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jazzbo

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Everything posted by jazzbo

  1. jazzbo

    Kaki King

    Interestingly I have been doing some reading on materials made in sound production. There is some scientific findings that the material does not make as much difference as the design. . . . One guy for example built trumpets out of PVC and as long as the valve structure, tubing thickness, length, coil, etc. were identical the sound was supposedly identical. Quite interesting stuff. . . . It would be interesting if Ovation made fiberglass guitars that were identical in structure and design to a Gibson Hummingbird for instance and one could compare the two!
  2. jazzbo

    Kaki King

    I know you were. The few I've fingered play nice. . . . But I don't really know too much about them.
  3. jazzbo

    Kaki King

    I don't know, I have an Ovation Breadwinner ('seventies solid body electric guitar, sort of "Explorer" like) and it's one FINE guitar!
  4. jazzbo

    Kaki King

    Yes, she looks more feminine than he does. . . .
  5. jazzbo

    Kaki King

    I like that picture where she's looking rather ruefully at her guitar on the other end of the sofa. . . . I can relate!
  6. I have the cd, I have a burn of the French "Jazz Tribune" version and a burn of the original lps. Guess I like it!
  7. jazzbo

    Feb 15 RVGs

    Must be a new distribution name for EMI/Blue Note
  8. Definitely agree Mark!
  9. jazzbo

    Kaki King

    I first encountered this gal from an audio board I frequent, someone was recommending her. VERY talented. And very gorgeous if you ask me. Ultimately, like Jordan, a little dab really does it for me. . . . I wish her b i g success.
  10. jazzbo

    Herbie Hancock

    Wow, I felt that New Directions was a snoozefest! Give me some Chico!
  11. I think there's something to that with Bird's death; in some ways if a player didn't moved towards a harmelodic or sheets of sound or other trends that slowly grew out of the second half of the fifties and the first years of the sixties they may seem to be becoming dinosaurish and decades later seem to be past their best by a mile in comparison to the growth of many another. . . .
  12. Yes Garth, I certainly agree about the albums by Zoot with Rowles. The Lizard sure adds an awful lot to those sessions and I wouldn't call Zoot's playing on these "rote" by any means. Sometims Rowles seems the perfect jazz pianist to me!
  13. jazzbo

    Herbie Hancock

    Don't miss "Feelin' the Spirit." Herbie really shines!
  14. Rest in Peace Genius!
  15. These are all wonderful lps! Worth considering if you do not have them.
  16. Yes, those late thirties recordings seem to show a change in Armstrong, he seems so goddamned confident and effortlessly rhythmic, as if he finally realized he was THE SHIT!
  17. Matt, have a great day!
  18. The promo version of this was in a four-cd jewel case. . . . Better than the cube! (No booklet though!)
  19. Interesting. . . I've heard some very strong (in my opinion, others may vary) playing from Eager from England in the seventies, but I would have to revisit them to definitively say they pale in comparison to his forties playing, but that is my inclination to say from memory!
  20. I knew him more for his sci-fi mag covers and paperback covers. . . . He did some very eerie portraits too. . . . Quite an interesting painter. RIP Kelly!
  21. I really like all the material on One for One. You gents are right: t h i s is the one to get excited about!
  22. Marty, many happy returns!
  23. Okay. I'll have to draw this off the rack soon and listen again. I like it.
  24. Some of us don't need to smell a lot of testosterone!
  25. The first Dick novel I read was The Zap Gun; I bought it when I was 12 in the only English language bookstore in Addis Ababa. It was the Pyramid paperback with a cover of a guy with a big gun . . . . I didn't really "get" the book, but it was entertaining, and it led to me eventually buying all his books and his warping my mind. . . I write to Phil shortly before he died and told him of my journey getting and reading and digesting his books that began in Ethiopia; he said he felt that novel wasn't much, but I really think it's a great novel that had a LOT to say about the Cold War and arms races and the roots of war.
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