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Bought a lot of these back in the day (introduced me to Eddie Laguna's label, Jay McShann as well as affordable (!) reissues of the 50s modern jazz recordings on Storyville, among others). And the German pressings I came across (both those by Intercord in the 70s and those by Deutsche Austrophon in the 80s) always sounded quite decent to me (and still do). So no need to shell out like that. BTW, what' that strange format of combining 33 and 45 rpm records in one pack? Who needs that kind of duplicate packagings - just a gimmick, or did I miss a point there?
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LF Chocolate Williams LP Hi-Lo 1402
Big Beat Steve replied to Stonewall15's topic in Offering and Looking For...
I'd think so too. Jepsen lists only two tracks under this number (the sole entry as a Chocolate Wiliams leader date). One of the two tracks (Lady Gingersnap) is on the Savoy twofer "The Modern Jazz Piano Album" (SJL 2247), whic AFAIK is not a particularly rare album. Two more tracks from that date (on Hi-Lo 1403) which are also on that Savoy twofer start the Herbie Nichols leader entries in Jepsen's discography. -
Very rare Lucky Thompson 7' EP on ebay
Big Beat Steve replied to mikeweil's topic in Offering and Looking For...
A lot of what was released on Bertelsmann (e.g. Johannes Rediske, Oscar Pettiford) seems to have had its (more or less simultaneous) "non-record club" release on Manhattan (which was a subsidiary of Ariola). I myself have - Sadi's Vibes (Fats Sadi, of course, feast. Jimmy Deuchar) (66133 C) - Jazzing In Stuttgart (Horst Jankowski Trio) (66026 C) -
Very rare Lucky Thompson 7' EP on ebay
Big Beat Steve replied to mikeweil's topic in Offering and Looking For...
True for 100% of all reissued music but just look at what loads of BN fetishists drool about, just because the very item they have got hold of now sometime back in the 50s had already been in the grimy hands of the then owners. Surreal, irrealistic and unreasonable but that's just what the core of any "original item/issue/printing" collectionism is all about so it's just part of the game for those willing to play it ... -
Very rare Lucky Thompson 7' EP on ebay
Big Beat Steve replied to mikeweil's topic in Offering and Looking For...
Is that record really THAT rare and is this a common price? Of course we know prices started skyrocketing ever since the Asians all went haywire about anything reeking of "Eurojazz". But this is a bit hefty anyway. I bought my copy several years ago (through eBay too, IIRC) but at a fraction of that price and that already struck me as a "collectible" price. Strange seller indeed, BTW. Those other comments sound alarming indeed ... BTW, checking out his other current listings, this Lucky Thompson single actually isn't THAT overpriced, really. Asking 29.99 or 39.99 for German pop records from the 60s that should not go for much more than, say, 5,00 or maybe 10,00 if they come with their picture sleeve is certainly over the top ... -
Sonny Rollins album on PERIOD....where to hear it
Big Beat Steve replied to chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez's topic in Artists
Yeah, I think that's happened to a lot of us. Bought some of those Everests (with Period stuff, incidentally, that seemed to be fill gaps on the reissue market at the time) through the years but at other times I found many of their reissues being compiled in quite a helter-skelter manner so passed up other Everests countless times, including this one, IIRC. -
RIP. Will certainly spin some of his his Coral/Decca/Prestige/RCA LPs during the wekend (don't have his Bethlehem, it seems ...). But how about moving this thread into the ARTISTS section where it will get noticed the way it derserves?
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Why Are Ahmad Jamal Albums Always Trashed?
Big Beat Steve replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in The Vinyl Frontier
CrocoJAZZ, you mean ... I remember coming across a bunch of original Ahmad Jamal Jazz LPs in a secondhand shop sometime in the 90s but passed them up as the vinyl was really beat up. But I did pick up Shorty Rogers' "Chances Are It Swings", Herb Pomeroy's "Band In Boston", Kenny Dorham's "Jazz Contemporary" (Time) and The International Youth Band at Newport 1958 that all clearly came from the same original owner. But on these last ones the vinyl was in far better shape and plays quite nicely. So again ... the Jamals must have been pressed into service a bit more at parties (or wherever ...). -
Not sure what you mean by that. The common practice these days seems to be to push up the sound level and reduce the dynamics. In quite a few "modern" recordings and remasterings there are hardly any dynamics left... My mistake, certainly. Poor choice of words. What I meant to say was indeed that the sound level is pushed so everything comes across louder. "Dynamic (sounds)" in the sense of "sounds that blast you away", if you know what I mean ...
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Why Are Ahmad Jamal Albums Always Trashed?
Big Beat Steve replied to Teasing the Korean's topic in The Vinyl Frontier
Remembering that among all the MOR, VERY EASY-listening stuff churned out on AFN FM radio by such "name bands" as Percy Faith, Mantovani, Hugo Winterhalter, Bert Kaempfert, etc. there was bound to be an Ahmad Jamal item coming up relatively frequently amidst all those MOR pop band sounds, I am not at all surprised to see that his LPs apparently were abused so often by "non-collecting" music consumers of the day who spun the records at their parties.
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