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medjuck

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Posts posted by medjuck

  1. Moosehead is indeed from New Brunswick-- as am I. However I think it's owned by the Olands who are a Nova Scotia family and make Olands beer in their home province. When I moved to LA I was shocked to see Moose advertised as a gourmet beer. I think it was the only one you could buy in NB when I was growing up.

    An American writing a book about Canada used the fact that you could buy Moosehead in every state but in only 4 provinces to exemplify the independence of

    provinces vs the feds as compared to that of states vs the feds.

  2. Topsy Part 2 was one of the only records by a Black musician played on the only radio station in my home town when I was growing up. And I don't think it was racism-- they played Mugsy Spanier's version of Party Doll instead of the Buddy Knox version. I think they just had a very limited music library. (They mainly played country and western music.)

  3. Buddy Collette has spoken highly of these sessions on which he also played. I tried to track down the original Ellington score. Never did get it but was able to obtain a a couple of cds of the music which was finally used in the film. Some of it is pure Ellington, some EKE with overdubs and some just studio musician playing music not by EKE. It would be great if Shank has a copy of all the original Ellington material.

  4. Rhapsody has begun offering mp3 downloads for sale. Pricing is about the same as iTunes Store. So-so selection. However they are offering one free album download to the first 100,000 people who register. I was looking for some Ivie Anderson material and found the cd I most wanted "Raisin' the Rent" was listed as a single, so I got a 24 cut cd for 99 cents as well as a free download. I don't know if they made this mistake anywhere else and I feel a bit guilty taking advantage of them (and telling others about it) but at least I'm helping to publicize the the service as well as (I hope) helping out some short-on-money jazz fans.

  5. Having spent more time with the Ellington Box set I highly recommend it. You can't beat the price. However I do worry it might scupper a Mosaic set. There's only about 2 cds worth of material from the period missing and most of it is vocals and alternates.

  6. How in the world did Frank Zappa ever end up on Verve??

    Or the Velvet Underground??

    I don't know any of the history of Verve's non-jazz endeavors; can someone elucidate?

    Not to mention Tim Hardin. All that was after Granz but was it during the Creed Taylor period?

  7. How in the world did Frank Zappa ever end up on Verve??

    Or the Velvet Underground??

    I don't know any of the history of Verve's non-jazz endeavors; can someone elucidate?

    Not to mention Tim Hardin. All that was after Granz but was it during the Creed Taylor period?

  8. In his notes to the new "Original Masters" Ellington 4 disc set Bruce Talbot mentions that "improved sound retrieval on these rather murky mid 30s recordings" allows us to better appreciate Duke's pre-Blanton bassists. I had started thinking about this when listening to the Mosaic Basie set. Were record listeners at the time of the music's original release able to hear the bass the way we do know when many of us have large speakers and even sub-woofers?

    The recordings were made to match the playback equipment and sounded fine, back in the day. Many current cd transfers are only pale reflections of the originals.

    So the bass would sound just as present as it does today?

  9. In his notes to the new "Original Masters" Ellington 4 disc set Bruce Talbot mentions that "improved sound retrieval on these rather murky mid 30s recordings" allows us to better appreciate Duke's pre-Blanton bassists. I had started thinking about this when listening to the Mosaic Basie set. Were record listeners at the time of the music's original release able to hear the bass the way we do know when many of us have large speakers and even sub-woofers?

  10. Did you notice the positioning of the piano on the Evans tape? I thought that the piano was centered in the original release but off to one side in the newest cd

    box set. (Though I guess the tape wouldn't necessarily indicate where it actually where it was in the room.)

  11. I'm old enough to remember the impact of Little Richard, Ray Charles and Elvis. Rocked my world. I was a jazz snob and didn't listen much to rock in my 20s. (I just didn't get Led Zepplin or Cream. I was introduced to Jimi Hendrix by Gil Evans.) Then I heard The Clash and Elvis Costello and started listening again. Now I have an 18 year old son who's into The Arcade Fire and the Broken Social Scene groups. Sound good to me. OTOH he wishes he was a teenager in Seattle in the late 80s.

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