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Everything posted by kh1958
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My first four concerts: 1. Mingus with Adams, Pullen, Walrath, and Richmond in 1974 (GREAT!); 2. Lightnin Hopkins (terrible); 3. Freddie King (GREAT!); 4. Dizzy Gillespie (good but a bit disappointing at the time).
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Also in 1974, Cannonball Adderley played in Dallas and I wasn't able to manage to attend.
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I was at that Mingus concert at SMU. Actually there were two concerts, but I didn't drive yet so I was dependent on a ride from a couple of friends and wasn't able to stay for the second concert, which I've always regretted. There couldn't have been more than 20 people at the first concert, and I got to sit in the second row and be blown away.
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Lee Friedlander
kh1958 replied to Late's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
I saw that exhibition at the AfterImage Gallery and purchased the book. Some great photographs. -
My personal favorites and Sweet Rain and Dynasty.
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The Candid recording, Out Front, and the Bethleham recording, Victory and Sorrow, are his two mature masterpieces. Little's playing on these is great, his compositions are wonderful, and his leadership of the two sextets (with some overlapping personnel) is impressive.
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Curb Your Enthusiasm on DVD tomorrow (1/13)!
kh1958 replied to Big Al's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
It is the funniest show on TV, that I know of. It chronicles Larry David's spectacular inability to smoothly interact with other humans. -
Personally, I find the date to be very exciting. I love Canon, Opus 3, and Opus 4, as well as the compositions by Adams and Pullen, both of whom sound great. The trumpet player does leave something to be desired. Not at the same level as Changes, but then practically nothing is.
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That's the first Mingus record I bought, when it was released. It's a fantastic recording.
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Does the Lord discography show any other Gene Shaw recorded appearances, other than Tiajuana Moods, East Coasting, A Modern Jazz Symposium..., all with Mingus, the unreleased session with Shaft Hadi and Pepper Adams included in the Mingus Debut box, and the three Argo session?
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There's also 3 LPs on "Unique jazz" "Mingus in Stuttgart," from April 28, 1964. This concert has what must be the longest version of Fables of Faubus, at nearly 50 minutes.
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It was either The Best of Cannonball Adderley on Capitol, or a Columbia Miles Davis Anthology called Basic Miles, purchased around 1973.
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I have enjoyed his recent recordings on High Note. These are three really good ones. Chillin', Davey Blue, and Keep the Spirits Singing.
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Carnival Sketches has been released on a Japanese import CD, which I was able to obtain through amazon.com.
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He's terrific. I have a number of his Concord recordings; all are elegant, refined, lyrical, swinging, and very good. His playing is heavlily based on the style of Louis Armstrong, but he nonetheless has an individual and recognizable sound.
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David Newman is one of my favorite jazz musicians, and I've seen him in many settings, mostly at the Caravan of Dreams in Fort Worth--he played there a couple of times in a quartet with Ellis Marsalis on piano, once in an organ trio with Leon Spencer, in a quintet with Roy Hargrove, with James Clay and Cornell Dupree, in various quartets, and I've seen him in concert with Marchel Ivory--he's always an utterly superb combination of sophisticated, soulful hard bop, and the blues. He's great and underappreciated.
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He's playing his best and making his best recordings now.
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It'a a wonderful recording. Charles McPherson is the most prominent soloist and he plays brilliantly. The concert starts with an exquisite Duke Ellington melody, a series of beautiful ballads, climaxed by a stirring Take the A Train, performed by a small group (Mingus, Richmond, Jaki Byard, John Handy, Charles McPherson, and Lonnie Hillyer). Then there's an extended, slow and gorgeous version of Orange Was the Color of Her Dress, Then Blue Silk, again a small group version. Finally, there's a tremendously exciting large group version of Meditations on Integration, with Buddy Collette filling the role of Eric Dolphy, featuring very exciting soloing by McPherson, and a wild collective improvisation by the group at the climax.
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I haven't seen that Jazz Casual. Is that a Europe only release?
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Two tracks of Magic Sam playing and singing are "bonus" tracks on volume 2 of The American Folk Festival of the Blues DVD. These DVDs (and these tracks) are great. There's also some fine mid-1960s Otis Rush and a smidgeon of Buddy Guy in this collection. As for Freddie King, if you haven't heard the DVD the Beat you are missing out--amazing 1960s performances from a local Dallas teen dance show. Mick Taylor's second studio album as a leader came out a couple of years ago, A Stone's Throw. It's pretty good. Mike Bloomfield's had a couple of good issues lately, an unreleased Fillmore East recording with Al Kooper and his album with Nick Gravenites My Labors. The latter recording has Bloomfield's best playing on record.
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I hope you're not the one who gave it to me. Definitely pure misery.
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It was a Christmas music bonanza for me: CDs: Mosaic set, the Complete HRS Recordings; Django Reinhardt Proper Box; Kurt Rosenwinkel HeartCore; and Duke Ellington and Ray Brown This One's for Blanton. DVDs: Freddie King Live in Europe; and One Night with Blue Note.
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I haven't seen that one. But I do wholeheartedly recommend Live at Tivoli Gardens, Memories of Duke, On the Road with Duke Ellington and the Intimate Duke Ellington, four great Ellington DVDs.
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It depends on the form of ownership of the business and how the sale was structured. If, say, the business was owned by a corporation, and the buyer purchased the stock of that corporation, then of course that corporation remains liable for its debt, even though it has new stockholders. However, for an insolvent business, it is likely that the buyer would insist on an asset sale--that is, the buyer would purchase the assets of the business and assume only those liabilities specified in the contract. In that case, a new corporation or other entity set up by the buyer likely would acquire the assets of the selling corporation and generally would not be liable for the seller's debts unless the the debt's were assumed under the contract, the creditor had a security interest in the assets sold, or there was a fraudulent transfer (that is, the buyer is purchasing the business for less than its value and has a bad intent). Without knowing the facts, it's impossible to say for sure if the buyer is liable for unpaid trade debt, but if the buyer was represented by a competent lawyer, the deal could certainly be structured in a manner which left the old corporation liable for the debt, not the new corporation. In that case, the debts should be paid from the proceeds of sale received by the old corporation, if any, before any proceeds could be paid to the owners of the old corporation. If they liquidated the old corporation and distributed proceeds without paying creditors, then the shareholders of the old corporation would be liable to the extent they receive distributions. Of course, I don't know how this business or this sale was structured, so this is merely speculation.
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I believe that the transcriptions were studio recordings, which were distributed by the record companies to radio stations, but were not intended for sale. Airchecks were recordings of live performances broadcast on the radio.
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