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clifford_thornton

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Everything posted by clifford_thornton

  1. Ah, at Love Garden in Lawrence, KS?
  2. Sunny Murray - Quintet - (ESP orig)
  3. Yes, the America is very good. There was also another America under Noah Howard's name that was mostly recorded at the same session. All the compositions on Uhuru Na Umoja are, in fact, Howard's. I think the defining statement from that band was the Calumet LP, Church Number Nine, which has been reissued on CD. One of those recs that I was glad I got at a decent price before eBay madness really took over...
  4. I think my third BN LP was Sonny Rollins at the Village Vanguard. A dark-blue label, steppin' up from the DMMs that were the first two!
  5. I have the LP, but as it was originally issued as Sun Records SEB-004 (FR). Quite good!
  6. Share your love for the Reverend Frank Wright, saxophonist and leader of some fantastic (and frantic) post-Ayler ensembles in the 1970s. Born July 9, 1935 in Grenada, Mississippi, he moved to Cleveland and met Albert Ayler, who encouraged him to go to New York in the mid-60s. He was apparently asked to record with Coltrane on Ascension, but was still getting his chops together at the time. Recordings for ESP followed, as did a lengthy sojourn in Europe before he returned to New York in the 1980s. He died on the bandstand of a heart attack in Germany, in 1990.
  7. Well, I'd rather listen to that than Pat Metheney.
  8. So let me know when you have the LPs of the Cairo Free Jazz Ensemble Heliopolis, Michael Cosmic Peace in the World, and the Black Unity Trio on offer.
  9. No, he was selling "in." Belying my age, the first George Benson I recall hearing was a CD - when those were new - of Soda Fountain Shuffle. Ugh. My dad had White Rabbit in his LP collection, but the only Benson record I ever owned was the Prestige disc with Jack McDuff.
  10. Ah yes. Like many California-based artists (Ed Ruscha, for example), the pun on the popular icon was paramount. Hip, if you will.
  11. Joe Henderson - Page One and Eric Dolphy - Out To Lunch were the first two BNs I got, on vinyl no less.
  12. So,,,,,,,,you only read the last post in a thread. Yes, and didn't Warne record with Lew Tabackin for the label?
  13. I actually did see that Cage Wergo set in a store. It was about seven or eight years ago, I suspect, considering the store.
  14. It's not bad. Curious band. Was originally recorded for the French label Carson.
  15. Rudolph Grey - Mask of Light - (New Alliance/Ecstatic Peace) w/ Rashied Ali, Jim Sauter and Alan Licht. A little "nacht musik."
  16. Oh, did it now?
  17. I don't know why I never got into Reese that much. YMMV I guess. Sabu Toyozumi did some really nice arrangements of "People In Sorrow." It's a fantastic symphony; that thematic line is such a killer in the bluesy pathos it exudes. I remember when I bought it, I was about 19 or 20 and came home for a break from work. I put it on and didn't go back to work that day, just kept listening to it. Those were the days...
  18. Have most of the early stuff, save Go Home, and can say with a (historicized) certainty that the Nessas and the first two entries in the BYG/Actuel catalog are extra fine. I still spin Les Stances and Message to our Folks quite regularly, years on.
  19. clifford_thornton

    Air

    Get back to driving.
  20. Hoboken Saturday Night is a minor classic - not sure whether that's an oxymoron. Bought it when it was issued and have enjoyed it since then. Yes, it's real good as is the first one.
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