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Everything posted by Hardbopjazz
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Kenny Dorham's Blue Lament. 1961 unissued BN session.
Hardbopjazz replied to Hardbopjazz's topic in Discography
That's what I was told the working title was. -
I have the tracks from the Six Sense. Too bad the other tracks aren't any good.
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Did we ever get a reason why this session was deemed rejected? I have fess to up and say, I got to hear this the other day. I listened to it twice, and in my judgement, it is good. I would rate it a 3 out of 5. It swings! I can't understand why it hasn't been issued. Too bad I couldn't get a copy.
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Walking down the hall, minding my own business
Hardbopjazz replied to BeBop's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Who's Kenny G? Man, I have to get out more. -
The rest of the world seems to be somking just as much. I've in Europe and Asia in 2002, 2003 and 2004 and there are a lot of smokers, but the below article, smoking seems to be on a decline in the states. WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The number of cigarettes sold in the United States in 2005 fell to the lowest level in 55 years largely due to enforcement of marketing restrictions imposed on the tobacco industry, the National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) said on Wednesday. ADVERTISEMENT According to federal tobacco tax figures, cigarettes sales slid 4.2 percent from 2004 levels in the largest one-year percentage decrease since 1999, the group said in a statement. The attorneys general said 378 billion cigarettes were sold in the United States in 2005, the lowest number since 1951. The drop continues an eight-year decline in cigarette smoking since the 1998 Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) between U.S. states and the tobacco industry that settled state lawsuits over the costs of treating smoking-related illnesses, the NAAG said. Overall, cigarette sales have plunged more than 21 percent since the agreement, which raised cigarette prices and severely restricted industry marketing practices, the organization said. "It is not a coincidence that cigarette sales are down and fewer people are smoking. The Master Settlement Agreement was designed to protect the public and reduce cigarette consumption -- and it does just that," said Vermont Attorney General Bill Sorrell. The major companies that signed the MSA are Philip Morris, a unit of Altria Group Inc.; R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Holdings Inc.; British American Tobacco Plc's Brown & Williamson unit; and Lorillard, which trades as Carolina Group and is part of Loews Corp. The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention considers cigarette smoking to be the leading preventable cause of death in the United States. About 440,000 people die each year from lung cancer and other diseases related to tobacco use.
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HAs this session ever seen the light of day? It is listed in my Blue Note discpgraphy as unissued. I would love to hear some un-heard Lee Morgan.
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It's off my list if it sound that bad.
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All I have on this session is, Jazz View COD 028 google tells me that COD 28 is a Mingus disc (???) and that the only 1960 Booker Little on JazzView is the Time album in their jazz history series. Allmusic.com has the Booker Little as COD 28. They must have it listed wrong.
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All I have on this session is, Jazz View COD 028
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It is a wonderful CD.
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I came across a live date of Booker Little. There is so little little out there. The CD is called "Live in NYC." April 1960. The label is Jazz View. Are they a legit record label?
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Teddy Charles Jazz in the Garden at the Museum of Modern Art
Hardbopjazz replied to Hardbopjazz's topic in Discography
Thanks Chuck. -
The Vault is about to be opened...
Hardbopjazz replied to Hardbopjazz's topic in Miscellaneous Music
Today I received an email that this site is live. Went back to see if there is anything new. In the forum section there's a post about the 2 dollar tape cassette. Allen, did you really ask this question? That takes balls. Horace Silver View previous topic :: View next topic Author Message AllenLowe Guest Posted: Fri Feb 24, 2006 6:40 pm Post subject: The $2 question -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cassettes that cost 2 bucks, why did you need to bill him for it? Back to top Gregoryshere Joined: 15 Jan 2006 Posts: 2 Location: New York, Los Angeles Posted: Sat Feb 25, 2006 10:48 pm Post subject: Re: The $2 question -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- AllenLowe wrote: Cassettes that cost 2 bucks, why did you need to bill him for it? I don't undertand what this means. What cassette? Who was billed? I'm lost Back to top Display posts from previous: All Posts1 Day7 Days2 Weeks1 Month3 Months6 Months1 Year Oldest FirstNewest First -
I spoke to him about this. He knows of an LP where one side is Nancy Wilson and the other was the 3 sounds. Must be the same LP. He said stay away from it. Nancy Wilson's mic had problems and you can't hear her.
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They are pretty much the worst team in the NBA right now. Jim, don't be so kind. They are the worst team in any league right now, wheather NBA or Pee Wee ball.
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I haven't read through this entire thread, but how bad are The New York Knicks? I use to enjoy watching basketball.
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Anyone know something about this session? I've been in a Nacny Wilson mood, and a Three Sounds phase recently. I saw this album by Wilson at a web site with the Three Sounds. I never heard of it before.
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Global Warming, do you notice it where you live?
Hardbopjazz replied to Hardbopjazz's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
WASHINGTON (AFP) - Antarctica's mammoth ice sheet, which holds 90 percent of the Earth's ice, is showing "significant decline" as world temperatures heat up, according to a new study released. As Earth's fifth largest continent, Antarctica is twice the size of Australia and contains 70 percent of Earth's fresh water resources. British research suggests the melting of the West Antarctic ice sheet alone would raise global sea levels by over 20 feet (six meters). And now a team of US researchers at the University of Boulder in Colorado say they have discovered that the Antarctic ice sheet is losing up to 36 cubic miles (152 cubic kilometers) of ice annually. The estimated ice mass in Antarctica is the same as 0.4 millimeters of global sea rise annually, with a margin of error of 0.2 millimeters, according to the study. There are about 25 millimeters to one inch. The study, however, appears to contradict the 2001 assessment by the UN-mandated Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change which forecast that the Antarctic ice shelf would actually gain mass in the 21st Century due to higher precipitation in a warming climate. Using specialized data from two NASA satellites orbiting Earth in tandem, the Boulder researchers determined the Antarctic ice sheet has lost significant mass in recent years. "This is the first study to indicate the total mass balance of the Antarctic ice sheet is in significant decline," said Isabella Velicogna, of the university's Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences. The bulk of the loss is occurring in the West Antarctic ice sheet, according to Velicogna. "The changes we are seeing are probably a good indicator of the changing climatic conditions there," she said. The continent's ice sheet has an average thickness of about 6,500 feet (1,981 meters). The study appears in the online issue of Science Express. -
Thanks. I didn't know about these before. Makes you wonder what the government has and is using to watch over us. What I am trying to say is, watch over us in a good way, and not to spy on us in any way. I know they would never do that with out the court's allowing it.
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Has anyone use this? I down loaded the free software. It is amazing. Type in any address and it takes you there via a satellite image.
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I have to correct 2 things. First it is Jimmy Cobb on drums. Second Wes opens by saying he wants to play So What, but ends up playing Impressions. Alan Grant says when the tune is done, "That was So what?" Wes giggles. He probable realized that he didn't play so what.
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The sound is good enough that it should have found it's way to record or CD. Hard to believe that it has gone un-noticed for 41 years.
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Also Jim, on this recording, Donald Byrd is in the audience. Alan Grant tells Wes, and Wes asks Allen where is he at, after he sees him he says hello. Track 3 and 7 are Wes tunes which I don't recall hearing before. Wes states the titles as #3 "Blues" and #7 as "a Little Blues".