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Everything posted by BFrank
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A general rule of thumb on final selling prices on ebay is double the original price (there ARE exceptions, of course - Larry Young, Andrew Hill, etc). Just make sure that you don't put that as your starting price. It will probably NOT sell if it's listed that way.
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Thursday's ...
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"East Wind" catalog to be reissued in U.S. by 411
BFrank replied to Rooster_Ties's topic in Re-issues
I've got 3 EW/Inner City Great Jazz Trio albums: "At the Village Vanguard" "Milestones" "New Wine in Old Bottles" w/Jackie McLean Also one of those direct-to-disks: "Love for Sale" w/Buster Williams (the others have Ron Carter) They're ALL excellent, BTW. -
Yes. Very odd. I checked all over myself. Definitely not there.
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washingtonpost.com Hunter Thompson Death Blows Uncle Duke's Mind In Cartoon Tribute By Bob Thompson Washington Post Staff Writer Wednesday, March 9, 2005; Page C01 So here's the setup: The legendary gonzo journalist kills himself, with a handgun bullet through the head, while seated in his Colorado kitchen on a February afternoon. A couple of weeks later, KA-BOOM! The comic-strip character based on the legendary gonzo journalist has his head blown up in the second frame of the strip. Not funny, you might think. The kind of outrageous violation of community standards that gets cartoonists' work suppressed by editors. The kind that, if the strip does run, is guaranteed to generate outraged complaints. Except . . . This is Hunter S. Thompson we're talking about, a man immortalized both by the "Fear and Loathing" persona he created for himself and by the one cartoonist Garry Trudeau hung on him as Uncle Duke in "Doonesbury." The former was a loose howitzer who positively gloried in outraging community standards. The latter is a paranoid substance abuser currently helping the Bush administration govern Iraq. Let's face it: Neither one of these characters stood much chance of surprising us anymore. After the literally explosive "Doonesbury" strip ran yesterday, neither the cartoonist, his syndicator nor the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors -- a newspaper group that keeps an eye on such potential controversies -- reported any blowback. There were no complaints, said Universal Press Syndicate editor Lee Salem. "We've had nothing move over our listserv about it," said Penny Bender Fuchs, the AASFE's executive director. Fuchs, as it happened, hadn't seen Trudeau's strip yet. Told about it, she expressed serious concern. "He didn't kill Duke, did he?" she asked. No, Trudeau said, he had no plans to have art imitate life that way. Reached by phone in his New York studio, he said that he had done a week's worth of strips as a tribute to Thompson and that he hoped Tuesday's would not be misinterpreted. The series began Monday with a strip in which Duke and his faithful would-be spouse equivalent, Honey, suddenly appear as if drawn by Ralph Steadman, illustrator of "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas" and numerous other Thompson works. It continued with yesterday's strip, which Trudeau described as "basically mind-blowing" for Duke. In it, he reads of Thompson's death, his head is obliterated by a sudden explosion, and then he reappears, thinking: "That can't be right. Better Google it." At which point there's another "KA-BOOM!" The Thompson strips will continue through Saturday, but Trudeau was reluctant to discuss their story line. "I hate to talk about it until people have seen it," he said. Later, in an e-mail, he pointed out a reason that his readers may not have found Tuesday's strip unusual. "I've been exploding Duke's head as far back as 1985," he wrote. "I also had a rocket burst out of his head, a flock of bats, and during Duke's run for president, Mini-D, a tiny self that conducted Duke's business, even gave speeches when the candidate was incapacitated." After he'd established his original Thompson parody, Trudeau noted, he soon moved his story line away from the writer's real life. This was in part because sticking to Thompson's personal narrative "would have been very limiting." But it was also because Thompson himself "seemed so aggrieved by the character." As well he might have. For Trudeau's Duke, in the end, is a character far more sinister than the self-created, self-destructive gonzo artist who shot himself last month. Duke has a "predatory nature," the cartoonist explained. Once parachuted into a hot spot like Haiti, Kuwait, Panama or Iraq, his "relentless opportunism" will always take over. He stands for "a certain kind of mad unconditionality. Duke is never ambivalent, never in personal conflict. His take is resolutely binary: Is this in my self-interest or not? It's a kind of weird state of grace." Hunter Thompson he's not, then -- though the writer might have seen something of himself in that last phrase.
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"East Wind" catalog to be reissued in U.S. by 411
BFrank replied to Rooster_Ties's topic in Re-issues
Great Jazz Trio -
Well.........good luck!
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Nice new Organissimo icons!
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Continued ...
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Turns out the references aren't so "veiled". This week's strips are new.
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I was trying to figure out if that was a new cartoon or they were re-running an old "Duke" strip. Trudeau has been out recently with a broken collar-bone from a skiing accident.
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Similar to this (without the "ark").
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The album cover at the top of this thread changed. This is about the Jazz Messengers' "Ritual" album, right? Anyway......I was right about Amoeba. I went there today and they DO have a bunch of these - sealed - for only $5.99. Needless to say, I picked one up.
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Dave Holland - "Extended Play" Jazz Messengers - "Ritual" Steve Nelson - "Fuller Nelson"
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Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Hmmmmm. Interesting. B-) "The set is No. 3,312 and bears Mosaic catelogue No. MD5-151. It consists of 5 CDs. The set has been sold out for some time, since the 1960's I believe."
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I've still got vinyl of "European Tour 1977" and "Social Studies", but never listened to them that much. Maybe it's time to give them some serious "air time". I recently picked up this Jack Bruce live album. It was apparently a very short-lived group and they only recently found tapes of one of the shows. Carla plays on it along with Mick Taylor, Bruce Gary and Ronnie Leahy.
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Tim Hardin - "Bird on a Wire" This album has a surprisingly diverse roster of jazz (and other) artists on it: Warren Bernhardt Keyboards Richard Bock Cello Sam T. Brown Guitar Canby Singers Vocals, Vocals (bckgr) Bill Chelf Arranger, Keyboards Monte Dunn Guitar Ed Freeman Guitar, Producer, Horn Arrangements, String Arrangements Steve Haas Percussion, Drums Tim Hardin Guitar, Arranger, Keyboards, Vocals Paul Hornsby Keyboards Bill Keith Pedal Steel, Guitar (Steel) Tony Levin Bass Ralph MacDonald Percussion, Drums Mike Mainieri Vocals (bckgr), Vibraphone Glen Moore Bass Alphonse Mouzon Percussion, Drums Natoga Percussion, Drums Robert Popwell Bass, Percussion, Drums George Ricci Cello Margaret Ross Harp Rob Rothstein Bass Joe Rudd Guitar Bill Stewart Percussion, Drums Ralph Towner Guitar Miroslav Vitous Bass Collin Walcott Vocals (bckgr), Vibraphone Joe Zawinul Arranger, Keyboards
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The last session of the Carmell Jones Mosaic Select set consists of jazz versions of popular folk tunes of the day.
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I seem to recall seeing this at Amoeba (SF). If I'm right, they are sealed copies, too.
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They'll have a note under the star rating that says: 128K MP3 ONLY! Otherwise, there is no listing of the bitrate.
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Your rarest possession in your music collection.
BFrank replied to Hardbopjazz's topic in Miscellaneous Music
I have 2 "Bee Hives" that seem to be pretty scarce: Johnny Hartman - "Once in Every Life" (on Bee Hive Records) Clifford Brown - "Live at the Bee Hive" (on Columbia) -
Your rarest possession in your music collection.
BFrank replied to Hardbopjazz's topic in Miscellaneous Music
Since I DON'T have a Beatles "butcher cover", I'll have to go with (based on monetary value alone - last sold on ebay for over $400) the Larry Young Mosaic CD set. (not that it's THAT rare, really). I also have all the George Duke MPS albums (discussed somewhere recently). -
Sounds good, doubleM
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did you guys notice that the upcoming handshake in this pic is bound to be one of the whimpy kind? You know, all fingers no palm. Luvly yes, thank you ... touch, go ... thank you... It's amazing how those guitar players all look OLDER than the Queen. (it must be the drugs)
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I just recently got into "Asia Minor". How does this BN stuff compare to that? I've started thinking that I have to put this set on my "list".