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medjuck

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Posts posted by medjuck

  1. In the summer of 1964 I was hanging out at the Marquee club a lot ad I'm sure I was there for one 625 taping. But I've always remembered it as being with either Mose Allison or Jimmy Witherspoon. But neither of them is listed. I may have seen them at the Marquee Club but not being taped. It may have been Mark Murphy. I know I saw him a couple of times during that period and his show seems to have been while I was there.

  2. I have a vague memory of seeing him perform with a violinist in the early '60s. (Many of my memories from the '60s are vague.) And it's interesting that John Handy made the announcement of his death, because I think Handy was at that gig too.

  3. IIRC Evans' solo on All About Rosie made his early reputation. There are two issued takes. The originally issued one was on a compilation of specially commissioned avant-garde pieces by Russell, Mingus and others, the other on a cd of Evans odds and ends put out by Columbia. (Don't have the cds in front of me to confirm.)

  4. Saw Benjamin Button last night. At one point the background music is Pops playing a lovely version of Dear Old Southland. Sounded like it was just him accompanied by a piano (but I could be wrong about that). It was a bit of a strange choice for background music because it was live with applause. Made it seem that Louis was playing somewhere nearby. I stayed through about 10 minutes of special effects credits at the end to get to the music credits. They only identified it as being courtesy of Columbia Records.

    Anyone know what record/concert this might be from?

    It's a duo recording with Armstrong on trumpet and Buck Washington on piano.

    April 5, 1930. New York City. Recorded for Okeh.

    And it is a lovely recording.

    I expect that's it. The applause was probably for the beginning of the next song which was IIRC "If I Could Be with You". The two were run together.

  5. Saw Benjamin Button last night. At one point the background music is Pops playing a lovely version of Dear Old Southland. Sounded like it was just him accompanied by a piano (but I could be wrong about that). It was a bit of a strange choice for background music because it was live with applause. Made it seem that Louis was playing somewhere nearby. I stayed through about 10 minutes of special effects credits at the end to get to the music credits. They only identified it as being courtesy of Columbia Records.

    Anyone know what record/concert this might be from?

  6. IIRC Mole also produced a few records. I had an Lp they released of the parts of the Gil Evans Royal Albert Hall Concert that were left out of the RCA Lp from the concert.

    I did manage to visit the store a few times when I was in the UK in 2000. Has anything in London replaced it and Dobell's (sp?) Is Ray's gone too?

  7. I just found this on the Smithsonian website re: Folkways (took some searching):

    "As a condition of the acquisition, the Smithsonian agreed that virtually all of the firm's 2,168 titles would remain "in print" forever--a condition that Smithsonian Folkways continues to honor through its custom order service. Whether it sells 8,000 copies each year or only one copy every five years, every Folkways title remains available for purchase."

    I'm not home to check whether the one I got was a CD-R but I see you can also download (even single tracks!) for about half the price of a cd.

    Wouldn't it be nice if every label had this policy.

  8. Getting back to the original post: I think that if you replace the term "hard bop" with "funk"-- a term that was used a lot at the time, you might have a different conversation. I do remember that after "Moanin" came out there seemed to be an attempt on the part of Blue Note to reproduce ti's success. (There were probably earlier examples of funk but I can't think if any right now.)

  9. My recollections were from about 1960

    Yeah, that would be about the right timescale for Harriott & co. at the Marquee. Would have loved to have seen that !

    Is it true that the band-room there had a pet rat?

    I saw the Harriot Quartet at the Marquee in the summer of '64.

  10. I have a copy of the Japanese CD reissue from a few years ago and the back of the booklet only contains a track listing plus details of personnel & solos. There's lots of other information in the booklet but, of course, it's all in Japanese! I suspect that the original LP cover only had what is shown on the back of my booklet.

    Information on soloists would have been nice. Does Mosaic ever post things like that?

  11. WTF????

    Well, perhaps I shouldn't be very surprised. Perhaps one of these days they'll come out with a corrected Such Sweet Thunder (but I'm not holding my breath.)

    Enlighten me.

    Well the liner notes spend a lot of time discussing a famous take of "Up and Down" that they left off the cd. It can be found on a cd celebrating Ralph Ellison.

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