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Dan Gould

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Everything posted by Dan Gould

  1. Thanks Mike, will be interested to see your reaction to the reveal ...
  2. Not sure if you mean Chicago musicians, or musicians passing thru or which. I don't think Al Grey was living there, nor LD and they recorded quite a few times. I think their approach was simply what was popular or thought popular enough to have a shot at decent sales. They were happy to nab people like LD when he wasn't contractually obligated to BN because he was, I am sure, a consistent and predictable seller. Check out how they promoted the first hit record by the Jazztet - I shared this on a FB page that is private - Rare Jazz Photos.
  3. Al Grey, with Billy Mitchell! Sam Lazar! LD (sometimes with Grant!)!! https://www.bsnpubs.com/chess/argo600.html the rest of the discography is available elsewhere on the site.
  4. I seem to recall that early use of his voice messed it up but not that it was specifically related to yelling at a record company exec. I have to say that this has got to be the longest period of time between first post and a response - Bravo.
  5. Just got permission from Ted Panken to use a quote from an interview he did with Charles Earland as a Remembrance on the site: When I was coming up as a kid, Bill Doggett was someone I definitely admired. I loved his group. I loved him and I loved to hear that saxophone of Percy France. Oh, man, those were the good days, especially when I lived in Atlantic City, and these cats used to come to town. Oh, they used to just knock my socks off. I loved Bill Davis and Bill Doggett. You know what I liked about these guys the most? They could groove! Man, when I would come down Kentucky Avenue in Atlantic City, I could hear them organs screaming all the way at the end of the block. As soon as you hit that block on Kentucky Avenue, you’d go into your bop walk! You’d start to struttin’ with the groove, man, because you could feel the pulse all the way a block away.
  6. I'll second Chuck's nomination of "The Rake" from Star Bright and also add the title track from Blue Train.
  7. Thanks for joining in Mike. #1 is not "very recent" at least as I'd define the term. Pre-1995 and all live in the studio by real people. Jim Sangrey got the three (for me) principal musicians.
  8. I bet you found at a good price ... at least on discogs they all seemed $5 or less.
  9. Thanks Thom, your comments are always appreciated! First off very good on the Robert Stewart ID, I considered him the most obscure person so getting him correctly ... very good, even though its not from any of the recordings you mentioned. It is fascinating when two musicians have different reactions to the same track - number 11 didn't work much for you while I (think) Sangrey liked it best. Gene Harris not on the Ernie Andrews/Teddy Edwards recording though I can understand going from Ernie to Gene based on their 90s connection on some Phillip Morris SuperBand recordings. Regarding Scott Hamilton, I think some of his best work and most satisfying recordings are with top-flite pianists: Wig: Race Point and/or Radio City Tommy Flanagan: After Hours Gene Harris: At Last Norman Simmons: My Romance
  10. Individual hints aren't very obvious to me but Sangrey did get the theme, which he called "intergenerational" - on every track there is at least one "young lion" type matched with at least one from an older generation. Maybe that can help a little. Specifically, track 2 was ID'd as a band with Alvin Queen, Jesse Davis, Peter Bernstein and Mike LeDonne, and I let slip that the tune is a Don Patterson composition ... should add up to an answer for those who sleuth. Similarly for #4 that can be figured out too. I will say that Track 11 is the one with the second appearance by one musician.
  11. Thanks for sharing your thoughts Al and I am pleased to report that you do not need to go away for another ten years - no Freddie Hubbard here. (And not Joe Williams either though I definitely hear the similarities.)
  12. Well done on both! #2 and #4 are ID'd if not with perfect specificity.
  13. I accompanied my wife to the first three of the epic Tolkien film adaptations and all I can say about that is that I'd have been even more aggravated had their run times been extended by intermissions. In all seriousness I thought back and came up with The Sting as a picture from my childhood that had an intermission but now I am not sure, since Wiki tells me that the run time was only 129 minutes. Did 2001 have one?
  14. Glad you did!
  15. Dan Gould

    Teddy Edwards

    What the hell would you possibly mean by "frail"? Teddy was one of the toughest tenor sounds right from the start.
  16. Sorry not feeling most of his analysis. 1. What were the record companies supposed to do thru R&D of this "70 year old technology"? The whole point was that it was 70 year old technology that some people had started to think wasn't so bad after all. What were they going to do, reinvent the CD? 2. Owning factories - excuse me but did record companies ever own their own pressing plants? For vinyl or for CDs??? 3. 50% don't own a fucking record player. They are lucky to get money out of them period. 4. Anyone notice that he speaks of back catalogs as this great source of revenue and having no artist or production costs, but the biggest sellers are current stars with new recordings? 5. He points out consumers who stream "for pennies" dominate, but thinks if they offered prices at $10, and below costs, the industry would convert them to buying vinyl? Beyond the fact that the price is still hugely more expensive at that price point, how would they convert buyers and overcome the great advantage of streaming: you can hear it thru your PC or your phone or whatever - but if you have vinyl you can only hear it while sitting in front of your non-existent rig. I don't care if record companies make money, make a ton of money or turn into a single huge conglomerate. Vinyl was never going to be some huge part of their business again. Ever.
  17. Everything is now sold. Thanks.
  18. What the heck, to clear these out - $15 now on Tomcat
  19. So let me get this straight: While they knew that Trevor Story had a serious problem with his throwing elbow (again), and Correa was still out there in limbo, they made no effort to try to get him? I swear they brought in that GM from Tampa and think they can win with a Tampa size payroll. What is the point of all this money coming in from NESN and the ballpark? And on top of that, Story is rapidly shaping up as the worst free agent signing in recent memory. Utterly shitty season last year, couldn't hit at all except for an isolated 15 day stretch in the late spring, plus other injuries that kept him off the field, and now missing all or most of 2023. He's going to get better as he goes deeper into his 30s?
  20. Seems early for the mid-month lull, seven days and counting. 😒
  21. King and Mikey, after a well-timed tongue-click and snap.
  22. Very long time, Peter.. You got 'em - sending PM now.
  23. And now maybe the Mets are ready to walk away? https://www.mlb.com/news/carlos-correa-rumors Wouldn't mind the Red Sox swooping in at something like 5 years/150 million. And can I say I am relieved that they are extending Devers for 10 years or whatever but that does nothing for the roster. I am kinda intrigued by Justin Turner on a short-deal for run production, and what I am really intrigued by were the rumors of a deal for young Marlin pitching, and now, my dream that they replace Boegarts with Correa, if a deal can be made.
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