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Brownian Motion

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Everything posted by Brownian Motion

  1. I seldom miss a chance to blow Bill Coleman's horn. Bill Coleman, August 22, 2002 Reviewer: moldyfig (see more about me) from State College, PA United States Trumpeter Coleman, strongly influenced by Louis Armstrong, belongs to that generation of jazz musicians (He was born in 1904) who set the standard for instrumental performance in the 1930s. But for the fact that he spent 80% of his career in Europe he would today be one of the icons of early jazz, comparable in stature to Coleman Hawkins, Red Allen, or Benny Carter. Unlike so many of his contemporaries Coleman was a true long distance runner: this date, recorded in England in 1967, finds him in great form, not at all enfeebled by advancing age. Listen to him on the old warhorse "Indiana", a song he must have played a thousand times before this: he effortlessly spins off four hot choruses, sings a couple more (the second scatted and very boppish), and then, after a piano interlude, takes it out with a pair of choruses that are like an instruction manual on swing and swinging. A welcome release.
  2. I loved his recording of Naima, which I enjoyed several times before my cat jumped on the the record while it was playing; that would have been around the mid-1960s. I haven't heard much of him since then.
  3. I like the General's take on this. http://tinyurl.com/33mdu We're not misogynists after all Dear President Hoffman, It's hard being a manly Christian man these days. You have to watch every word you say or you'll be hauled before the PC police. You can't even say something like, "Hey 'cunt,' get me a beer," without people screaming "misogynist." It's funny that it took a Republican woman like yourself to change all that. That's what you did the other day when you said that "cunt" was a term of endearment. I salute you for doing it. Sure, there will be those who will say that you were just cynically covering your butt because your athletic program allowed male football players to use that word to sexually harass a female football player, but anyone who would say that is just a "cunt" anyway. Certainly, no real men, no rugged, manly, Christian individualists are making that argument. That's a debate for women and sissies. It's an argument for "cunts." In any event, it was a brave act on your part--one that is unlikely to win you friends in the academic world. To hell with those who can't grasp what you've accomplished. You've advanced traditional patriarchal values farther than any man could, now it's time to get back into the kitchen. Heterosexually yours, General JC Christian, patriot posted by Gen. JC Christian, Patriot | 12:14 AM
  4. Francoise Gilot. Oceanic Woman. 1986
  5. And don't forget "Alabama Jubilee".
  6. Another American woman who was drawn to the East was Bertha Lum (1867-1954). This blockprint, "Theatre", dates from 1907.
  7. All trumpet players are underrated. Unless they're overerrated.
  8. Since about 1959. My first couple of album purchases were "The Bix Beiderbecke Legend" and "A Rare Batch of Satch". There was virtually no classic jazz available in reissue in those days.
  9. >BkE HpaUNG LIKE TH@E STGyARS< TH/E Pj8ORN SUTAR"S The doctFor ap)proved pills wenjMt against all laws of }genetics, TtVYhey wibll grow youbr phbenYLis to porjun ind*ustry stDandar`ds . MorOe IBRnfo / Order Here
  10. Another early bop trumpet who was still playing well in the 1960s was Idrees Sulieman, who began his career as Leonard Graham. His best recording, from the few I've heard, was a Coleman Hawkins date from 1957, featuring J.J. Johnson and a splendid rhythm section.
  11. You could always move to Canada. They've instituted a neat idea there called national health insurance.
  12. I'm impressed that I've never heard of this guy. Another trumpet who labored mostly in obscurity was Webster Young. He must have had personal problems. I'd also like to put in a good word for Peanuts Holland, who moved to France after WWII but apparently recorded rarely. Holland had decent chops and a wealth of invention, although his tone was sub-par.
  13. Lilian Miller, whose woodblock print I began this thread with, was born in Japan in 1895, the daughter of the American Counsel. She began formal art lessons from Japanese masters at a young age, came to the US for college, but afterwards returned to Japan and then followed her family to Korea. By the mid-1930s mounting medical problems forced her to leave the East for Hawaii, where she died in 1943. She was unusual among Japanese printmakers in not only designing her prints, but also in cutting and printing the blocks. This print dates from the late 1920s.
  14. Another 1950s player who was highly regarded as an underrated player in his own day was Phil Sunkel. Stu Williamson was an interesting player who got dragged down by drugs. And Dick Cary, who mainly played piano and arranged, was also a pretty good trumpet player, though his recordings are rare.
  15. Bill Coleman and Doc Cheathem.
  16. It's time for my annual plug for Jimmy McPartland, who was capable of a lot more than many of his records indicate. In particular I'll single out a date with Marion and her bassist and drummer, and a guitarist, Jimmy Raney I think, playing Hoagy Carmichael's music. Fine, sensitive playing.
  17. Well, I'll surely agree with Shorty Baker. But Buck? That cat was the most recorded trumpet of the swing era, 'ceptin' Roy. How about Shad Collins, Emmett Berry, or Ernie Royal? Snooky Young?
  18. Donald Byrd is my nominee for the most over-recorded trumpet player of all time; he never missed a date and could always be depended on to play three notes when one would suffice.
  19. Wilbur Harden Ray Codrington Al Aarons
  20. Marion Post Wolcott. FSA. 1941
  21. Marion Post Wolcott. !938. For the FSA.
  22. Sybil Andrews. Woodcut.
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