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Everything posted by ghost of miles
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Ah! Thanks much--didn't see a track listing on the CD Universe site. Here's a video of the quintet circa 1974, doing "Liberated Brother" from IPOT27th MAN:
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Featuring, of course, the classic Coltrane/Hartman album, but also music from other dates Hartman did for the label, as well as recordings from Jackie Paris, Lorez Alexandria, and Freda Payne: Impulse: the Vocal Sides ...also a couple of Lambert, Hendricks and Ross sides thrown in for good measure, since their 1957 ABC-Paramount album helped inspire the label's birth and was also reissued on Impulse in 1965.
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I've seen this listed before--a DVD of Silver performing in 1976, though supposedly the tunes are ones he never recorded commercially: Horace Silver Quintet 1976 Would love to find out that Horace--or somebody--was sitting on a stash of live tapes from the 1970s...that would make a great Select, I'd wager.
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This past week I taped an Andy Bey program and used the version of "Peace" that appears on Horace's UNITED STATES OF MIND (many thanks to the poster who hipped me to this recording in another thread...I bought UNITED STATES OF MIND a couple of years ago, but hadn't actually listened to it yet). Listened to all of disc 1 of UNITED STATES tonight & found myself liking it a lot more than I thought I would. The only other Horace I have from the 1970s is IN PURSUIT OF THE 27TH MAN, which I also dug...any thoughts, recs on this period, which seems to have often been maligned? I'm particularly interested in the SILVER 'N series (saw Jsngry's rec for a compilation with some of that material when I did a search for Horace/1970s threads tonight).
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The "round-midnight" thread
ghost of miles replied to ghost of miles's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Don't know that album. (just kidding ) Not quite midnight yet, but I'm still up, working on some Night Lights/Afterglow stuff, and gritting my teeth over our noisy new undergrad neighbors. -
Boy, Dan, I haven't read any rundowns or seen any clips yet, just noticed the scores--looks like both of our teams failed to show at the ballpark tonight. I do wonder, too, how this "pitch Joba every 5 starts, but only for 3 innings" approach is going to shake out ultimately.
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"Last of the Lions: Gerald Wilson"
ghost of miles replied to ghost of miles's topic in Jazz Radio & Podcasts
Gerald Wilson took the place of the more usual Jack Sheldon on trumpet on the Curtis Counce Group's January 6 1958 date when they recorded "So Nice", "Origin", "Bella Rosa", "Night in Tunisia", "La Rue" and "Carl's Blues". I think I have that record--will have to check it out again when I get home from work tonight. -
"Last of the Lions: Gerald Wilson"
ghost of miles replied to ghost of miles's topic in Jazz Radio & Podcasts
Does he take any solos on Lunceford records? (Sadly, I don't have any Lunceford from 1941 or the years after...I do have the postwar Majestics that were reissued by Savoy, but Wilson's no longer in the band, obviously.) -
"Last of the Lions: Gerald Wilson"
ghost of miles replied to ghost of miles's topic in Jazz Radio & Podcasts
Up for Mr. Wilson's 91st birthday today: Last of the Lions: Gerald Wilson -
Interestingly enough, the Yanks and Bosox have nearly identical records at home this year--NY is 45-20, Boston is 45-21. The difference comes almost entirely from their road records--NY is 41-28 in away games, Boston 33-34.
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The "round-midnight" thread
ghost of miles replied to ghost of miles's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Which Furs? I was revisiting some of their early catalogue the other day... Was up at 4 this a.m. but didn't go online...had to work on a book review for a local magazine. -
Can Jazz Be Saved?
ghost of miles replied to mjzee's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
Hobo, don't ride that train! -
Dan! Peace, my brother! Let us all agree to disagree... let Yankee and Red Sox fans hold hands and sing happy songs of bliss and joyous rectitude!
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They've dropped tons of money before and it hasn't brought them rings.
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Third and Final Coltrane Prestige Box
ghost of miles replied to JETman's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
What's in it, exactly? The Red Garland material? Plus...? -
No team that isn't winning it all gets talked about much, PERIOD. You pull up one example--the 1977/78 Yanks--and yet I'd still argue that THAT team had a very weird, dysfunctional kind of chemistry. Even if the Yanks blow up in the playoffs, I'll still argue that this year's team had great chemistry. There are plenty of overachieving teams that didn't even make the playoffs that had it, too. It can stem from a manager's leadership, some key personalities in the clubhouse, what have you... but it's definitely something more present in some teams than others. And the Yanks--that team so legendary during the Steinbrenner era for a tendency towards tense, dysfunctional atmospheres--have it this year. Doesn't guarantee a WS win, not by any means...but surely makes it more likely than it's been for the past few years.
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Oh, for God's sake, Dan--the 2002 and 2004 Yankees won just as many games, and they did NOT have the kind of chemistry that this team has. Your 2004 Bosox certainly had chemistry. One consternation of being a Yankees fan for so long (I started as a kid in 1974, when Bill Virdon was the manager, so I've pretty much been along for the ride during the entire Steinbrenner era) has been watching Steinbrenner think, year after year, that going after a few high-price players will always do the trick--and it rarely does. Yes, the Yanks are benefiting this year from Tex and Sabathia, but as Dave has pointed out in the past, the additions of Swisher and Burnett have done wonders beyond their statistical contributions. And the great 1996-2001 run was sparked by players such as Pettite, Rivera, Bernie Williams, Jeter, Paul O'Neill, and others who either came up through the farm system or were acquired in shrewd trades...and that team had superb chemistry. I'm grateful that a few of the vets from that era are still around. NY always plays under tons of pressure, the media scrutiny is extraordinarily tense, and this year's team has found a way to still have fun. They ran their first kangaroo court way back in the spring, when things weren't looking so statistically hot... the vibe was already different and better than the past few years. Even if they don't get to or win the Series this year, I'd still say they've been the most enjoyable team to watch since the first years of the Torre era. In any event, I think chemistry and winning are inextricably linked--I wouldn't say that one comes before the other in either case.
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Can Jazz Be Saved?
ghost of miles replied to mjzee's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
They got run over by the Jazz Train. -
I'm still chuckling over Posada's losing the count twice the night before--the shots of Jeter and Rodriguez laughing and holding up two fingers after Posada thought he'd struck out, and then Posada hitting a home run on the next pitch...a nice capsule of the Yanks' season so far. Lighthearted and winning. Again, the chemistry of this year's team (even A-Rod really seems at home now) is making them a joy to watch.
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Scott Wenzel reassured me fairly recently that the Ellington Mosaic will be out next year. greg mo Glad to hear it--my most recent contact with them had left me wondering. Listened to the Ivie Hep V. 1 last night, and it's great...now, if I can only track down V. 2. V.2. (All God's Chillum...) is available as a download from Rhapsody. For some reason v.1 is listed as a single and hence costs 99 cents. I saw the download version, but I'm a finicky 20th-century physical-artifact kind of guy...plus I generally like the Hep liner notes.
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Scott Wenzel reassured me fairly recently that the Ellington Mosaic will be out next year. greg mo Glad to hear it--my most recent contact with them had left me wondering. Listened to the Ivie Hep V. 1 last night, and it's great...now, if I can only track down V. 2.
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Tex has indeed hit 20 of his 32 homers at the new stadium. Oddly enough, Swisher--another switch-hitter--has hit 20 of his 23 home runs on the road.
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Can Jazz Be Saved?
ghost of miles replied to mjzee's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
Hmm... perhaps a chain of fiefdoms? How about "jazz provinces" ruled by various war-lords? In that case, I dibs Bloomington and Whitehall for me and Chuck, respectively. And if the "jazz train" wants to come through, they'll have to pay tribute. -
Can Jazz Be Saved?
ghost of miles replied to mjzee's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
Who here can we get to be "jazz czar"? I nominate Chuck. -
Can Jazz Be Saved?
ghost of miles replied to mjzee's topic in Jazz In Print - Periodicals, Books, Newspapers, etc...
There ya go. In fact one exasperated musician-grassroots "presenter" (quite successful in both roles) did propose something like this. though he didn't at the time know that $75,000 had been spent on this affair. The people in charge didn't get it/seem to like it. Proposals that were greeted with enthusiasm included creating a "jazz train" (?) and a "jazz district," naming streets after musicians, designating a jazz "czar," and, my favorite, getting celebrities (in particular, I kid you not, Oprah Winfrey) to say that they liked jazz. Hoo boy, Larry--I'm sorry that you had to sit through that. Somebody should've pulled a fire alarm.