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Everything posted by paul secor
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Those Lionel Hampton sessions were released by French RCA in two separate boxes of three LP each, vol. 1 and 2 'Historical recording sessions 1939-1941'. Those were not part of the Jazz Tribune series but they are the best complete boxes of those sessions I found. Worthy of a Mosaic job! Amazingly, U.S. RCA released a six LP box of the Hampton recordings in 1976. I don't imagine we'll see this kind of thing happen these days, with all of the European issues of vintage recordings.
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Bo Carter's Greatest Hits (Yazoo)
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Thanks for the info on the Givens/Mingus, brownie. Just listened to: Various artists: Lonesome Road Blues - 15 years in the Mississippi Delta 1926-1941 (Yazoo)
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Revenant is planning big Albert Ayler box
paul secor replied to ghost of miles's topic in Mosaic and other box sets...
I'll be happy if the price is a hundred bucks. I'll also pay more if I have to. (Just don't let Dean Blackwood know that I said that. ) -
Spalding Givens and Charlie Mingus: Strings and Keys (Debut - an Italian bootleg that was issued in the '80s. Black Saint's logo is on the cover, though there's no other information.) Does anyone else know something about this?
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A bit off the subject of Roy Eldridge, but on the subject of time - I guess that this might explain why you don't hear any Jimmy Reed imitators/followers in the blues world these days. Jimmy Reed was a man who was never in a hurry, but he always got to where he was going.
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Billy Bang Anima Reissues on 8th Harmonic Breakdow
paul secor replied to JSngry's topic in Re-issues
Another for Untitled Gift. And like most everyone else, I've never heard Sweet Space. I have enjoyed most every Billy Bang recording I've heard. Thanks for the info about the reissue. -
I have a number of the LPs that brownie has listed, and I still listen to them. Don't have any of the CDs, so I can't help there.
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Any impressions you'd care to share? I saw the film about the search for the author - an entertaining watch. I felt that the filmmaker could have found Dow Mossman without going to all of the trouble he went to - but then he wouldn't have had a film. For all of the publicity the book has gotten, I can't recall seeing a review.
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Damn. I was in Ct., near the R.I. border last week. A record collector/musician friend and myself would have made the trip. I would have enjoyed meeting you, Tom.
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Will The Site Crash Again This Weekend?
paul secor replied to Soulstation1's topic in Forums Discussion
Not yet.... -
Welcome back, David. Where ya been?
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Pat Jordan: A Nice Tuesday
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On a total vinyl kick today: Rev. Robert Wilkins (Piedmont) - Perhaps the finest of all the 1960's blues rediscovery recordings (though by this time Rev. Wilkins was performing only religious music).
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Air: Montreux Suisse Air (Arista Novus)
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Jackie McLean/John Jenkins: Alto Madness (Prestige - 1981 complete edition)
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Everybody Knows Johnny Hodges (Impulse/Jasmine) It was a pleasure to listen to this again, and a special pleasure to listen to Harry Carney's extended (for him, anyway) solo on "I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart".
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I have fond memories of 1970's Down Beat articles by John Litweiler on Archie Shepp and Cecil Taylor, and of his liner notes for Hank Mobley's A Slice of the Top and Third Season. (Actually, the latter two aren't just memories, since they're on my shelves.) I hope that he'll post when the time is right. Until then - welcome, Mr. Litweiler.
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Rebecca Rischin: For the End of Time - The Story of the Messiaen Quartet
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Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers: Originally (Columbia)
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Org Board Malfunction (aka) I Did Not Ignore YOU
paul secor replied to grey's topic in Forums Discussion
Me too - Five. -
My wife and I are going to the Connecticut shore for a mini vacation in the next couple of weeks, and I've been setting aside music I might want to listen to. I always end up taking more than I'll have time to listen to, but I like to have a lot of choices. So far it's: Harry Smith's Anthology of American Folk Music Volume Four (Revenant) Charlie Feathers: Get with It (Revenant) Hastings Street Blues Opera (P-Vine) The Erroll Garner Collection Vols 4&5 - Solo Time (Emarcy) Nico: 1968/1973 (Sonodisc) The Best of King Gospel (Ace) Bill Doggett: Leaps and Bounds (Charly) Charles "Baron" Mingus: 1945-49 (Uptown) Ornette Coleman Trio at the Golden Circle - Vol. 1 (BN) Doug Sahm: The Last Real Texas Blues Band (Antone's) Andrew Cyrille: X Man (Soul Note) 'Etoile de Dakar: Xalis (Pam) Kenny Baker & Josh Graves: The Puritan Sessions (Rebel) Guillermo Portabales: 16 Exitos (UR) Joe Harriott Quintet: Abstract ( Redial) The Delmore Brothers: Sand Mountain Blues (County) Serge Chaloff: Boston 1950 (Uptown) Guitars of the Columbian Andes (Musique du Monde and Frank Hewitt (Smalls) Arthur Rhames/Rashied Ali (Ayler) - if they arrive in time I'm interested in what other folks listen to when they're away from home, and I just thought I'd share what I'll be listening to when I'm away.
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Amazingly, no. Every time I thought about buying something, I'd ask myself, "how many other recordings do I have by this artist?" and "when was the last time I listened to any of those recordings?", and I realized I didn't need to buy another one.
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I actually hadn't bought any music for four months (I'd sent a check to Chuck Nessa for his Warne Marsh CD in February) - the longest period I'd gone without purchasing any records or CDs during my adult life - and it felt good. I was able to listen to parts of my collection that I hadn't listened to in years, and I came to feel that I had broken an addiction. That said, I just ordered the Arthur Rhames/Rashied Ali CD on Ayler and the Frank Hewitt CD on Smalls. I like Arthur Rhames' playing on his DIW issue, and I'm eager to hear Frank Hewitt after reading Jim Sangry's comments on this Board and a positive review in Cadence. I'm happy to say that I don't feel a need to order or buy anything else right now, and it's great to be free of that need.
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Since Clem has brought the Jargon Society and Jonathan Williams into the mix, I'd like to bring two books of Williams' essays to your attention: The Magpie's Bagpipe and Blackbird Dust. Fascinating, interesting, entertaining stuff. Blackbird Dust also includes some of Williams' photographs - that's a whole other story. Someone should publish another collection of those - one was done years ago, but I think that it's long out of print.
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