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Everything posted by ghost of miles
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I didn't know about the Watrous big-band albums. Hope those see the light of some eventual day.
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Hey all, I'm sitting in again tomorrow afternoon at our local public radio station. In musing about what to play, I realized that three of my favorite re-issues--Billy Mitchell's THIS IS BILLY MITCHELL, Allen Eager's IN THE LAND OF OO-BLA-DEE (technically not a re-issue), and Charlie Rouse's SOCIAL CALL--all feature tenor saxophonists who are relatively unsung. Hence I'll be featuring them Monday afternoon from 3:30-5 p.m. EST on this link: WFIU I'm calling the program "Three Tenors."
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I finally broke down and ordered the Japanese import of Barry Harris' BREAKIN' IT UP from Mr. Tanno. I may do the same with some other Argo titles if Universal doesn't appear to be more forthcoming in the next year or so.
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Getting a little obscure here, but I really enjoyed the piano playing of Albert Dailey on Uptown's recent re-issue of Charlie Rouse's 1984 LP SOCIAL CALL. Dailey died before the album actually came out; according to the liner notes, he recorded a debut leader record for Columbia in 1972 entitled THE DAY AFTER THE DAWN. I'd like to hear it, but I doubt that it's high on Sony's list of priorities...
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God how I hated/loved that one. Brings back a FLOOD of memories, for sure!!! / I've forgotten - did we ever dertermine why Chuck was such a jerk??? Any ideas???? Yeah, that was one of the great ones, wasn't it? My memory's vague, but seems like somebody kept asking Chuck discographical questions and then got peeved when he suggested that they buy a discography. He's so pushy that way. Geez, you'd think the guy was sitting around planning CD releases of some fabulous Bird/Diz concert and had better things to do or something.
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Charlie Rouse/Red Rodney, SOCIAL CALL Sam Cooke, THE MAN WHO INVENTED SOUL Joe Pass, SOUNDS OF SYNANON Barry Harris, BREAKIN' IT UP Various, SECOND ANNUAL ESQUIRE JAZZ CONCERT 1945 Billy Mitchell, THIS IS BILLY MITCHELL
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You're right about THE RIGHT TOUCH, Aric. I picked it up as a $6.99 cut-out several months ago out of a Barnes and Noble bargain-music bin, and it's top-notch Pearson. Not sure what the rationale is for leaving it out, or what the reasoning is behind the forthcoming John Patton configuration... I haven't divined yet the science of these two Select sets.
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(Jsagnyry): Opening music in Mati Hari (1932)
ghost of miles replied to a topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Yeah, I've done some reading about Shanghai, from mid-19th century up until the Communist takeover in 1949... Stella Dong's SHANGHAI: THE RISE AND FALL OF A DECADENT CITY 1842-1949 provides a good overview, focusing on the more glitzy aspects of the city's history, while BEYOND THE NEON LIGHTS: EVERYDAY SHANGHAI IN THE EARLY TWENTIETH CENTURY, by Hanchao Lu, looks much more in depth at the backalley life of lower and middle-class Shanghai. YELLOW MUSIC was so specialized and so academic that I have a hard time recommending for anybody but a true fanatic about this subject. BLUE NIPPON, which focuses on Japan, but which includes Shanghai because it was such a destination for professional Asian musicians in the 1930's, is much more accessible and interesting; both books come from Duke University Press. -
Oh man, oh man... is this the same "live-at-the-Haig" record that Ted Gioia touts so avidly in WEST COAST JAZZ? If I'm remembering right, he cites Shank's playing here as being "hotter" than it often was on his studio records--not to start that old canard again or anything.
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I'm in the midst of reading Arthur Kempton's BOOGALOO, and periodically he alludes to the world of mid-20th-century American black radio. Has anybody here come across an entire book devoted to the topic? I'm interested in reading about stations and personalities of all formats: blues, gospel, jazz, soul, etc.
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(Jsagnyry): Opening music in Mati Hari (1932)
ghost of miles replied to a topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Perhaps a tad off-topic, but I'd really like to read a good, comprehensive book on the Shanghai jazz scene of the 1930's. Buck Clayton spent some time over there and talks about it a little in his memoir... Two books, BLUE NIPPON and YELLOW MUSIC, touch on the place and era, but don't go into it in depth. -
Warner Brothers Fifties and Sixties Jazz Sessions?
ghost of miles replied to DrJ's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
What about GONGS EAST? I've got the CD re-issue on Discovery... but was that WB originally? I'm hoping for a CD re-issue of the soundtrack to SWEET SMELL OF SUCCESS. News of the Downbeat feature only whetted my appetite even more. -
I love the Proper DAWN OF DOO-WOP box, although that's prob. considered more "40's vocal harmony" than pure doo-wop per se. I bought the first Rhino box a few months ago but haven't cracked it yet... but yeah, I've felt a doo-wop surge coming on in the past year. I esp. like the more haunting, late-at-night numbers. Anybody around here ever hear Mercury Rev do "I Only Have Eyes for You"? Killer!
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I think I underwent a somewhat similar experience after downing a fifth and a half of Pisco the night before.
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Various, BIG BAND JUBILEE SESSIONS discs 1 and 2 Gigi Gryce, RAT RACE BLUES Miles Davis, in Tokyo 7/12/64 w/Sam Rivers Frank Morgan, YOU MUST BELIEVE IN SPRING
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Hey man, you jest, but a friend recently sent me this passage from Steve Otfinosky's THE GOLDEN AGE OF NOVELTY SONGS! The Cannonball Adderley/Don Elliott/Chipmunks connection... who woulda thunk it?
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MOOSER!! Hate to break it to you, Mark, but you do not have the most posts in politics, by either total number or percentage. There is another... so sayeth Obi-Wan.
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My query, too (on looking up the politics statistics)... I can't find a way to sort "Top 10 posters" by politics alone. About 25% of my posts are in politics--although the addition of Greg to the board has lately driven that number up. On the old BN board I made a vow to quit posting in politics altogether, and then the board blew up about a week later. I may renew the vow here if I find myself getting too caught up in some of the running battles. Post on, Johnny!
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For later Jeanne Lee I also like TRAVELIN' IN SOULTIME with Mal Waldron.
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Me too, as it's the only one that I don't already have in some form. Glad I waited so long to get it.
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Gigi Gryce radio show w/Michael Fitzgerald
ghost of miles replied to ghost of miles's topic in Artists
The two-part Gryce program with Mike that I did for WFIU-Bloomington last March didn't go out over the web because we were streaming news about the invasion of Iraq. My station manager has graciously allowed me to re-broadcast it on the other station where I have a show as a one-part, three-hour broadcast, on Wednesday, July 30 from 6-9 p.m. EST. WFHB has a semi-official streaming link, and I'll post it a day or two before the broadcast.