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mjzee

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Everything posted by mjzee

  1. I ordered the Jazz Crusaders. My awareness was widened by the Lou Blackburn set on BN (formerly on Imperial) that I want to hear more of this type of sophisticated yet grooving West Coast musicians.
  2. Is there anything in this box that wasn't on the 4 ESP 1953 albums?
  3. Thanks for posting that!
  4. Still waiting for some greeeeeeeeeze to hit Houston.
  5. i've said this before, but my best recommendation is connecting with a (private/non-chain) japanese shop, a la hiroshi / early records. many do business outside of japan. snag a copy of jazz life, jazz japan, or jazz critique and there are usually several advertising. also, 'grand stan'; 1: http://tower.jp/item/3246723/%E3%82%B0%E3%83%A9%E3%83%B3%E3%83%89%E3%83%BB%E3%82%B9%E3%82%BF%E3%83%B3%EF%BC%9C%E5%AE%8C%E5%85%A8%E9%99%90%E5%AE%9A%E7%94%9F%E7%94%A3%E7%9B%A4%EF%BC%9E 2; http://www.hmv.co.jp/en/artist_Stan-Levey_000000000049491/item_Grand-Stan_227658 Thanks, etherbored. I also see that Dusty Groove has it in stock for $13.99. Still thinking about it, though I must say that This Time The Drum's On Me is one of my favorite records. Wow, that Tower site is seriously Japanese!
  6. Are there three Leveys? Was one of them a 10"?
  7. You mean like Johnny Hammond Smith, Jim Hall, Tina Brooks...?
  8. What manner of music is this?
  9. Now Amazon says it's from ESP. (?!?)
  10. The novelty is that, at least if you buy from Amazon, you get both the LP and an MP3 rip of the album. That's playing both centuries at once!
  11. In reading the list, I'm struck by how many titles I own in various forms. Unless they release some rarities or curiosities, I'll continue my current focus on other labels. Still, the BN titles are great music, and we shouldn't overlook the value of their being available to a new generation of listeners. I also hope this helps debilitate "Doxy" and other bootleg labels currently issuing these on vinyl from who-knows-what sources.
  12. I often fall asleep about 10 minutes into a concert, movie, or lecture. I doze for about 5 minutes, then wake up refreshed. I think it has something to do with switching gears, transitioning from the day's work to really focus on the program.
  13. Here are the 14 volumes in the "Dexter in Radioland" series released by Steeplechase: Cry Me A River: November 28, 1962 - with Atli Bjorn, Marcel Rigot, William Schiopffe Cheese Cake: June 11, 1964 - with Tete, NHOP, Alex Riel King Neptune: June 24, 1964 - with Tete, Benny Nielsen, Alex Riel I Want More: July 9, 1964 - with Tete, NHOP, Rune Carlsson Love For Sale: July 23, 1964 - with Tete, NHOP, Alex Riel It's You Or No One: August 6, 1964 - with Tete, NHOP, Alex Riel Billie's Bounce: August 20, 1964 - with Tete, NHOP, Alex Riel Wee Dot: June 10, 1965 - with Atli Bjorn, Benny Nielsen, Finn Frederiksen Loose Walk: June 24, 1965 - with Kenny Drew, NHOP, Alex Riel Misty: July 8, 1965 - with Kenny Drew, NHOP, Alex Riel Heartaches: August 5, 1965 - with Kenny Drew, NHOP, Alex Riel Lady Bird: August 19, 1965 - with Donald Byrd, Kenny Drew, NHOP, Alex Riel Stella By Starlight: January 6, 1966 - with Pony Poindexter, Kenny Drew, NHOP, Makaya Ntshoko Satin Doll: June 29, 1967 - with Kenny Drew, Bo Stief, Art Taylor
  14. J.J. Johnson & Nat Adderley - Yokohama Concert (2 cds) - $7.99 J.J. Johnson & Nat Adderley - Chain Reaction (Yokohama Concert Vol. 2) - $4.31 Nat Adderley - A Little New York Midtown Music - $3.69
  15. John Coltrane - Sun Ship: The Complete Session - 10.63 GBP http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sun-Ship-Complete-John-Coltrane/dp/B00B7IJEMY/ref=pd_sim_m_h__9?ie=UTF8&refRID=1V2YE97SCAB6JWNC4658
  16. I have it as part of the Dexter Prestige box.
  17. There's a nice appreciation of him in, of all places, the opinion page of tomorrow's Wall St Journal (and Back To School is one of my favorite films): The world seems a little less amusing after Monday's death of filmmaker Harold Ramis. A famous face to moviegoers because he often shared the screen with great comedic actors, Ramis made his greatest contributions as a writer. He wrote or co-wrote the screenplays for a generation's worth of classic comedies. From "Animal House" to "Analyze This," from "Ghostbusters" to "Groundhog Day," Ramis kept Americans laughing from the late 1970s until his death Monday morning at age 69 of complications from vasculitis. For a decade or two after the 1980 release of "Caddyshack," which he co-wrote, it could seem almost impossible to communicate with young American males without a working knowledge of the film and its memorable lines. See Bill Murray's famous riff on caddying for the Dalai Lama nearby. Other hits included "Back to School," "Meatballs" and "Stripes." Ramis was rarely a winner at entertainment-awards shows. He simply succeeded at entertainment. Except for "Groundhog Day," his films rarely impressed critics, but they were celebrated by moviegoers. So perhaps it is strangely appropriate that he died the week before the movie industry prepares for its annual Oscar celebration of films that may or may not have much of an audience. If moviegoers had been able to vote, they would have handed Ramis a wall full of trophies. "Acting is all about big hair and funny props," he once said. "All the great actors knew it. Olivier knew it. Brando knew it." What we know is that the work of Harold Ramis is still making Americans laugh.
  18. Little Feat, for me, was a story of unfulfilled promise. Lowell George started a great band, but I guess his drug use knocked the wind out of their sails. When Feets Don't Fail Me Now came out, I was shocked to see that without the live performance that ends the record, there was less than 30 minutes of new songs. When The Last Record Album came out, they admitted that Paul Barrere was taking a larger role with songwriting because George's output was dwindling. Unfortunately, (for me) Barrere wasn't anywhere near as interesting a songwriter as George.
  19. In the link that Jazzbo posted, the author surmises that these will be remasters, and stated that the OAS had older masterings.
  20. Has anyone heard this? Dexter Gordon Quartet Dexter Gordon (tenor saxophone) Hampton Hawes (piano) Bob Cranshaw (bass) Kenny Clarke (drums) Los Angeles, CA, summer 1973 Modal Mood Up Front UPF 188 Ernie's Tune - Smile - Soul Sister - Clear The Dex - * Up Front UPF 188 Dexter Gordon Quartet
  21. The site was useful - I decided I don't look so bad compared to some of my peers.
  22. A band that's owed its due. I followed them at the time, but lost interest with The Last Record Album.
  23. Musician James Murphy thinks New York's "underground music" scene leaves a lot to be desired. He wants to change the underlying sound: the cacophony produced by the subway turnstiles. "They make this unpleasant beep and are all slightly out of tune from one another," said Mr. Murphy, 44 years old, over breakfast recently in the trendy Williamsburg neighborhood here. For the past 15 years, Mr. Murphy has been crafting what he says is a low-cost musical solution: He has worked out a unique set of notes for every station, one of which would sound each time a passenger swipes his or her MetroCard to catch a train. The busier a station becomes, the richer the harmonies would be. The same notes would also play in a set sequence when the subway arrives at that stop. Each of the city’s 468 subway stations would have note sets in different keys. More here: WSJ (Google the thread title if you can’t read the article.)
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