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ghost of miles

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Everything posted by ghost of miles

  1. "Soulful Days: the Cal Massey Songbook" is now archived. Special thanks to Jim Sangrey.
  2. Exactly... my wife & I both commented on that as we were watching. I think Ornette was a "new artist" to them as well.
  3. Beautiful to hear the audio of that, Lazaro. You had a great rapport with him. My wife just called me in to see Ornette presenting the "Best New Artist" award on the Grammys, so great timing. Ornette at the Grammys--it's like a holy man entering the temple of Babylon.
  4. A van down by the river.
  5. I've long wished that Mosaic would do a Konitz Verve set (and hire you to write the notes, Larry). I know a fair amount of that material has come out over the past 10-15 years on CD, but much of it has gone OOP again. Labels like Gambit do make it problematic for Mosaic, though... they gotta figure that the customer pool for something like a Konitz Verve is only so deep.
  6. Hey, just heard you quote Sangrey... I quote him in the Cal Massey show that follows, too! Jim, you gotta start charging...
  7. I've been revisiting the Woody Herman 1945-47 Columbia box... lots of musical gems here that I'd never heard before (before this set came out, all I had of the Columbia material was the 2-CD BLOWIN' UP A STORM compilation, which is worth checking out for the Ralph Burns liner notes in addition to the "Best of" sides gathered within). Those interested in the young trumpeter Sonny Berman should seek this Mosaic out as well.
  8. Lazaro interviewing Ornette coming up in just a few minutes on Blue Lake.
  9. I invite anybody not acquainted with the Phillips or RCA recordings to check out this show and this show. The Phillips program (drawn from the 2003 box-set) is under September 4, 2004 in the archives; the RCA show is under April 29, 2006. Probably my two favorite periods of Nina recordings, though I like a lot of the Colpix material as well.
  10. Never saw the Monk/Blue Note--who did those? And I forgot about Parker/Benedetti... yes, that was an excellent booklet. Anybody know who's doing the notes for the Chu Berry set?
  11. Glad you enjoyed the show, AL... McCoy Tyner also recorded that Massey tune ("I Thought I'd Let You Know"). The program will air again tonight on Blue Lake, but it will be a poor second to Mr. Vega's interview with Ornette Coleman, which airs before it, from 7-10 p.m. EST. (Lobbying folks to tune in for that; I know I am.) Chewy, I'd imagine that Cal Massey Candid is hard to find on vinyl; it didn't even come out until (I think) the 1980s--might be a few copies floating around in the ether. On CD, not hard at all, as it was recently reissued; certainly available on Amazon.
  12. I've been revisiting the Herman 1945-47 Columbia Mosaic, and, in the process, enjoying Loren Schoenberg's notes all over again as well. He includes a lengthy interview that he did with Woody in 1984, and his comments on the music are detailed, very knowledgeable, and interesting. What other booklets or sets of notes have folks here enjoyed? I also give high rank to Larry Kart's notes for the Tristano/Konitz/Marsh & Will Friedwald's for the Cole Capitol Trio box. Unfortunately I've never seen Roswell Rudd's for the Herbie Nichols... I know others speak quite well of them.
  13. Yes, but no sectarian he... have you ever heard his recording of "On the Sunni Side of the Street"?
  14. This week on Night Lights it’s “Soulful Days: the Cal Massey Songbook.” Trumpeter Cal Massey was an African-American jazz composer, little-known now and in his lifetime, but whose work was recorded by musicians such as John Coltrane, Freddie Hubbard, Charlie Parker, Lee Morgan, Jackie McLean, McCoy Tyner, and Archie Shepp. In the 1960s Massey made his Brooklyn home into a kind of community center for jazz artists and produced many concerts, including benefits for the Black Panthers. A longtime friend of Coltrane, he read the tenor saxophonist’s poem “A Love Supreme” at Coltrane’s 1967 funeral. Massey died of a heart attack in 1972 at the age of 44, leaving a wife and three children; his son, Zane Massey, is a well-respected saxophonist on the modern jazz scene. (As a child Zane was also the inspiration for Massey’s composition “Father and Son,” tapping out a figure on drums that would become his father’s basis for the melody.) We’ll hear recordings of Massey’s music from many of the above-named artists; you can view an online discography of his compositions here. “Soulful Days: the Cal Massey Songbook” airs at 11:05 p.m. EST Saturday, February 10 on WFIU and at 9 p.m. Central Time on WNIN-Evansville. It airs at 10 p.m. EST Sunday evening on Michigan's Blue Lake Public Radio. Also, be sure to tune into Blue Lake Public Radio at 7 p.m. EST Sunday for a three-hour program featuring Lazaro Vega's interview with jazz giant Ornette Coleman. You can read a transcript of the interview here. The Night Lights "Cal Massey Songbook" show will follow the conclusion of Lazaro's Ornette program at 10 p.m. Next week: "Come On Down to Central Avenue" with L.A. jazz historian Steve Isoardi.
  15. Wanted to give this an up for board members Michael Weiss and Stevebop.
  16. My first thought was that it was some sort of mashing project.
  17. Thanks for the update, Bol--I think I remember you mentioning this campaign to me last month when we met for coffee. Great news indeed! I have a buddy who's an Al Cohn fanatic & on the trail of the RCA material; he'll be jubilant when he hears this news.
  18. Thanks, I will!
  19. We just got a copy of this today at the station, and Frank's credited on piano. Haven't had a chance to listen to it yet.
  20. If you think jazz writers are livin' large, well, I have two words for you--jazz radio. I'd post more, but Lazaro says we're about to run out of "supplies" for the mid-day party down here in Bermuda, so I need to rustle up one of the staff for some errand-running. Dilemma: do I buy that third yacht or not?
  21. "The Big Broadcast" archives
  22. Something I haven't seen much about (might've missed it... but so much of today's coverage is "Manning overcomes, etc.") is the Colts' running game... didn't they pile up about 200 yards on the ground? Not sure that that was a key factor in the game, but it seemed significant enough to keep the Bears from focusing solely on Manning.
  23. Glad you liked the show, Sidewinder. There was some discussion of Williams recently in the Artists forum (you might have caught it already) and I posted some comments about TW from Wallace Roney halfway down this page. I can't remember where I came across this--I think it might be alluded to in the Mosaic booklet, but I found the name somewhere else--Terence Blanchard was the trumpeter originally scheduled to make the FOREIGN INTRIGUE date, and Roney was a last-minute substitution.
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