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Д.Д.

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Posts posted by Д.Д.

  1. I was tied with Clunky with 32 posts, so I just wanted to forge ahead.  Carry on... :P

    Sorry Matthew, but we can't count that post toward your total. :P

    Moreover, we will actually deduct a penalty point.

  2. And looking at your "Twins" cover, it seems it's one of the German ones. The others (the new jewel case ones) don't have that thing on the left saying "Atlantic Masters").

    http://www.warnerclassics.de/index.jsp

    ubu

    Got Twins (for €7 or so at Amazon.fr). It is indeed a typical red-black Atlantic Masters digipak reissue made in Germany. The sound is actually quite good - much better than Atlantic Master reissue of Free Jazz, for example. The music is phenomenal.

    The other one I got is this one:

    B00004VSFA.08.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

    Great stuff! Pretty adventurous playing from everybody. Say what you will, but I hear a lot of Brötzmann in Hawkins' playing.

  3. Talking about Okka, I assume everybody here (particularly Back Together... fans) already purchased Fred Anderson / Steve McCalls Vintage Duets?

    No, not yet. I'm guessing you would recommend this disc?

    Yes John, you are guessing correctly :rmad:

    After some previous discussion on Fred Anderson, I dug up some CDs of his I have, and found this one to be absolutely stunning: Fred Anderson / Steve McCall - "Vintage Duets, 1980".

    It seems to be the very first Okka release (1994), so there is a chance of it going OOP fast, and YOU wouldn't want to be without a copy.

    As I mentioned, Fred Anderson's other duo with drummer (Steve MacCall) - Vintage Duets (on Okka) is fantastic...

    I would still rate Vintage Duets (Okka) higher, though.

    Hans, have you heard Vintage Duets? - Fred Anderson / Steve McCall duo recording on Okka - there MCCall is perfectly complimetary to Anderson's playing.

    Of 5-6 Fred Anderson CDs I have, Vintage Duets is my favorite, by far.

    I still much prefer Vintage Duets (Okka) to this one (AMG review). I would be interested in hearing your opinion on comparing these two (also given that they were recorded more than 20 years apart). Vintage Duets should be a pretty safe bet: if you like Back Together Again, I don't see why you would not like it...

    Hans, what's your feeling on Vintage Duets vs. Back Together...?

    As you might have noticed, I feel that while Back Together... is SINOW, Vintage Duets is far superior...

    This is a great album:

    Fred Anderson & Steve McCall - Vintage Duets - Okkadisk

    :tup

    Absolutely.

  4. I'm just giving this a first listen

    e39741yvxbs.jpg

    my first exposure to Leroy Jenkins & Carlos Wards work.

    Let us know how you like it. I haven't checked any of Cecil's Leo releases yet.

    Carlos Ward is one of my favorite alto saxophone players (he also plays some mean flute... and is an excellent composer). He is excellent on two live discs he recorded with Ed Blackwell on Enja, and on duo reocrd with Karl Berger.

  5. This is a fantastic set, which is available from Okkadisk for something in the neighborhood of $15 for the 2cd set.

    I would have loved to buy from Okka (I try to buy either from artists or labels directly), but they don't accpet neither CCs not PayPal. The guys (guy? - I assume Okka is also a one-man company, as most of them...) are stuck in XX century!

    Talking about Okka, I assume everybody here (particularly Back Together... fans) already purchased Fred Anderson / Steve McCalls Vintage Duets?

  6. Cannot get Bergman. Get bored every time I try to listen to him. Sounds random and unstructured to me (he is sometimes compared to Cecil, but Cecil to me sounds totally opposite  - there is a great degree of logics and structure in place).

    It took quite a while for me to "get" this disc, primarily due to Bergman. This is the only disc of his that I have and I really had to work a bit to apreciate its beauty.

    I don't have too much either - lethargic (and incredibly boring, IMO) solo piano Meditations (Tzadik) and fast furious (and incredibly boring, IMO) duo with Evan Parker (Black Saint).

  7. Another great disc is his duo with Borah Bergman on Soul Note.

    c481342ofu5.jpg

    This disc doesn't seem to get a lot of mention but it is fantastic! I don't know of any other Drake / pianist duets off the top of my head, which is too bad. This disc smokes!

    Cannot get Bergman. Get bored every time I try to listen to him. Sounds random and unstructured to me (he is sometimes compared to Cecil, but Cecil to me sounds totally opposite - there is a great degree of logics and structure in place).

    ---------------------------------------------------------

    Drske would have probably sounded great with Jaki Byard...

  8. If you both like this duet you should try to listen to the STEPHAN OLIVA's record who belongs to the box JAZZ'N (E)MOTION: FILM MUSIC ON THE PIANO.

    This is a beautiful one. IN general Oliva is a very interesting pianist - he has a nice trio (reinterpretation of the mksuic of Bill Evans) on Owl. I am also interested about his Tristano duo with another piranist (forgot the name) on Emouvance.

    Also in this series, there is a very lyrical solo Steve Kühn.

    These CDs are available as indivudual CDs outside of the box (I got mine from themusicreource, I think).

  9. This on is probably the best:

    gy21.jpg

    SunRa covers a lot of ground here - from touching reading of standards to fairly free pieces. All played with humor, melodism and great imagination. The sound is not perfect though. It's on Leo Records.

  10. Now I'm looking forward to listen to the Braxon/Blake "Memory of Vienna" hatOLOGY disc, soon.

    Let us know what you think of this one. I have ambiguos feelings about it. I think Braxton is playig beautifully, but I find Blake playing simply annoying and totally non-cooperative.

  11. Some Sunday listening:

    B00004Z3EU.03.LZZZZZZZ.jpg

    I guess I got to look for more discs by Lindberg some fine day...

    I don't have this oner, but I have The Catbird Sings(Black Saint) by the same band, and it is excellent. I had a feeling there is quite a bit of blowing though (as opposed to written material). Ochs is a great musician indeed.

    -----------------------------------------------

    Got the new solo Brötzm. on FMP. Will report later.

  12. "Portrait of Sheila" is one of my favorite vocal jazz albums EVER!

    And don´t you dare criticize Sheila!

    I don't, but it seems some think her intonation sucks. NOT ME THOUGH! Don't you mistake me for "some"! Or you will be immediately de-capitated by my royal troops!

    ubu :g

    I am deifinitely this very some. Sheila Jordan ruins this Rudd disc for me (and I am not a vocal-hater in general, as other some here). I will listen to it again (I bumped upon this CD recently, so why not listen to it - who knows when I find it next time?).

    Wow, give it another listen! I think that Sheila Jordan's rendition her of "What Are You Doing the Rest of Your Life" is one of the most haunting jazz vocal performances ever!

    d17203kfv3x.jpg

    Come on boys, what the fuck, is this some sort of a dadaist joke? You mean you really like it?!?!?

    I spent twenty fucking minutes looking for it, and now I am listening and just hate it. Masochist I am, I will listen till the end, but this will be the last time in foreseable future.

    So here we go, first track, "What Are You Doing for the Rest of Your Life".

    Jordan sounds to me like a middle-aged alcoholic fairy, who already lost all her majic abilities, but still tries to impress. Not enough character to be a witch either. Horrible intonation, no ideas (just repeating the same (bad) licks all the time), and just no range (we are not into chops here of course, but come on, some minimal level of technical ability should be there). All what's missing is substituted with cheapo pseudo-profound "meaning" ("I cannot really sing, but I feel it very very deep").

    Some highlites of the first track:

    1'30'' - low notes (I understandm this is some sortt of interplay with Rudd's trombone) - she can't hit them ... "that you spend it with meeeeeeeeee" - sure, I will

    2'00'' - "nickels and dimezzzzzz" - oh, this zzzzzz really REALLY emphasizes it (it will be repeated then in every subsequent line, so that you get a point)

    2'24'' - thse wavering tones (is this an ENglish word? does it mean what I want to say? - I am so annoyed I am forgetting my English) "with meEeEeE" - come on, you can't do it, you don't have a voice for it, please. Also will be repeated IN ABSOLUTELY THE SAME WAY several times throuhg the song.

    5'01'' And the best one for the very end - totally out of tune "with youOUouOUouOU". With me? Fuck...

    Now on "Maiden Voyage".. oh, solo... oho.. two ideas - let's bring them to absurd repeating them over and over...and all with such pathos and bombast...

    this one is actually better, but she just does not have the capacity to relise it. All this is nicely underscored by Altschul's high school band type of umtsa-umtsa drumming (5'06'') - is he in a sabotage mood (I wouldn't be surpirised)?... hey nice piano solo - just like 10,000 other piano solos recorded in the 60s... I see that everybody shines on this session... And where is Rudd by the way? Is he rolling on a floor laughing? Excused himself to the restroom? I have to read liner notes... they should explain what's going on... fuck, this is really bad..

    Friends, I can't continue, I am sorry. This is one of the worst things I've heard over the last year.

    Oh, here we have the third track, Rudd is back... thanks. And singing, sure. Well, you can't do much worse than Sheila, so go ahead.

    Enough.

  13. "New York 19" (Folkways 5558) - An audio study of New York 19, a postal zone in Midtown Manhattan where Tony lived. The material on this record was selected from thousands of tapes, dating back to 1952. It was during this time that Tony recorded the exotic sounds of blind street musician Moondog.

    Thanks Alan. I actually will check it out.

  14. Eehhh, Cyrille's My Friend Louis is a good drummer-led session--truthfully, I've never found it much more than that, though there are some nice things on it (notably Oliver Lake's reading of "The Prophet").

    I agree. It opens very strongly, but starting from second track it sets in the safe, pretty formulaic 60s advanced hardbop territory.

    In general, I have a bit of a problem with Oliver Lake. He is an excellent musician, but somehow I get tired of listening to him. Listening to CDs with Lake's participation (and I have quite a few of them) always seem to follow the same scenario: I totally enjoy the first couple of tracks, next two leave me indifferent, and by the second half I cannot listen to it anymore. I don't know what it is about Lake that I don't like (or rather like, but in limited amount)...

    Although there is one Lake CD that I am never tired of listening to - it is actually one of my favorite improv. CDs ever - Heavy Spirits (Black Lion), one Lake's earliest recordings. Masterpiece.

  15. Prima Materia - Meditations KFW 180 (1995) :tup

    This is Rashied Ali's quintet take on Coltrane's "Meditations". Two very good saxophonists (forgot the names), who thankfully don't sound like Coltrane. Ali's playing is beautiful here.

    Listened to it again. Beautiful, beautiful stuff. Inspired and inspiring. Particular :tup for altoist Alan Chase who brings a dose of lyricism to this quite intense performance. Louise Belongesis totally burns on tenor.

    Prima Materia also recorded a version of Ayler's Bells (also on Knitting Factory) - I have to get it.

  16. Pure sound? What it be?

    Just sound, you know. Just any sound in itself in the right time, even without any specific context can be beautiful.

    At least that's the way I am interested in seeing it now.

    Well, David, I think you're ready to go to the next stage of your musical evolution, who will consit in listening exclusivily to E.A.I.

    Let us know when you will definitely pass the line, baby!

    P.L.M., my firend, I thing I will hang in the "jazz universe" for just a bit more... at least until I start really appreciating Noah Rosen's music ( ;) ) - only after that I will feel I am ready for my next evolutionery step.

  17. Friends, I was listening to Scott Fields Ensemble "48 Motives" (Cadence, 1996). Powerful stuff. I don't think I've heard a lot of music like this. Here is the combo:

    Geoff Brady ... percussion

    Marilyn Crispell ... piano

    Vincent Davis ... percussion

    Stephen Dembski ... conductor

    Scott Fields ... nylon-string guitar

    Joseph Jarman ... alto saxophone

    John Padden ... contrabass

    Hans Sturm ... contrabass

    Matt Turner ... violoncello

    I understand there is some mighty scientific compositional/imporvisational concept behind all that (which is illistrated by some diabolic scheme on the cover which makes Braxton little symbols look like they are childrens' drawings... which they probably are), but if it makes you think (with a lottle help of this manic AMG review) that this is some sort of ugly dry academic BOulez/WEbern type of stuff (as I thought), then you would be surprised - this is some very listenable even a bit lyrical stuff with some constant forward motion and very interesting shift of themes/moods (that's what conductors are for!). No fire-breathing blowing as such, but thoughtful careful interplay. Go for it.

    Scott Fields has a very nice website, btw: http://www.scottfields.com/

  18. I usually don't really like experimental music when guitars are involved, but I must admit that this Helmut "Joe" Sachse from 1981 that I picked up recently is pretty kewl. He's a bit of a weirdo and not only plays two guitars at once occasionally, but also manages to play the flute while strumming on the guitar.  :wacko:

    Anyhow, here is a little sample of his work (4.5Mb mp3, right click and save to listen), titled Weber/Parkweg (Weber lasts 7m30, the remaining 2 minutes are "Parkweg"). Sachse is on guitar and flute, Manfred Hering is on alto.

    Good stuff. I am pretty sure I have this saxophone guy somewhere.

    Did an AMG search on Manfred Herring and found the following album. Now how can you possibly ignore an album titled like this?

    hey, the Ulrich Gumpert Workshop Band!

    Is it good? And is it available on CD by chance?

  19. I usually don't really like experimental music when guitars are involved, but I must admit that this Helmut "Joe" Sachse from 1981 that I picked up recently is pretty kewl. He's a bit of a weirdo and not only plays two guitars at once occasionally, but also manages to play the flute while strumming on the guitar.  :wacko:

    Anyhow, here is a little sample of his work (4.5Mb mp3, right click and save to listen), titled Weber/Parkweg (Weber lasts 7m30, the remaining 2 minutes are "Parkweg"). Sachse is on guitar and flute, Manfred Hering is on alto.

    Good stuff. I am pretty sure I have this saxophone guy somewhere.

    Did an AMG search on Manfred Herring and found the following album. Now how can you possibly ignore an album titled like this?

  20. I am now listening to Peter Brotzmann / Albert Mangelsdorff / Fred Van Hove and Han Bennink - Live in Berlin 1971. Very interesting, this is not an era of Brotzmann that I am very familiar with. Van Hove is playing fairly lyrically here (halfway through the 20 minute first track) while Bennink is being Bennink, howling and furiously beating everything in sight in a very controlled chaos. Brotzmann and Mangelsdorff are sitting out, but have been breathing fire everytime they play.

    So far I would not consider this album essential, but I am very much enjoying listening to it.

    What label is it on?

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