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david weiss

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Posts posted by david weiss

  1. Up for more additions......

    This is pretty much it. There is some vocal stuff, lots of Dee Dee Bridewater and Dianne Reeves and stuff like Louis Bellson but my student is getting sick of typing and I'm not sure you guys want this sort of thing but if you do, PM me and I'll tell you what I have.

  2. Time to make room in the apartment again

    The following are for sale

    Paypal is best but other payment options are fine.

    Postage will be actual postage plus a buck for a new bubble pack mailer.

    All are in excellent condition unless otherwise noted

    $5

    Tim Berne Bloodcount Discretion Screwgun (has some minor scuffage, doesn't effect play of course and it might be missing a booklet)

    Cassiber Beauty and the Beast ReR (has some minor scuffage, doesn't effect play of course)

    Bruford One of A Kind EG

    Luciana Souza The Poems of Elizabeth Bishop Sunnyside (has some minor scuffage, doesn't effect play of course)

    David Bixler Call it a Good Deal Zoho

    Marchall Gilkes Quartet Edenderry

    The Stein Brothers Quintet Quixotic Jazzed Media

    Geoffey Keezer Falling Up MaxJazz

    Alan Pasqua The Anti Social Club Cryptogramophone Promo

    Terell Stafford Centripetal Force Candid

    Dave Pietro Standard Wonder A Records Promo

    Slide Hampton and the Jazz Masters Dedicated to Diz Telarc

    Russell Gunn Love Requiem High Note Promo

    The Dave McMurray Show Warner Brothers Promo

    Gerry Gibbs Sextet The Thrasher Warner Brothers Promo

    Thomas Marriott Crazy The Music of Willie Nelson Origin

    Thomas Marriott Flexicon Origin

    Richard Davis and Friends Live at Sweet Basil Evidence (has some very minor scuffage, doesn't effect play of course)

    Eric Alexander Solid Milestone Promo

    Gary Bartz The Red and Orange Poems Atlantic Promo

    Christian McBride Gettin' To It Verve Promo Sealed

    Christian McBride Number Two Express Verve Promo Sealed

    Christian McBride A Family Affair Verve Promo Sealed

    Kenny Garrett Standard of Language Warner Brothers

    Kenny Garrett Happy People Warner Brothers

    Kenny Garrett Simply Said Warner Brothers Sealed Promo

    Kenny Garrett Pursuance: The Music of John Coltrane Warner Brothers Promo

    Charles Fambrough The Charmer CTI Promo

    Charles Fambrough The Proper Angle CTI Promo

    Charles Fambrough Blues at Bradley's CTI Promo (has some very minor scuffage, doesn't effect play of course)

    Children on the Corner Rebirth Sonance Promo

    Antonio Hart Here I Stand Impulse

    Russell Gunn Ethnomusicology Vol 2 Justin Time Sealed Promo

    Russell Gunn Ethnomusicology Vol 3 Justin Time Promo

    Carl Allen The Pursuer Atlantic Promo

    Carl Allen Testimonial Atlantic Promo

    Jason Lindner Ensemble Premonition Stretch

    Robin Eubanks and Mental Images Get 2 It Promo

    Don Braden Organic Epicure Promo

    Black Note Nothin' But Swing Impulse Promo

    Black Note Jungle Music Columbia Promo

    Marty Ehrlich Line on Love Palmetto Promo

    $7

    Uri Caine Ensemble Othello Winter & Winter Promo

    Ted Nash The Mancini Project Palmetto

    Ted Nash Double Quartet Rhyme and Reason Arabesque Promo

    Pharoah Sanders Save of Children Verve Promo

    Myra Melford Extended Ensemble Even The Sounds Shine Hat Art

    Dave Binney Edward Simon Oceanos Criss Cross

    Dave Douglas Parallel Worlds Soul Note

    Dave Douglas Five Soul Note

    Carla Bley Looking For America Watt Promo

    Don Cherry Live at Cafe Montmartre 1966 ESP (2007) comes with some sort of promotional DVD as well

    Don Cherry Live at Cafe Montmartre 1966 Volume 2 ESP digipack

    Mario Pavone Toulon Days New World

    Drew Gress The Irrational Numbers

    Arcana Arc of the Testimony Axiom Promo

    The Muffins Bandwidth Cuneiform Promo

    Kenny Wheeler It Takes Two! CAM

    Thelonious Monk Big Band and Quartet In Concert Columbia 2 CDs Promo

    Bill Bruford's Earthworks All Heaven Broke Loose Editions Promo

    Phil Miller In Cahoots Moonjune

    John Lydon Psycho's Path Virgin

    Darrell Grant Smokin' Java Lair Hill Records

    Logan Richardson Cerebral Flow Fresh Sound

    Spring Heel Jack Songs and Themes Thirsty Ear Promo

    Emilio Solla y la Orquestable Suite Piazzollana Fresh Sound

    Samo Salamon NYC Quintet Government Cheese Fresh Sound

    Taylor Haskins Wake Up Call Fresh Sound

    Justin Mullens and the Delphian Jazz Orchestra Fresh Sound

    Felipe Salles Mind Motions Fresh Sound

    Vardan Ovsepian Sketch Book Fresh Sound

    Sebastian Weiss Momentum Fresh Sound

    The Blue Note All-Stars Blue Spirit Blue Note Promo

    Ralph Alessi This Against That RKM (has some very minor scuffage, doesn't effect play of course)

    Greg Osby Further Ado Blue Note Promo

    Steve Coleman and Metrics A Tale of 3 Cities Novus Promo

    Joshua Redman Back East Nonesuch

    Enrico Pieranunzi Fellini Jazz Cam Jazz Promo

    Enrico Pieranunzi As Never Before Cam Jazz Promo

    Chris Potter Traveling Mercies Verve

    Pharoah Sanders Save our Children Verve Promo

    Enrico Rava Tati ECM Promo

    Marc Copland That's For Sure Challenge

    Marchel Ivery Marchel's Mode Leaning House

    Randy Weston African Rhythms Saga Gitanes

    Avishai Cohen At Home Raz Daz

    Avishai Cohen Adama Concord Promo

    Avishai Cohen Devotion Concord Promo

    Avishai Cohen Colors Concord Promo

    Avishai Cohen and the International Vamp Band Unity Concord

    The Art of Blakey Message Evidence Promo

    Bruce Barth Quintet In Focus Enja

    Geoff Keezer Other Spheres DIW Japan

    Black Note Nothing But Swing Impulse Promo

    Angelica Sanchez Life Between Clean Feed Promo

    Sean Conly Re:Action Clean Feed Promo

    Alex Sipiagin Steppin' Stone Criss Cross Promo (has some very minor scuffage, doesn't effect play of course)

    The Maritime Jazz Orchestra Now and Now Again (w/ Kenny Wheeler and John Taylor) Justin Time Promo

    Chet Baker Oh You Crazy Moon Enja Promo

    Chet Baker and the Boto Brasilian Quartet Dreyfus

    Chet Baker in Bologna Dreyfus

    Carl Allen and Manhattan Projects The Dark Side of Dewey Evidence

    Steve Grossman with Michel Petrucciani Quartet Dreyfuss

    John Patitucci Now Concord Promo

    $10

    Soft Machine Grides 1 CD and 1 DVD Promo

    John Tayloer/Kenny Wheeler Overnight Sketch

    Tim Berne Bloodcount Seconds 2 CDs and 1 DVD Screwgun (has some minor scuffage, doesn't effect play of course)

    Time Berne Bloodcount Unwound 3 CDs Screwgun (has some minor scuffage, doesn't effect play of course and a couple of creases on the back cover)

    Robert Fripp Exposure DGM 2 CDs Lots of bonus tracks

    Rodney Whitaker Hidden Kingdom DIW Japan

    New Orleans Collective (w/Nicholas Payton and Brian Blade) King Japan

    Marty Ehrlich's Dark Woods Ensemble Live Wood Music and Arts 2 CDs

    And for those who asked, some of my stuff

    The New Jazz Composers Octet The Turning Gate Motema Sealed $10

    Freddie Hubbard and the New Jazz Composers Octet On The Real Side Times Square Sealed $10

  3. And equally important, in the case of Bonds' "anonymous" sample in 2003, is that the Feds got a valid search warrant before it was destroyed. The court said they were entitled to get that sample and test it but due to a screw up by the Union, they ended up getting everybody's result, as well as the list of what anonymous sample matched up with what player. This is why there are 104 names out there of which we've now heard, what, five or six?

    So Bonds' result is legitimate, it was subject to a search warrant. Everything else fell into the Feds hands and has been in legal limbo ever since because they want to talk to these people about sources and the union is trying to prevent that from happening.

    Another valid point Dan but we'll never agree on this one. Getting a valid search warrant for something that at that point shouldn't have existed is a little tricky to me. The prosecutor in this case has really been over the top in his pursuit of "justice" and I think has been cited a few times already for his over the top behavior. Threatening Anderson's family with jail time is a bit much for me. Yes, Bonds is probably a piece of shit but this is all a bit much. The government is spending a lot of money to make an example of Bonds to show they are doing something about this steroids thing and Bonds is the scapegoat because he was the best and because he is an asshole. Even an asshole deserves a fair shake.

  4. Since this is a jazz forum let me put this out there though it really doesn't have much to do with this. I do a lot of touring with a lot of different people. Touring can be grueling and I'm often exhausted and but usually find the energy to get through a gig on pure adrenaline when I'm tired and sometimes the music just takes me over and energizes me but this can only take a person only so far for so long. Now maybe one or two guys are bouncing off the walls full of energy because they did some coke while we are dragging our asses. Are they cheating?

    I don't think this is a real fair comparison, David. Sports involve competition, and records are there to be broken. Some of which - like the all time Home Run record - are tainted by the cloud of steroids, as compared to the previous generations.

    In music, that's obviously more artistic than competitive. I don't think using a form of enhancement in music affects the opinion and public standing of the artist like it does the athlete.

    I know it's not fair but there is some competition involved in music especially among trumpet players, especially if they are on stage together. Now if one is tired and is not at his best and the other takes something so he is full of energy for the gig and is clearly superior on this night for all to see and maybe someone important is in the house that night and they offer him a great gig instead of you....... this is all fiction but I'm just saying that maybe it's not that far-fetched. All I'm really trying to say is a lot of people take something for an edge at a given time in their life for a variety of reasons including needing to be at their very best for what ever reason at a particularly important time in their life or career. Drugs of all sorts have fueled all sorts of industries for many years. Certainly there are some young up and comers in many fields who do coke or speed to stay up and work 20 hours days to impress their bosses and get ahead. I'm not saying it's right or anything I'm just saying I understand the impetus a little bit especially the ones who are taking it late in their career or the ones who took it to recover from an injury faster. The superstars get all the ink about this but I think Quincy has a point, if the list is released I think we will find many mediocre fringe players on the list who probably doped to have a fighting chance to make it in the big leagues and just have a couple of years of that big league money so they have a chance to lead a comfortable life. Again, I'm not saying they are right but I can see how a borderline player would be tempted especially when everyone else around him is juicing and getting called up and he is not so sure about himself. Rick Ankiel comes to mind as well. After his pitching disaster, he goes to the minor leagues and successfully becomes an outfielder and just when he is getting attention he injures himself and takes Hgh to recover from the injury faster so he can get back to the business of rebuilding his career. Should he have taken it, well probably not but I do understand the impetus.

    As I said earlier, I think this has become an all or nothing proposition which really isn't fair either. Since we'll never prove anything definitively (we might have a positive test but it still doesn't tell us how long they were doing it etc) we just have to say all of them did it and and then we can say well Barry Bonds was the best hitter of the steroids era and so on. Since there are plenty of juicers who never made it out of the minors it's still an accomplishment to be the best at what you do in this era. I want to see Bonds and Ramirez in the Hall of Fame but I guess one just would have to make the distinction about the era they played in.

    How ironic would it be if it were Jim Rice? :g

    He would have lasted a couple of more years and would have been voted into the Hall much earlier.

    He was one of my favorites as a kid, he had some monster years, unbelievable numbers.

  5. While I'll never claim to be "excited" by Black Dahlia, I do think it's a pretty decent album -- particularly as far as "movie soundtrack"-type music goes.

    I think this is a pretty accurate assessment. Again because it was on a major label it had to hyped as more than it probably was. It was great they laid out the bread for Belden to realize this project but they probably owed him considering all the fine work he did for them.

    I agree that Turandot is stronger.

    The one I always liked and I'm not sure this one saw the light of day was a collaboration between Belden and a flute player whose name I can't recall. Belden reworked The Four Seasons for him and the excerpts Belden played for me at the time he was recording it were killing. This wasn't for Blue Note (I think it was for the flute players label) and I'm not sure it was released. Kevin, did he send you this?

  6. The example I gave was of a new recording, with the artists paid, the photographer paid, the graphic designer paid, the printer paid, the pressing plant paid - all in front.

    Sorry I missed that though it is clearly in your post. Well clearly you are crazy to record and release a new CD in this climate but you just can't help yourself can you. I'm kidding of course (I hate to use emoticons) but it is a daunting task these days but if it is what you do, you have to continue on some level I guess. I would have to hope that a label like yours would still find a way through all this. You have been out here a long time and have clearly established your identity and sound and have consistently churned out quality product. You have a line as it where and should have a fan base that has relied on your abitlity to turn them on to new and exciting things and they know when they buy a Nessa CD they can count on it being of a certain type of music and of a certain quality. The part the trips me up, that I will never come to grips with is, why then are sales declining for you. Is your fan base dying or done with buying CDs or what. I know the current state of the economy is a factor but the fans of the music you churn out, the ones that have supported you through the years are probably not the type to switch to downloads or suddenly decide they like smooth jazz so where did they go (and of course I'm being more general now, not just referring to you). I mean it's one thing when back in the heyday of the young lion/new format (the CD) bonanza I would still here things like sophomore slump. In other worlds, so and so's first CD sold 60,000 copies and their second CD sold 12,000 and they are talking sophomore slump? Maybe, just maybe, the over-hyped first CD didn't really pass muster with the fans so they took a pass on the second one because you would think an artist would only get better as they matured so one would think if the first CD was good than most would anticipate the second and run out and get it when it came out. It's hard to think there was a time when an acoustic jazz album by a mid level star on a major label, not even a star yet actually because it is their first album, would sell 60,000 copies (and this is no exaggeration). Where did all these people go? Were they sick of being essentially lied to and being suckered into buying the next greatest new thing one time too many so they all chucked it in. That is a huge dropoff that I can't quite get my head around.

    The independents have historically been the ones to document most of the best music at the time it is happening and now it is time to rely on them again for this but I fear many aren't up to the task and in the long run that might be one of the final nails in the coffin. How many guys, in the US at least, are out there like Chuck has been, running a modest label for what, over 30 years and are still going? I can't think of any off the top of my head. Well one, Muse/High Note I guess would be one (and I'm not comparing you guys) but I can't think of any others. Sunnyside perhaps, they have been out here for a while now. There are some up and comers though much to my relief and I'm interested to see how they will fare and if they will last.

  7. Yes, the Bad Plus is a bad example when related to what you do, I was painting broader strokes here, generalizing a bit and didn't mean to imply that this was a model for what you do. At this point, I assume you know what your market is, know what you can expect sales wise and spend accordingly. I also assume you are talking about re-issuing things from your catalog and are not recording new music. I'm sure it is a labor of love at this point and probably always has been but you been around long enough to know things rebound, how or in what medium I don't know but things never stay the same for long. Maybe the next generation will want to hold physical recordings in their hands again, who knows, but there is always a reaction to something at some point.

    I also read about how Blue Note is experimenting with the LP/CD packaging. I don't know about that but maybe being able to download the CD for free when you buy the LP might be a little cooler and a little cheaper. I'm not a fan of these download only labels that have their artists sell download cards for $10 at gigs. At that point I still think I would want a CD for a few dollars more but then I'm not 20 years old.

    Oh and at least your distributor pays you even if it is down the road a bit, I've heard some stories......not much of a silver lining I guess......

  8. Not that I really care but if I were to suspect someone of juicing, Papi would be on that list. Playing at Fenway helped but he was so mediocre as a Twin. That said, I don't think there is any drug that gives you that ability to come through in the clutch like he did.

    I'm bothered by the whole leaking of these confidential tests. They were supposed to be confidential and I think it is probably a crime to leak this information but nobody is touching that. Yes, perhaps if you cheated you should be outed but if the tests where taken under the conditions of anonymity then that should be protected at all costs. It's not fair that just a few have been leaked and of course it's just some of the stars so this whole process is smelly. Lawyers working on these cases are leaking this stuff, is that right? The Bonds thing is ridiculous, he tested negative but the government seized the sample and tested it themselves and got a positive test? There is just something flat out wrong about that. I'm tempted to totally contradict myself and say that at this point you might as well release all the names as fair is fair and maybe this will dilute the attention from the few that were outed but ultimately the outing of any of these players is a result of what essentially is criminal behavior and I'm always a little scared when government agencies and other agencies of power operate outside of the law to get what they want.

    Bonds tested negative because there was no test for the designer steroid he got from BALCO. That is why a re-test gave a positive result, they knew what they were looking for.

    As for Papi, he never came close to getting muscular like so many confirmed 'roid users did. He was always a pretty big guy, and he surely never looked like he spent a lot of time working out. Furthermore, as to his performance in Minnesota, its been widely reported how their coaching effected his power hitting, as encapsulated in this story:

    One year in Minnesota, with a runner at second, he took a mighty cut and flew out CF. He got yelled at because he didn't ground out to the right side to advance the runner. He learned his lesson and when he came to Boston, in the same situation in a spring training game, he grounded to second and was promptly told that they want him to give the ball a ride, not worry about advancing the runner.

    In short, he was set loose in Boston from a very constrained environment in Minnesota.

    Good points Dan.

    That is interesting about Bonds but again opens up many cans of worms about how legal all this is. Retesting a sample that was given on the condition of anonymity and should have been destroyed is problematic to me. I just saw Donald Fehr's statement on ESPN and it is dead on, check it out.

    Interesting about Papi as well. Good to know Boston hitting coaches straightened him out but the steroids probably helped a little as well if he did in fact take them.

    At this point, I just don't care anymore. It's an all or nothing proposition to me at this point, since I don't really know who took them and to what extent, I'm just going to go with everyone did it and that's the reality of baseball in this era. Nobody can really definitively say who did what. One positive test means you did it your whole career or just that year or your denials are tailored to an anonymous test you know about and are hoping won't be leaked or it was leaked so you claim you only did steroids that years or maybe one or two more years to make it sound believable. It's all so pathetic and becoming a non-issue to me. Focus on testing to keep it clean from now on and move on because there is no way to figure out this mess. Barry Bonds and Manny Ramirez are probably my favorite recent players and I was a little disappointed when the reports of their positive tests came out but it really didn't change my feeling about them much or really undo their accomplishments. I loved watching them hit, it was a thing of beauty. If steroids enhanced that a bit oh well but they were still amazing, disciplined hitters with great technique and beautiful swings.

    Since this is a jazz forum let me put this out there though it really doesn't have much to do with this. I do a lot of touring with a lot of different people. Touring can be grueling and I'm often exhausted and but usually find the energy to get through a gig on pure adrenaline when I'm tired and sometimes the music just takes me over and energizes me but this can only take a person only so far for so long. Now maybe one or two guys are bouncing off the walls full of energy because they did some coke while we are dragging our asses. Are they cheating?

  9. edit to say I was responding to David.

    I don't accept your premise that prices are too high. At the end of the lp era (20 years ago) the price of a 35-40 minute lp was close to $10. Consider inflation. If I accept your premise and prices should have dropped on cds, the giant reduction in sales has kept the price high - as has the yearly jump in publishing royalties. I am working on a new release and the budget for it. When I get it issued, I will have to sell more than I have sold of any cd just to break even - not counting my time. Just don't ask why I keep doing it.

    It is a whole different ballgame when you are talking about artist produced cds sold at the gig. The budgets do not compare. This is part of my problem.

    Good points Chuck but if the prices dropped initially and then creeped up to where we are today, that might have been easier to swallow.

    I've never self-released/produced any of my CDs. I get them from my label(s) for $6-$7 and just don't take that big of a profit margin. I do sell them for more in Europe and in Japan (where most of my gigs are anyway) but still under market value and there I double my money and I'm satisfied with that.

    I'm not sure I can get with the more music more money thing though. Maybe that is a publishing royalties issue but I think CDs are too long anyway. I don't think I'm happier paying $18.99 for a CD if there is 70 minutes of music instead 50. I think 50-60 minutes is plenty of music for a CD with a few exceptions. There is one motto an industry guy came up with that summed up his feeling about the length of CDs and the current crop of new jazz artists; twice the music, half the talent. I, of course don't agree with this though I do see the point at times. Some re-issue LPs on CD and sell them for $18.99 so a CD could conceivably cost twice as much as the LP issue. What was the introductory price for CDs when they were first introduced, $14.99? Still a bit of a markup from what LPs cost and within a couple of years of their introduction they were cheaper to manufacture but the price stayed the same or went up.

    If I go to Amazon, my new CD is $18.99 and most Blue Note re-issues are under $10. While I'm on a smaller label and it is hard for them to compete with the majors, that is a huge price difference and I'm certainly the more unknown entity that needs the price reduction so someone might take a chance on me. I shop and I don't take any chances at $18.99. I'll take a few at $9.99 at the used CD shop though.

    When the Bad Plus released their first CD on Sony, the CD had a list price of $9.99 which really capitalized on the hype they were getting. People were reading about them and hearing about them and were more likely to investigate at $9.99 then $15.99. It helped launch them.

  10. You know, coming from a rock backround and other varied influences before I got into Jazz, hearing all the electric Miles stuff wasn't that big of a leap for me and I loved most of it upon first listen especially On The Corner, Big Fun, Get Up With It and Live Evil. Perhaps the only ones I didn't absolutely love were Agartha and Pangea. I wasn't really influenced by all the world influences in this much but loved the grooves and of course Miles' playing on top of them. The "Lost Quintet" of 1969 is the music that has had the strongest impact on me though. The energy they bought to the music is some of the most intense playing I've probably ever heard from any band rooted in Jazz and this is the energy I'm going for in my new group. The music itself might not be as strong of an influence but the power and impact of how this music is presented is how I want to my stuff to come off. We don't seem to be in an era where most are trying to bring it like this and I miss that.

    I do have to admit that some of Belden's projects come the closet I've heard to this (not Miles in India though) but while Tim Hagans is an amazing trumpet player, I never thought he was right for this (but maybe no trumpet player is, big shoes to fill)

  11. So much to comment on here....and so many of you guys are dead on with your observations.

    First, that is a big drop in sales from 2007 to 2008 but there can be a lot of factors involved in that drop. There is the Kenny G factor where back in the day, jazz sales would double in a year Kenny G had an album out. Now maybe Chris Botti does this. It could also be that with the major labels dropping out like they have been this drop is a reflection of their putting out a lot less product from one year to the next and maybe to a lesser extent, no Miles Davis box set and that there isn't a lot left out there to reissue.

    As for the nothing to buy argument, I'm not buying that one. There is a lot of great music being released these days and I'm a pretty tough critic. There is always plenty of new stuff I'm interested in checking out. That is one aspect of this site I wish was more active and that there would be more discussion in the new release forums. There is a lot of new stuff coming out, probably too much and sites like this can be invaluable in sifting through all the crap and finding the solid, interesting stuff and the few gems that do come out.

    The problem to me has always been this; CDs are too expensive and always have been. All new products and mediums are expensive when they first introduced to the public but if they are accepted into the mainstream, the prices are lowered to more acceptable levels for the masses. This never happened with CDs. Everyone got a little greedy. Soon people who just wanted to get their favorite hit single had to pay $16.99 for the whole CD (that CD single thing never worked) and that created Napster and on and on until where we are today.

    I was tempted to start a thread about this but got too busy. When the Union Square Virgin in New York closed a while back I went there a few times as they were in my neighborhood. From what I could see, it looked like they sold well over half of their stock at 40% off. At 50% off, at least 70% and maybe as much as 80% of their stock was sold. This is when I bought some CDs as well. I got the new Corea/McLaughlin 2 CD set for $10 and bought a couple of Criss Crosses, the new Dave Holland Sextet CD and a Graham Collier 2 CD set. A week later at 80% off, the place was still mobbed and I found another 5 or 6 CDs I was curious about and was willing to take a risk and get them at $4 a pop new. One thing I found interesting was there were about 30 or 40 CDs left in jazz section at the end and 10 of them were the Aaron Parks Blue Note CD.

    So, if you can sell more than half your store and it is a huge store at 40% off, isn't that a pretty clear indication that there is a market out there and that it's just that these fuckers are too expensive.

    In the US, I generally sell my CDs at gigs for $10. That seems fair to me and I'm not selling myself short. The funny thing is sometimes people insist on giving me $15 or $20 for them anyway.

    It is also clear that CDs are way too expensive in Europe and in Japan. As much as I love browsing in stores, if I lived there, I would probably buy most of my stuff on-line.

  12. It's an interesting album. It's an interesting colleciton of tracks perhaps more accurately.

    Perhaps. I don't think that comparing the Miles/Miller collaborations to the Miles/Evans ones are completely irrelevant. Even with the obvious chronlogical, sociologial, and technological differences, there's a lot that remains similar, not the least of which is Miles lending himself to be the lead voice in an environment created by somebody else, although completely with him in mind, and with his input along the way.

    Marcus Miller deserves a lot of credit for creating these tracks, as intersting, challenging and varied as they are, just as Miles deserves credit for inspiring them and how he interpreted them in the studio and especially, as you note, live. To me, this is vital contemporary (then and now) music of a quite high esthetic.

    The one adjustment I've ahd to make to get more into the music is that of the "digital" recorded sound. It's too easy (and I say this from experience) to let the color of the recorded sound color one's perception of the content of the music. Maybe that's why the live material speaks more immediately and fullfillingly to some of us?

    I think the comparisons between Evans and Miller are apt and I remember having such conversations when these recordings were released calling them the Miles/Gil albums of the '80s. I always thought they were more Marcus Miller's albums than Miles' but that is probably overstating things a bit. Let's just say, to me at least, that Marcus created the best atmosphere for Miles to function in at that period of his life. I think they are beautiful records.

  13. Not that I really care but if I were to suspect someone of juicing, Papi would be on that list. Playing at Fenway helped but he was so mediocre as a Twin. That said, I don't think there is any drug that gives you that ability to come through in the clutch like he did.

    I'm bothered by the whole leaking of these confidential tests. They were supposed to be confidential and I think it is probably a crime to leak this information but nobody is touching that. Yes, perhaps if you cheated you should be outed but if the tests where taken under the conditions of anonymity then that should be protected at all costs. It's not fair that just a few have been leaked and of course it's just some of the stars so this whole process is smelly. Lawyers working on these cases are leaking this stuff, is that right? The Bonds thing is ridiculous, he tested negative but the government seized the sample and tested it themselves and got a positive test? There is just something flat out wrong about that. I'm tempted to totally contradict myself and say that at this point you might as well release all the names as fair is fair and maybe this will dilute the attention from the few that were outed but ultimately the outing of any of these players is a result of what essentially is criminal behavior and I'm always a little scared when government agencies and other agencies of power operate outside of the law to get what they want.

  14. How about Lenny Dykstra filing bankruptcy, listing debts possibly as high as 50 million and assets of less than $50,000?

    Number one, couldn't happen to a nicer guy (NOT!) and number two, not only was this obviously inevitable if you've read anything lately about his business practices but those articles that were linked in the last six months or so paint an ugly picture of a moronic con artist loser.

    If there ever was a person for whom debtor's prison would be a proper and fitting sentence, its Lenny Dykstra.*

    * IMHO, YMMV, and I am not stating that the same thing could not be said for Bernie Madoff or any of the other recent Hall of Shame financiers.

    There was just a piece abut Lenny on one of those HBO sports shows recently. In it he said he didn't owe anyone anything of course. He got his first big windfall selling his chain of car washes for millions. He lived the life too since then, 10 million dollar plus house, fancy cars etc. and was quite successful investing etc until the stock market tanked and it hit him hard but he basically ignored the warning signs etc. He was asked in the interview how he figured all this finance stuff out to initially make all this money and Lenny answered, invest with me and I'll show you. Mind you this was while he was already being sued and owed all these folks money......

  15. Thought we'd try this once at least......

    Hope some of you can make it

    Iridium Jazz Club

    presents

    Hubtones: The Music of Freddie Hubbard

    Bobby Hutcherson- Vibraphone (June 12-14)

    Nicholas Payton- Trumpet (June 11 and 12)

    Curtis Fuller- Trombone (June 13 and 14)

    James Spaulding- Alto Sax

    Craig Handy- Tenor Sax (June 11-13)

    Javon Jackson- Tenor Sax (June 14)

    David Weiss- Trumpet

    George Cables- Piano (June 11 and 12)

    Mulgrew Miller- Piano (June 13 and 14)

    Dwayne Burno- Bass

    Lenny White- Drums (June 11 and 12)

    Louis Hayes- Drums (June 13 and 14)

    Thursday- Sunday, June 11-14

    at

    Iridium Jazz Club

    1650 Broadway (at 51st Street)

    (212)582-2121

    http://www.iridiumjazzclub.com/

    Sets at 8:30 and 10:30 pm

  16. David, I did not know that you did the Ray gig! Were you on it while Mark Van Sickle & Don Wilkerson & Johnny Coles were too?

    Damn Jim, how old do you think I am.....

    I did one Japanese tour with the band in December 1995 and none of those guys were there. I knew Johnny Coles did the band but didn't know that Don Wilkerson did it and I don't know Mark Van Sickle. Rudy had already done the band for years when I did it and the other tenor player (Al something I think) was there for a while as well so I don't know when Wilkerson could have done it but it was long before I made my brief appearance. The only guys that were there when I was that seemed to have been there for a while where the two tenor players, the alto player/music director (Al Jackson was his name I think) and the organ player (I think his name was Earl). I guess it's all a blur to me at this point.

    NTSU alumni James Farnsworth was in the band at the time.

    I left NTSU in 1986 by the way.....

  17. I worked with Rudy in Ray Charles' band. Rudy was there for years I believe. I heard he passed away a few years ago but I'm not entirely certain.

    I used Doug Sides on a Cookers gig last year. He does live in Germany and he did sound great on the gig.

  18. Donald Byrd...wow

    Well, we asked him to speak....I don't expect he'll play

    Below is a more updated list

    " To Freddie With Love "

    The Freddie Hubbard Memorial

    Please join Freddie's widow Briggie, his son Duane, his musical director and friend David Weiss as well as:
    Donald Byrd,
    Cedar Walton,
    Louis Hayes, Charles Tolliver,
    Gary Bartz,
    Slide Hampton,
    Jimmy Heath, Billy Harper,
    Joe Chambers, Wallace Roney, Buster Williams,
    Lenny White, Stanley Crouch, Randy Brecker,
    Javon Jackson,
    Christian McBride, Carl Allen,
    Reggie Workman, Joe Lovano, George Cables, Russell Malone,
    Jeremy Pelt
    , Vincent Herring, Larry Ridley, Killer Ray Appleton, Howard Johnson, George Coleman, Jimmy Owens, Pete "LaRoca" Sims, The New Jazz Composers Octet (David Weiss, Myron Walden,
    Jimmy Greene,
    Steve Davis, Norbert Stachel, Xavier Davis, Dwayne Burno, and
    E.J. Strickland
    ) along with many others- the list is getting longer each day
    ...

    Date: Monday May 4th

    Time: 6:30 pm - 9:30 pm

    Place:
    The Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine

    1047 Amsterdam Avenue

    New York, New York 10025

    The Cathedral is located at 112th Street and Amsterdam Avenue, one block east of Broadway.

    The Jazz Foundation took care of Freddie during his times of illness. A tax deductible donation can be made in his name to the Jazz Foundation of America. Aside from helping to make this possible, you will be saving hundreds of great artists in crisis. 1600 emergency cases a year. Saving jazz and blues... One musician at a time.

    The family asks that donations be made in Freddie's name to the Jazz Foundation of America:

    Donations online:

    or make checks payable: Jazz Foundation of America

    322 West 48th Street 6th floor

    New York City 10036

    Attn: In honor of Freddie Hubbard

    Special thanks to St. John the Divine for all they are doing to make this possible.

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