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brownie

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Posts posted by brownie

  1. If there is nothing new on the Mosaic set, I'll stick to my LPs.

    I have the Verve Concert Jazz Band albums and give them a

    spin pretty often. Just love this music.

    There were five Verve albums (Gerry Mulligan and the Concert

    Jazz Band, GM and the CJB at Village Vanguard, A Concert in Jazz,

    CJB on Tour, and Gerry Mulligan '63).

    If Mosaic wants to do a complete Concert Jazz Band set they should

    add the DRG album Judy Holliday/Gerry Mulligan which had the CJB

    accompanying the singing actress.

  2. Blue Note (the name) does business in Europe.

    Just caught this.

    (quote)

    MILAN, Italy (AP) _ The legendary Blue Note jazz clubs are expanding into Europe, with a venue opening in Milan this week to offer a top stage for big-name swing in the old continent.

    The Blue Note franchise in Milan opens to the public Thursday, with a series of shows by jazz pianist Chick Corea. The main Blue Note, in Manhattan's Greenwich Village, has already sold four franchises in Japan.

    "We're definitely looking to expand into Europe because it's been so successful in Japan," international booking director Christian ver Halen said by phone from New York.

    He said the New York club oversees the design of its international franchises, monitors how they are run and operated "to be sure it keeps within the Blue Note image."

    New York's Blue Note has been a venue for some of the best jazz talent since opening in 1981. The same name was used in the past by a famed but now closed club in Paris.

    (unquote)

    Always wondered if there was a (business? financial?) connection with the BN label.

    Anybody knows?

  3. Forget to add that I totally agree with your Thank God for the

    Organissimo Forums. They're really the best. My favorite place

    to hang around nowadays (when I have time enough)

  4. Jim, you asking a hard question. One equivalent musician would

    be Frank Rosolino. Another badass musician who was a comedian

    in his own way and as funny as could be from what everybody who

    met him has asserted.

    He obviously was more confused than Jack Sheldon and I wish Jack Sheldon

    a very happy future. His comedian aspect I have heard about but never

    had the chance to see. From what I can grasp, I really missed something.

  5. Jim, you asking a hard question. One equivalent musician would

    be Frank Rosolino. Another badass musician who was a comedian

    in his own way and as funny as could be from what everybody who

    met him has asserted.

    He obviously was more confused than Jack Sheldon and I wish Jack Sheldon

    a very happy future. His comedian aspect I have heard about but never

    had the chance to see. From what I can grasp, I really missed something.

  6. Don't forget Jack Sheldon was brilliant in the Jimmy Giuffre adventurous 'Tangents in Jazz'

    debut album on Capitol. And on his big band date (Jack's Groove) on Gene Norman Presents

    with a great lineup including Art Pepper, Chet Baker, Harold Land, Mel Lewis.

    Also some great dates with Art Pepper including 'The Return of Art Pepper' and 'Smack-up'on Contemporary.

    Not familiar with his Capitol records. An good?

  7. Sonny Murray indeed. He is a one-man incarnation of 'Free Jazz'.

    Any of the albums he recorded with Cecil Taylor and Albert Ayler is

    a living demonstration of how great and a master of freejazz drumming

    he is. And the intensity is just overwhelming.

    A couple of rare Murray dates that have gone out of print are the two

    dates he recorded with his Untouchable Factor unit:

    - Charred Earth on the Kharma label,

    - Apple Cores on Philly Jazz.

    Both are really worth looking for.

    Hate myself for not having mentioned Jimmy Lyons yet.

    You can hear Lyons and Murray on 'Jump Up/What to do about' on

    HatHut (they play in a trio with bass player John Lindberg).

    Lyons and Murrau were members of the Cecil Taylor Unit in the early

    '60s.

  8. Alfa Jazz is Japanese. Found the Hank Jones box on sale in a Paris store.

    Don't remember the price but it was damn cheap. And the music

    is superb. I know all five CDs in the box were released as single units by

    Alfa Jazz (in Japan).

    Alfa Jazz is the label that originally released the Bill Evans at

    Keystone Corner (the Consecration box). I've also seen trio dates

    by Kenny Drew Sr. on that label.

  9. My favorite Hank Jones albums have already been mentioned (Somethin'

    Else and the Great Jazz Trio albums) but I also like the following ones:

    - Urbanity on Verve (early 1947 and 1953 dates),

    - Arigato on Progressive (with Richard Davis and Ronnie Bedford),

    - The Trio on Chiaroscuro (with Milt Hinton and Bobby Rosengarden),

    - 'For Sentimental Reasons' (a rare Open Sky LP with the great Al Hibbler),

    - 'Flowers for Lady Day' an Atlas CD (with George Mraz and Roy Haynes,

    Jim Anderson recorded that),

    - and a superb Atlas 5CD box (The Great Standards with Mats Vinding and

    Billy Hart, 50 standards by the Great Jazz Trio)

  10. Daniel, I have the Golden Crest Hank Jones Swings Gigi album. Could not

    resist buying it when I stumbled on this several years ago. Here is the

    tracks list.

    Side A:

    - Gigi

    - I'm Not Young Anymore

    - Thank Heaven for Little Girls

    - It's a Bore

    - Say a Prayer for me Tonight

    Side B:

    - Gossip

    - Waltz at Maxim's

    - The Parisians

    - I Remember It Well

    - The Night they Invented Champagne

    As much as I like Hank Jones, Barry Galbraith and Don Lamond (nothing against

    Arnold Fishkin), it's mostly pretty inoffensive music. I would add this to

    the (short) list of Hank Jones' forgettable albums.

    The two Capitol albums with a similar crew are much more interesting.

  11. Couple more interesting French movie sountracks:

    - the Modern Jazz Quartet Atlantic album 'One Never Knows' is the

    sountrack to the 1957 Roger Vadim film 'Sait-On Jamais' (another

    Vadim stinker which was set in Venice),

    - the Kenny Dorham-Barney Wilen soundtrack to the 1959 film 'Un Temoin

    dans la Ville' (directed by Edouard Molinaro, a French black - as in film noir -

    film). The film is nothing to rave about but the music is great with Kenny

    Dorham, Barney Wilen, Duke Jordan, Paul Rovere and Kenny Clarke.

    The same people that are seen - but do not perform - in Vadim's 'Les

    Liaisons Dangereuses'

    The music to 'Un Temoin dans la Ville' has been reissued on CD but am not

    sure it is available right now.

  12. 'Alphaville' is not my favorite Godard film (a surrealistic sciencefiction tale with

    Eddie Constantine in his Lemmy Caution silhouette and Godard's companion Anna

    Karina sharing the main parts). It plays off and on on French films channels.

    The score by Paul Misraki is pretty impressive. Much better than the usual

    Misraki film scores.

    This must have been issued at the time as an EP. Not sure it has been reissued

    and doubt you will find it nowadays.

    But the film should be available as a DVD.

    Good luck!

  13. Another worthy soundtrack that seems to have been reissued here

    (by Universal) is the Fontana CD of the music to the 1959 film by

    Roger Vadim 'Les Liaisons Dangereuses'. The CD has the music by

    the Jazz Messengers (with Lee Morgan, Barney Wilen, Bobby Timmons,

    Jymie Merrit and Blakey). I have seen new copies on a budget edition.

    Excellent music.

    Wish somebody would also issue the music that Thelonious Monk and his

    quartet (Rouse, Sam Jones, Art Taylor) recorded for the same film.

    The film is currently playing on one of the French cable film channel.

    The Blakey Messengers music (which was mainly composed by Duke Jordan

    under the Jack Maray alias) is heard briefly in the film.

    Small aside. The Messengers music starts near the end of the film

    with a great solo by Lee Morgan as background to a wild party that opens with

    a closeup of Kenny Dorham (who is seen playing - but not heard - along with

    Kenny Clarke, Barney Wilen, Duke Jordan and French bass player Paul Rovere).

    The Monk music is all over the film and contains brilliant pieces

    (there's a great 'Crepuscule with Nelly' solo in the opening

    sequence). The Monk music has never been released anywhere.

    The film stinks.

  14. Got this CD a couple of years ago (a French Virgin release). Played it once.

    Found the music intriguing and forgot all about it until this thread came up.

    The liner notes also lists bass player Arthur Phipps.

    Phipps' name does not appear in the Tom Lord discography where the

    session is not listed under a musicians' name but simply under 'Track in

    the Sands'. The session was recorded in March 1962 in New York (at

    RKO Pathe Studios according to the liner notes).

    This ia quite an intriguing date. I may be offtrack (in the sands ;) but I have

    a strong feeling that Charles Mingus had something to do with this music.

    The lineup is very Mingus Workshop-like. The music is quite Minguish.

    There is even an unlisted alto player who sounds very much like Charles McPherson,

    who played with Mingus at the time.

    I even hear Mingus bass lines on several of the tracks.

    The music composer is listed as one Charles Mills who left no trace anywhere.

    Charles Mingus was the one who found the Charlie Chan alias for the Debut

    release of the Jazz at Massey Hall Quintet of the Year LP.

    Charlie Chan Parker. Charles Mills Mingus.

    There is no mention of this music in the Mingus bios I have read. Brian Prestley's

    book was written before the release of the music. Gene Santoro's 'Myself When

    I'm Real' ignores this but the Santoro book is far from perfect as an accurate

    biography (he even confuses Oscar Pettiford and Oscar Peterson).

    Might be worth checking with someone like Max Roach on this soundtrack.

    Also the liner notes list Albert and David Maysles as having taken part in the

    film photography. The 'Tracks in the Sand' film does not appear in their filmography.

    Talk about a mystery film.

    I'll file the CD under Charles Mingus now unless proven wrong.

  15. I worked the evening shift for years and loved it. Could go to clubs

    right after finishing work. When I started my present job, the Paris Blue Note club

    was right around the corner and I heard great live jazz there.

    Now I am in the executive position and have to work way too early in

    the morning. Which means that in the evening, I am done. No clubs

    or concerts these days. Sleep comes easy nowadays in the old man in me.

  16. Asuperb Lucky Thompson disc that has not been mentioned is the Fresh Sounds CD reissue 'Lucky Meets Tommy' which includes the two Tivoli albums that were issued under Lucky Thompson's name with Tommy Flanagan on piano.

    The MPS release 'A Lucky Songbook' needs to be reissued also.

    Another rare and good session.

    Yes, there is no bad Lucky Thompson session.

  17. Rhoda Scott is pretty active in France where she is travelling pretty often. She is playing in Caen, French Normandy, on March 8. Read all about her at the following website www.rhodascott.com

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