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Leeway

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Everything posted by Leeway

  1. That cover kind of reminded me of "Physical Graffiti" - Led Zeppelin:
  2. Rosie the Riveter The Maid of Killarney Molly Bloom
  3. That's funny. So, more beer, louder music? Yeah, I suppose I'm kind of the same way. Brotzmann of Gustafsson maybe. But if it's port, I might go in a different direction. Maybe some of these listening posts should come with an alcohol warning
  4. PM coming on Daniele D'Agaro & Tobias Delius, "Byas a Drink" (Nota) oop [quartet w/ Glerum, Trombetta]
  5. I ordered from Dusty Groove the 2LP "Conversations" - Roscoe Mitchell. Surprisingly low price of $16.99 for a double LP. Hmm, hope that's not reflected in the quality. While I was at it, I got the Complete Remastered Black Saint and Soul Note box of Oliver Lake. Price on that was just an OK $34.99. Looking forward to checking that out
  6. John Major The Iron Lady The Man in the Iron Mask
  7. JACANA - Sten Sandell (p), Paal Nilssen-Love (d). Rune Grammofon. Not usual these days to see new piano-drum duos --or maybe I just missed them. Shades of Cecil in Berlin. This one works quite well.
  8. LOW COST SPACE FLIGHTS - Paul Flaherty, Chris Corsano - Feeding Tube Records.
  9. I think will I. am has a valid point. AT the most basic level, musicians can't do what they do unless they can make a living from it. AT a higher level, musicians have a right to receive compensation for what they produce. The music "industry" has become a cottage industry. Artists have to make their own CDs or LPs, find their own ways to distribute it (usually at their concerts), get downloads onto iTune and other sites, do incessant touring, and perhaps get a half-cent per play from Spotify. It's a hustle. The days of labels providing A&R, recording support, touring support, etc, are mostly gone. This artist-centric model has some obvious problems. They don't have the legal and financial muscle of the big corporations. They can't negotiate on an even basis with Spotify or You Tube (to name two). As someone pointed out, Google is making money from the hundreds of thousands of videos of performances. Why shouldn't the artists? Spotify has already been discussed elsewhere. Basically, the mechanisms for distributing music benefit pretty much only the distributors. They don't make, they make off of. The comparison to cassette recordings doesn't really work here. Yes, there were alarmist statements made about it, but the continued sales of records weren't really affected. In terms of copying and distributing music, the digital age changed all that. It's much different now. For one thing, it's much more massive. This is why so many labels have packed it in. Hard to sell product when everyone is giving it away.
  10. Coincidentally, I'm now shuttling between Lessing's Four-Gated City and Stannard's Spark biography. I respect Lessing and recognize her seriousness. On the other hand, her prose style is, shall we say, utilitarian, and she has hardly any sense of humor. Comparing her to Spark is like comparing boiled potatoes to potato chips. They both have their virtues I think; just don't think you can hold either to the other's standards.
  11. That certainly looks marvelous! I have no doubt it is.
  12. "Brodie" is not really a plot-driven book, and so Spark throws out the ending (which is not really the ending) because that is not what she is getting at. Really the novel is one of humor, interpersonal relations, how, one feels about those relation, how one sees others over the passage of time, over betrayal and its pain. Although its not a feminist novel, it does offer a view into what it is to grow up as a woman, and to find a woman's perspective on the world. Although "Brodie" comes closer to a more apparent emotional context that much of Spark's other writings, I don't think it's "kind hearts and coronets;" Spark likes her satirical edge a bit too much for that. It's a felt book, but also a thoughtfully-considered book. If none of the humor or wit came though, then, yes, I'd have to say that Spark probably is not for you. As for Hitler and Mussolini, sad to say that in the early days of their rule, many in Britain adored them. It took awhile to see what was really going on.
  13. Great looking venue too.
  14. Edward Hopper Skip Bayless Jhumpa Lahiri
  15. I don't think the gibe was directed solely at Mary H. There are other women improvisors on the scene now, and that, regrettably, is causing some heartburn in certain quarters. As for the guys in untucked plaids, well, we've heard enough about that sort of thing here too; but then again, almost every hipster in Brooklyn sports that look (non-musicians included). Sounded to me like trash-talking that found its way into a review.
  16. I've been wondering if Freeman made his barbed witticism on his own hook, or if it is reflects something deeper (or larger). The attack seems to me to have deeper roots than one person's sense of humor. Perhaps it represents certain factions of the Downtown scene that might not be enamored of some of the more relatively recent arrivals on the scene. There are fault lines drawn. The joke is a thinly veiled jab, enough to sting, not knock anyone out, just to let someone know that it's not going to be all hearts and flowers. I'm not condoning it, just trying to analyze what seems a rather odd sideswipe.
  17. Seal Heidi Klum Heidi Fleiss
  18. H. Rider Haggard Merle Haggard Hagar the Horrible
  19. I don't really get the purpose of the article either but I like this quote (if that is what it is): "We always dressed real sharp: pin-stripe suits, porkpie hats, silk ties. As if to conceal the fact that we were spending all our time playing jazz in some basement."
  20. I'd like to know the context of these quotes. Were they from a recent conversation? Were they culled from interviews over a long period of time? Do they really reflect Sonny's point of view--then or now? Sonny's always been ambivalent about laying jazz, thus some of his well-know hiatuses. But this sounds seriously depressed or at least seriously self-deprecating. Hard to say without more context.
  21. Daddy Warbucks The Koch Brothers Goldfinger
  22. Butterbean Mr. Bean Old Bean
  23. Mr. Softee Master Softee (http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/queens/mister-softee-master-softee-article-1.1774733 ) Dairy Queen http://www.amny.com/eat-and-drink/mister-softee-knockoff-master-softee-now-new-york-ice-cream-1.8769626
  24. The Shins Kneebody Brooklyn Hipsters in untucked plaid shirts, beards and glasses and girls who look like substitute teachers
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