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Everything posted by medjuck
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Johnny Griffin, Ronnie Scott and Ronnie Ross - but who's the altoist? Hans Koller? (I'm just quoting what someone posted on YouTube.)
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I've been listening to the alternate takes. There's a lot of great Bird here that hasn't been heard in a long time.
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Rockland also has a version of Stardust with strings that isn't listed here. (And btw I just noticed that the listings of the songs on the 2nd disc are all screwed up.)
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- G. Russell
- M. Ellington
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(and 3 more)
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I'm not sure if you're joking, but the Hendrix is called The Wind Cries Mary and I think I read that Miles said it influenced Bitch's Brew. (They Call the Wind Maria is from Paint Your Wagon.)
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HAPPY BIRTHDAY JIM ALFREDSON!
medjuck replied to randissimo's topic in organissimo - The Band Discussion
Happy Birthday Jim! -
I've always liked the Chet with strings record.
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Charlie Parker "Long Lost Live Afro-Cubop Recordings"?
medjuck replied to mjzee's topic in New Releases
It's on Amazon too with the full listing. At least one track, "On the Alamo" isn't in Peter Losin's excellent discography. For $10.99 I think I'm going to take a chance. -
Give in. Get it. Don't worry about the strings (and more oboe than you can shake a reed at) , Bird sings.
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Happy Birthday Chuck Nessa!
medjuck replied to Free For All's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Happy B'day young man! -
I had business dealings with him a couple of times and he was always gracious. (He also gave me the Monk and Bud Powell Blue Note box sets.) A very nice manin a business where you can't say that about everybody.
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I was at an event last night at The Ace Theater in downtown LA (it's really the old United Artists Theater built by Chaplin, Pickford, Fairbanks and Griffith) where they did a live reading of the first year's season final then showed the last episode of the series with Weiner and most of the cast present along with an audience of 1600 people. Both episodes got many laughs and huge applause when it looked like Joan and Peggy were going to open a business together. They all got a standing ovation when they took to the stage but I thought the most satisfying thing must have been to hear a large audience responding to their work. I presume you don't usually get that in tv. BTW I think there was one historical mistake in this episode. I don't think you answered "I'll accept" for a person to person call. You did that for a collect call. Person to person just meant you didn't get charged unless the exact person you were calling was there. That sort of thing drives me nuts. I remember in the first couple of years they had someone going to a Dylan concert months before he'd ever given a concert. However I disagree with Larry's note about smoking. People smoked constantly. (Though maybe actors don't don't do it quite naturally enough.) Until he quit completely my father smoked in bed after he'd turned out the lights. And it continued later than we think. If you watch the first Ghostbusters movie (shot in 1983) the guys are smoking all the time. By the time we made the sequel in 1988, nobody in it smokes at all.
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So my Eddie Condon box from Mosaic was shipped more than ten days ago via USPS media mail. I checked my shipment notification and saw that there was a tracking number. Googled USPS tracking, put in the number, and learned that it sat in Jersey City for a week before arriving in Atlanta, then next day n Memphis and is now in Bell Gardens Ca. I don't know whether I should be pissed that it's taken so long or impressed that I'm able to track it.
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The death of BB King brought this to mind again. Wikipedia says it was Lowell Fulsom and somewhere I read or head B.B. saying Lowell wrote it. Certainly he recorded it first but the original label of BB's version list it as being by "King", the box set of B.B.'s recordings put out by MCA list it as by "Jules Taub and B.B. King" and a compilation of recordings from the Bihari Brothers' catalogue includes a version by Larry Davis (a cover of BB's version) saying it's by "Taub-King". (Is Jules Taub perhaps Jules Bihari?). (BTW To confuse me even more one of the King obit's I read said Lowell wrote The Thrill is Gone-- which is definitely not true. )
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Happy B'day Larry!
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Last art exhibition you visited?
medjuck replied to mikeweil's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Ai Weiwei at Alcatraz. I can't imagine a better site specific show. -
RCA put this version of Little Wing on the "Plays Jimi Hendrix" cd. But it was on the original "Comes a Time" lp. So the American "Comes a Time" cd has only 8 tracks.
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I'm surprised there hasn't been any discussion of this since its release. Let me start one: Is that really "Undecided" they recorded for Epic? It doesn't sound much like the "First you say you do..." one to me though the liner notes claim it's the one written by Charlie Shavers.
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Let me clarify lest purchases be made in vain - it's the Bluebird CD of There Comes A Time that contains more music. Though IIRC it doesn't contain 'Aftermath of the 4th Movement..." which was on the Lp but if you want it on a cd you have to buy a strange hybrid from RCA called "Battle of the Bands: Charlie Mingus and Gil Evans".
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And there's an alt rock singer who calls himself Kurt Vile. He's pretty good.
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I ordered a cd from Amazon via UPS (not USPS) that I tracked to Fort Worth where it seemed to stay. After a week or so I informed Amazon and they immediately sent me a replacement. Maybe someone in Fort Worth was a Kurt Weil fan.
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And it's really good.
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No, you are not correct. Michael Jackson owns most of Lennon-McCartney's publishing. Paul owns Buddy Holly's publishing. Morris Levy owned some Chuck Berry. I doubt if any one company owns the publishing on even 20% of songs written in the last 70 years but given the rate of mergers taking place who knows. A recently deceased friend of mine once tried to arrange fro Ruth Ellington to sell the Ellington/Strayhorn publishing company (Tempo Music?) to Quincy Jones and Lionel Richie. The deal fell through when too many lawyers got involved and Paramount (Famous Music) ended up buying the company. There are thousands (maybe hundreds of thousands) of publishing companies and most new composers know to start their own.