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Everything posted by kh1958
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Have you heard Moffett's new release? It's awfully good.
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Yes indeed. Mingus has been an automatic purchase for me in all instances since I first heard Mingus Moves in 1974.
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I bought one in the late 1980s that has a blank cover and blank labels on the LP.
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I've never run across this before. The only bootlegs of the Mingus Moves/Changes group I've heard have been of very poor quality.
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It's available for pre-order at amazon.com. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detai...?v=glance&s=dvd
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That's quite an interesting database. Were all of these performances actually recorded?
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After Hours is the only fairly recent recording by Ira Sullivan I've come across. It's a good one. http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detai...=glance&s=music
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Obscure records you love which never get a mention
kh1958 replied to David Ayers's topic in Recommendations
Breakthru, Debut in Blues, and Carnival Sketches, all by trumpter Gene Shaw, on Argo. -
Does anyone else have Sun Ra meets John Cage? As I recall, they don't actually play at the same time. I wondered about the rarity of this LP, which I bought from the band in the late 1980s.
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I have the original vinyl of this one (purchased used), but the pressing is so noisy, I could never really listen to it.
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Mingus lives in the form of the Mingus Big Band, which has been playing weekly at the Fez in New York City for the last dozen or so years. Their recordings are worthwhile, though I would get all the Mingus-led sessions first. I don't think there is anyone comparable to Mingus today. I hear a little Mingus parallel in drummer/leader Bobby Previte, who is an interesting composer and fine leader who has been making really good recordings in relative obscurity since the 1980s. http://www.bobbyprevite.com/
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I started buying Mingus in 1974, and those two Bethleham LPs were among the hardest to find. They were reissued on LP by Affinity in 1982-83; I was very happy to finally obtain copies. As for underappreciated, I would nominate the group with Charle McPherson, Bobby Jones, Eddie Preston, Jaki Byard and Dannie Richmond that recorded to 2LPs for the French America label (reissued as a twofer, Reincarnation of a Lovebird).
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The April 19th concert on The Great Concert... is the better concert.
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Perhaps not the equal to the Morgan/Shorter, Hubbard/Shorter, or Mobley/Byrd/Silver edition of the Jazz Messengers, but that edition of Blakey's group with Terence Blanchard as musical director was sure good. They sure took me to musical heights two nights when they played at the Caravan of Dreams.
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Fortunately, the Bush/Cheney team, making the music world safe from Cat Stevens, stepped in and silenced the horror.
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You must have seen him on a bad day. Every time I've seen him live (7 or 8 times, going back to with Art Blakey), he's been very good.
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In addition, Gal Costa is very fine as well, though I don't know those recordings. She is I believe one of the "MPB" performers that came up in Brazil in the late 1960s/1970s, such as Gilberto Gil, Caetano Veloso, Jorge Benjor and others.
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Tonino Horta was associated with Milton Nascimento early in Milton's career and performed on some of Milton's finest recordings. I actually saw Horta one time in New York City in a small club, performing mostly solo on accoustic guitar and vocals. It was a very enjoyable experience. Unless I am confused as to labels, I think Horta had a recording on Blue Note (jazz oriented of course) a few years back, and I seem to recall reading that he may have performed at the Village Vanguard at around that time.
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The ipod itself creates directories for each artist and a subdirectory for each album of that artist. You can listen to the ipod through a cassette adapter in your car. (The only problem I have with this is that it sounds like a cassette. Maybe there's a better way?) I don't know about a PC. If you have a mac, you just plug the ipod into your computer and itunes automatically moves the music from your library in itunes to the ipod. It couldn't be easier.
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I just bought a 20 gig ipod last weekend, and so far I'm liking it more than I would have ever imagined. I'm not sure it's the ipod itself so much, as it has provided the impetus to delve into my collection, go through lots of CDs, and pick out the tracks I like the best to transfer to the ipod. This has been great so far, rediscovering lots of favorite music, and I'm only at 1.2 gigs used.
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I think its spelled James Cammack. He's been in Jamal's group for twenty years or more.
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Interesting. I'm confused. The 'Mingus Presents' sides are in stereo on my Mosaic LP set. Are they in mono on the Mosaic CD set, but stereo on the Mosaic vinyl? In addition, I've never noticed the echo. It could be there, but I'm usually pretty bugged by unnatural sounding recordings. I'm even more confused, as I have the Mosaic LP set and thought the echo that always bothered me was there; also, I didn't know there was a CD Mosaic of this set. Maybe it's me that's echoing?
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I came across another interesting Ron Burton recording in my collection--Blue Brass Connection, Cool Affairs. It also features George Adams, Graham Haynes, Paul Zauner, Cameron Brown, and Ronnie burrage. It's from 1991 on Amadeo.
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On the quartet pieces, there is print-through echo at certain points--that is, you can hear a ghostly duplication of the horn soloist, slightly out of sync. I read this was because the tapes were not properly stored--that is, if they go too long without being rewound, the adjacent tape prints through to get the distracting echo effect. I assume early versions would not have this problem. The earliest version I have is a mid-1970s Barnaby reissue, which has the problem.
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We are just trying to keep up with the ubiquitous debates on what CD versions are best and whether or not to upgrade to the latest and greatest. I have both Mosaics and the sound on both serves the music and my listening experience. I have always thought a couple of the Candid discs were pretty special sonically, but I won't go into details. You should pick them up. They can be had for around $100, at times, on EPAY. Mosaic bargains if there are any. The Classic Records 'TJ Moods' is a bit bright, but very good nonetheless. The Impulse reissue, from a few years ago, of Mingus Mingus....sucks. As Mingus is my favorite musician, I have every official Mingus release on LP and CD, sometimes more than one of each, but I don't think I have any "first pressings" prior to Mingus Moves, which was the first one I bought. I also have the two Mingus Mosaic sets, the Atlantic box, and the Debut box, not to mention most, though not all of the bootlegs. I would like to have the two Candids on LP, to avoid the dreaded "echo" on every version I have, but haven't been successful yet in picking one up (I'm not entirely sure what a first edition Candid label looks like.) The two worst CD issues of Mingus material are Mingus Plays Piano (very harsh and unlistenable, I think it was a "gold" CD as I recall; I think there is a subsequent version I haven't heard) and the only CD issue of the "Reincarnation of a LoveBird two-fer/French America release, which is pretty terrible sonically.
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