Jump to content

Pete C

Members
  • Posts

    3,728
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Donations

    0.00 USD 

Everything posted by Pete C

  1. Halle Berry Sir John Barbirolli Sir Eyre Coote Cootie Williams Cat Anderson Felix The Cat Felix Frankfurter Michael Hamburger Hamilton Burger
  2. Master Bates Norman Bates Norman Connors
  3. Pete C

    Chico Hamilton

    This may be tough for Mosaic to pull together, as they would have to draw from at least four labels to gather it all: Drumfusion (Columbia) A Different Journey (Reprise) Passin' Thru (Impulse) Man From Two Worlds (Impulse) Transfusion (Studio West) I agree that these are all fine records, and would make an excellent set. The last one consists of short tracks recorded for the US Navy, and first issued in the 1990's. Perhaps not as essential as the others, but interesting. Lloyd is also on Chico's previous Columbia LP ("The Chico Hamilton Special"), but the format is closer to the old Hamilton group, with cello and no Szabo. Szabo is also on The Further Adventures of El Chico and Chic Chic Chico.
  4. Oliver Platt Lester Flatt Earl Scruggs
  5. Charro Zorro James Fox
  6. You were lucky ! Try curry and/or chilli con-carne ! I have no problems with cumin/turmeric aromas. It's the flatulent stench of cruciferous vegetables that gets to me.
  7. Pete C

    Chico Hamilton

    Two mainstream jazz artists at the same time at the Knit: I'm guessing it was during one of their summer jazz festivals.
  8. Big Daddy Lipscomb Idi Amin Dada Irene Papas Ivo Papasov Ivo Perelman Devo
  9. The most irritating coworkers are the ones who cook broccoli and cauliflower in the microwave.
  10. Hurd Hatfield McCoy Tyner Walter Brennan
  11. Pete C

    Chico Hamilton

    For me the working group with Lloyd and Szabo was one of the all time great jazz groups--anchored in mainstream while pushing the boundaries--like such other contemporaneous groups as McLean-Moncur & The John Handy Quintet. The Man from Two Worlds never fails to blow me away. The fifties stuff sounds too "period" to me. I saw him once, maybe 7 or 8 years ago in Seattle, and he sang several tunes, quite awfully.
  12. Pete C

    Jeanne Lee

    I always liked Lee, but was only familiar with her out stuff, e.g. with Hampel & Shepp. Then, in 2000 I saw her with Waldron, Workman & Cyrille at the North Sea Festival, only a few months before she died, doing standards and Waldron compositions, and was mesmerized. Easily one of my top 10 concert experiences in 40 years of jazz listening. After that I picked up everything I could find. I found that Stockholm CD at a used shop in Strasbourg. After Hours is probably my favorite.
  13. Golden Circle 1 for sure. It's even a contender for my favorite Ornette album, period. Amazing rhythm section, infectious tunes. Moffett completely underrated. For me this is the sax trio that gave birth to the funky-free sounds of Rivers-Holland-Altschul, Surman-Phillips-Martin and Romano-Sclavis-Texier.
  14. Horace Rumpole John Mortimer Mortimer Snerd
  15. Barnet Newman Gary Oldman Henny Youngman
  16. Rusty Hamer Busty Russell Gypsy Rose Lee
  17. Wild Man Fischer David Wild Gene Wilder
  18. A.M. Homes Homer Jethro
  19. Jim Gentile Jodie Christian Johnny Whitaker
  20. The Three Wise Men The Three Stooges Five Guys Named Moe
  21. Gary Husband The Wife of Bath Geoffrey Chaucer
  22. Fred Gwynne Gwyneth Paltrow Pal Joey
  23. Donald M. Frame Michel de Montaigne Renee Montagne
  24. Murph the Surf Papa Smurf Papa Jo Jones
  25. Three Men on a Horse Frank McHugh Jimmy McHugh
×
×
  • Create New...