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paul secor

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Everything posted by paul secor

  1. Rob Bowman: Soulsville U.S.A. - The Story of Stax Records Nelson George: Where Did Our Love Go? - The Rise and Fall of the Motown Sound
  2. Lester Young: Pres (Verve-Japan)
  3. Just finished Penelope Lively's A House Unlocked - a personal and social history of her grandparents' country house in Somerset, England. In many ways, it was a fascinating read, recounting the social changes that occured over a period of more than seventy years. I found the chapter which recounted the evacuation of children and some adults from cities to rural areas of England during WW II was especially interesting. I hadn't realized the extent of social change that took place after these events. Lively's future husband was one of the evacuees, and his life changed dramatically. He grew up in a working class urban area, and ended up attending Oxford and becoming an academic - something that probably wouldn't have occured before the War. (Penelope and Jack Lively didn't actually meet until some years after the War - she was living with her family in Egypt during the War years.) Penelope Lively is one of my favorite writers, and this is a very good book - I recommend it to others - but I'm actually looking forward to reading more of her fiction in the future. I feel that fiction is her forte.
  4. Machito and His Salsa Big Band: Machito!!! (Timeless) From H.F. Dulfer's liner notes: "...those companies...should be advised to worry about a new slogan than 'Hometaping is killing music'." (This was 1983) "I would propose: 'Reissuing old records is killing musicians'".
  5. Stuff Smith at the Montmatre Earl Hines and Jimmy Rushing: Blues & Things The Jimmy Rushing All Stars: Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You Henry "Red" Allen: Feeling Good The College Concert of Pee Wee Russell and Henry Red Allen Jazz Composer's Orchestra (w. Cecil, Rudd Cherry, Sanders, Coryell, Barbieri) Phineas Newborn Jr.: Please Send Me Someone To Love; Harlem Blues Walt Dickerson Quartet: Jazz Impressions of A Patch of Blue Sonny Murray: Sonny's Time Now Albert Mangelsdorff and Friends (duets w. Cherry, Elvin, Karl Berger, Attila Zoller, Konitz, and Wolfgang Dauner)
  6. Evidence (OJC) might be a good place to start - Lacy, Don Cherry, Billy Higgins, and the mysterious Carl Brown playing Monk and Ellington compositions. For solo Lacy, Only Monk (Soul Note) is a good one. Lacy had a true love and affinity for Monk's music, and spent a playing lifetime proving (and improving) that love and affinity.
  7. Johnny Griffin: Live in Tokyo (Phillips-Japan). Griff and the rest of the band - Horace Parlan, Mads Vinding, and Art Taylor - had a true groove going for this concert.
  8. My ears first opened up to Roy Haynes' playing when I heard him on Eric Dolphy's New Jazz recordings, especially Far Cry.
  9. Forgot about Don Joseph. Thanks for the reminder, Brownie. The Uptown LP is a fine one. He also has a few good solo spots on Chuck Wayne's String Fever CD.
  10. Taft Jordan Ted Curson Wilbur Harden Henry "Red" Allen
  11. Sounds interesting. What label, Matthew?
  12. Tonight I listened to a mono copy of Living Legends - Son House, Skip James, Bukka White, & Big Joe Williams - Recorded Live at Cafe au Go Go (Verve/Folkways). On vinyl, Son House's guitar and vocal almost jump out at you - an amazing listening experience.
  13. Randy Weston: Berkshire Blues (Arista Freedom)
  14. The list continues: Jay McShann: The Man from Muskogee Ben Webster: Remember Randy Weston: Berkshire Blues Jimmy Lyons: Other Afternoons Roy Eldridge: The Nifty Cat Here Comes Earl Hines w. Elvin and Richard Davis The Lee Konitz Duets Charlie Parker Memorial Concert 3/27/65 (Dizzy, Konitz, Moody, Hawk, Roy, KD, etc.) Ted Curson Quartet: Urge Marion Brown: Porto Novo Sonny Rollins: There Will Never Be Another You - Underrated because it was only marketed for a short time until Sonny sued and forced Impulse to withdraw it.
  15. Hampton Hawes/Paul Chambers: The East/West Controversy (Xanadu) Hamp from 1951; Chambers with Bill Perkins and Jack Montrose.
  16. $30 Modern Jazz Quartet: Concert in Japan '66 - 2 LPs - Atlantic (Japan) P-5536 - mono (only released in mono, I believe) - (m-, w. obi) $23 Jackie McLean: Tippin' the Scales - Blue Note/Kong (Japan) GXF-3062 - (m-, w. obi) $20 Lou Donaldson: Swing and Soul - Blue Note/King (Japan) K18P-9242 - (m-, w. obi) Hampton Hawes/Martial Solal: Key for Two - Affinity (Japan) RJL-3008 - (m-, w. obi) Chico Hamilton Trio - Pacific Jazz/King (Japan) K18P-9219 (mono) - (m-, w. obi) $16 Archie Shepp: Bijou - Musica 3001 - (LP m-, jacket has tiny 1 1/2" split on top) Archie Shepp: Maple Leaf Rag - Fluid 104 - (m-) $14 Sonny Stitt: Stitt Plays Bird - Atlantic (Japan) P-6020) - (m-, w. obi) Elvin Jones: Soul Train - Denon (Japan) YF-7004-ND - (m-, w. obi) $13 Arthur Blythe: The Grip - Paddle Wheel (Japan) GP-3219 - (m-, w obi) $11 Air: Open Air Suit - Arista Novus 3002 - LP (m-), corner cut on cover $10 Ted Curson: Blue Piccolo - Why Not (Japan) PA-7153 - (vg++) Getz, DeFranco, Basie, Wardell, Benny Carter, etc.: Jam Session #4 - Verve (Japan) UMV 2518 - (m-, w. obi) $8 Junior Mance: The Soulful Piano of - Jazzland (Japan) 930S - (m-) Red Norvo Quintet: The Forward Look - Reference Recordings RR-8 - (m-) Thelonious Monk - Prestige/Carrere 68 366/68 - 3 LP box of Monk's Prestige leader dates plus some recordings w. Rollins, Bean, and Miles - (m-) The George Coleman Octet: Big George - Affinity 52 - (m-) Bobby Hutcherson: Patterns - Blue Note 1044 - (m-) Benny Carter: Swingin' the '20s - Contemporary (yellow label) S7561 - (m-) Count Basie at Newport w. Pres, Roy, Jo Jones - Verve (Japan) UMV 2619 - (m-, w. obi) $7 Betty Carter: The Audience with Betty Carter - Bet-Car 1003 - 2 LPs - (m-) Roland Hanna: Glove - Trio (Japan) PAX-6001 - (m-, w. obi) Kenny Drew w. Wilbur Ware: I Love Jerome Kern - Riverside (Japan) SMJ-6316 - (m-, w. obi) Bobby Hutcherson: Solo/Quartet - Contemporary 14009 - (m-) $6 Machito and his Salsa Big Band: Machito!!! - Timeless 183 - (m-) Muhal Richard Abrams: Live at Montreux 1978 - Arista Novus 3007 - (m-) Atlantic Honkers (Arnett Cobb, King Curtis, Tiny Grimes, Frank Culley, Willis Jackson, etc.) - Atlantic 81666 - 2 LPs - LPs (m-), small cut in cover Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers: Once Upon a Groove - Blue Note 1065 - (m-) Andre "Mr. Rhythm" Williams: Bacon Fat - Bootleg/no name label - (m-) Eddie Vinson: Mr Cleanhead Steps Out - Saxophonograph 507 - (m-) Phil Woods Quartet: Birds of a Feather - Antilles 1006 - (m-) George Coleman/Tete Montolio duo: Meditation - Timeless 110 - (m-) Al Cohn/Zoot Sims: Body and Soul - Muse 5356 - (m-) $5 Joe Pass: The Complete "Catch Me!" Sessions - Blue Note 1053 - (m-) Charlie Parker: The Bird Flies Deep - Atlantis 12 - (m-) Miles Davis: Miles in St. Louis - VGM 0003 - (m-) Charlie Parker: Yardbird - DC-53 - VGM 0009 - (m-) Duke Ellington: Rockin' in Rhythm - Affinity 1034 - (m-) Paul Bley Trio: My Standard - Steeplechase 1214 - (m-) Stars of Modern Jazz Concert at Carnegie Hall, Christmas 1949 (Bud, Miles, Chaloff, Stitt, Tristano, Konitz, Marsh, Getz, etc.) -IAJRC 20 - (m-) John Coltrane: The Paris Concert - Pablo Live 2308 217 - (m-) Lee Konitz/Paul Bley/Bill Connors: Pyramid - IAI 37.38.45 - (m-, cover has corner cut) Kenny Dorham: West 42nd Street - Black Lion 60119 - (m-) Tommy Flanagan: Thelonica - Enja 4052 (m-) Sam Rivers: Waves - Affinity 186 - (m-) Jackie McLean: Plays Fat Jazz - Jubilee/Fresh Sounds 1093 - (m-) Booty Woods All Stars: Hang In There - Master Jazz 8102 - (vg+) Checks, money orders ok. Shipping is extra. Please e-mail me at joanpaul26@aol.com, or pm me. Thanks for checking this out.
  17. I think that Dimitry is right - if you dig Trane as much as you obviously do, eventually you'll want them all. However, you might want to pick up either Birdland or Crescent first, live with it for a while, and then go on to the others - preferably in the order that Trane recorded them. That may give you a clearer sense of his path.
  18. paul secor

    Jimmy Raney

    I have a duo album by Jimmy Raney and Attila Zoller - Jim & I: Live at Quasimodo (L&R 40.018) - a very good record. According to the liner notes, there are two other duo records on L&R by Raney and Zoller - one is studio recording (40.006) & one was recorded live at the 17th German Jazz Festival 17 (40.013). I haven't heard either one of those. I don't know if any or all of the three have been reissued on CD.
  19. I listen to a lot of different musics other than jazz, so I didn't want to vote for just one type. As I look at my LP/CD collection, probably blues takes second place to jazz in sheer numbers.
  20. John RT Davies spent his life proving his devotion to music. He'll truly be missed.
  21. Happy birthday! And thanks for letting all of us be part of the party!
  22. Ephie Resnick and Marty Grosz: The End of Innocence (Mark)
  23. Chuck - Never heard (or heard of) this one until now. I see from checking a discography that it's a Circle LP. I assume that it must be a good record if you've held onto it for this long and you still listen to it.
  24. A couple of personal favorites: Machito and his Salsa Big Band 1982 (Timeless) Charlie Palmieri: A Giant Step (Budda) - fine Latin piano by Eddie's older brother. I have an LP - I hope that it's been reissued on CD.
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