sidewinder Posted January 31, 2015 Report Posted January 31, 2015 George Wallington 'Jazz For The Carriage Trade' (Esquire, mono) Quote
JSngry Posted January 31, 2015 Report Posted January 31, 2015 Another LP plucked from the bargain bin. Orange label deep groove. What's the source of this material. or, at least, of the Scott? There is no information on the LP jacket but Discogs states: "Recorded at Reeves Sound Studios, New York City; October 29, November 23 and 30, 1956." Don't know their source. That's all I got. Maybe someone else has more. The liner note says the session was the idea of bassist Trigger Alpert and lists Dick Hyman, Marty Paich and Tony Scott as arrangers. On my LP, the arrangers as you give Bill are listed but nothing about the sessions being the idea of Trigger Alpert (although I read somewhere that they were). Do you have perhaps a UK version (was there such?). Mine is Jazzland JLP-11. Mine is an OJC CD. At the end of the notes we have: "These notes originally appeared on the album liner for Trigger Happy! (RLP 12-225), a reissue of Jazzland 11." Mystery solved! Perhaps the order is reversed? Would not the Trigger Alpert Riverside album (a very early Riverside, iirc) have preceded anything on Jazzland? Anyway, thanks for clearing up the origins of the material. I've never heard that one, didn't even realize Scott was on it. Have only known of Alpert through the Glenn Miller AAF band. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted January 31, 2015 Report Posted January 31, 2015 RLP 12-225 would precede Jazzland 11 by several years. Quote
Leeway Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Interesting figure from the Chicago scene. I like this one. Quote
JSngry Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Interesting figure from the Chicago scene. I like this one. Yeah, I go for Boykin whenever possible. Definitely. Don't have any vinyl though, when did this one come from? Not relevant, but are he and Nicole Mitchell still married? Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 no. she has a different husband. Evan Parker - Saxophone Solos (Incus) That and Monoceros are my earliest Parkers. Quote
JSngry Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Were they ever married, or am I just confusing people's relationships trying to make people happy who already are? Quote
Homefromtheforest Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Donald Byrd "electric Byrd" (blue note, liberty). Today's find; a pristine copy...mint vinyl and perfect cover - like new. Sounds pretty amazing..my first "late" period Byrd record and it's definitely in the early 70s Miles mode but considerably more "spacier"(apologies for this term haha). Quote
kh1958 Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Shelley Manne and His Men at the Blackhawk Volume 2 (Contemporary stereo), and King Pleasure Sings (Prestige ten inch). Quote
tomatamot Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Herbie Nichols ‎– The Third World Quote
Leeway Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Interesting figure from the Chicago scene. I like this one. Yeah, I go for Boykin whenever possible. Definitely. Don't have any vinyl though, when did this one come from? Not relevant, but are he and Nicole Mitchell still married? Boykin came to the last Vision Festival (so did Nicole Mitchell for that matter, they played in "Sonic Projections" together) and brought a couple of copies of this LP with him, so picked it up. Was new to me too. Quote
colinmce Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 I need to pick that one up. I have some of his CD-RS, which are distinctive. Love his playing on Abrams' Unknown Known. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Haven't heard Boykin in years. Need to seek out some more of his stuff. Now: Pygmy Unit - Signals from Earth - (self-released US LP) Bay Area free improvisation featuring Jim Pepper and Darrell De Vore, pretty neat. Quote
Leeway Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Haven't heard Boykin in years. Need to seek out some more of his stuff. Now: Pygmy Unit - Signals from Earth - (self-released US LP) Bay Area free improvisation featuring Jim Pepper and Darrell De Vore, pretty neat. Been getting into some Jim Pepper recently. Picked up some CDs with him on them, posted those over in the listening thread. I like one in particular with Mal Waldron. I have a few LPs as well. Anthony Braxton - B-X0 NO-47A - Actuel 15 - 1969 Cheesy BYG reissue, but serves its purpose. Braxton in Pre-Cardigan era. Quote
Leeway Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 (edited) Among the long list of musicians participating in the recording, I find Seldon Powell, which really surprised me. Maybe it shouldn't? Just seemed odd to find him with the Braxton and Roscoe Mitchell crowd. Edited February 1, 2015 by Leeway Quote
clifford_thornton Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Haven't heard Boykin in years. Need to seek out some more of his stuff. Now: Pygmy Unit - Signals from Earth - (self-released US LP) Bay Area free improvisation featuring Jim Pepper and Darrell De Vore, pretty neat. Been getting into some Jim Pepper recently. Picked up some CDs with him on them, posted those over in the listening thread. I like one in particular with Mal Waldron. I have a few LPs as well. Yeah, he's great. I mean, as ubiquitous as it is, "Witchi-Tai-To" is an amazing piece of music. Now, perhaps coincidentally as I was going through some ethnographic recordings today as well, Music of the Sioux and the Navajo - (Ethnic Folkways Library) Songs of the Pawnee and Northern Ute - (Library of Congress) Quote
Clunky Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Hodges/ Davis--------Wings & Things----------( EMI) UK mono of this wonderful Verve title Grant Green and Johnny Hodges, who would have thunk it! Quote
JSngry Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Among the long list of musicians participating in the recording, I find Seldon Powell, which really surprised me. Maybe it shouldn't? Just seemed odd to find him with the Braxton and Roscoe Mitchell crowd. Depends on who contracted the date. On the matter of skills, though, not surprising. That's some hardass music and it wasn't a working band. Financial realities would dictate that you have a few flyshit readers in there to keep the time needed thing between the lines. Look who else is in there - the Bridgewater brothers, Bruce Johnstone, and Jon Faddis. They weren't their to contribute their "unique personal stylings", ya' know? They were there to read the parts and keep the session moving. Time is money, as they say, and at least as much in the studio as anywhere. EVERYBODY gets OT if OT happens, unless its a scab date. Quote
tomatamot Posted February 1, 2015 Report Posted February 1, 2015 Branford Marsalis - In My Solitude: Live in Concert at Grace Cathedral Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted February 2, 2015 Report Posted February 2, 2015 Among the long list of musicians participating in the recording, I find Seldon Powell, which really surprised me. Maybe it shouldn't? Just seemed odd to find him with the Braxton and Roscoe Mitchell crowd. Depends on who contracted the date. On the matter of skills, though, not surprising. That's some hardass music and it wasn't a working band. Financial realities would dictate that you have a few flyshit readers in there to keep the time needed thing between the lines. Look who else is in there - the Bridgewater brothers, Bruce Johnstone, and Jon Faddis. They weren't their to contribute their "unique personal stylings", ya' know? They were there to read the parts and keep the session moving. Time is money, as they say, and at least as much in the studio as anywhere. EVERYBODY gets OT if OT happens, unless its a scab date. After the fact,I heard some complaints about Faddis and some other "studio" guys being unable to "stretch" to add to the music . Quote
JSngry Posted February 2, 2015 Report Posted February 2, 2015 And that makes sense too. I say this very advisedly, because I love the man, I love the music, and I for sure love the album, but that Julius Hemphill big band album...if jut a few strategically placed section players would have been inserted, the writing itself might have benefited. What that might have cost the feel of the music, I dunno. Something, I'm sure. Part of me says that if I got ears, I can hear the writing no matter what, and as a rule, I can. Another part of me says that parts are meant to be heard as much as they are felt, and that the clearer the parts are executed individually, the better you can feel them based on what is really there instead of waht you think you want to be there. And another part of me says just fuck it, go for what you get, start there and keep getting and going. Thing is, all these parts are often going on at the same time. And if/when it's Ellington, none of those parts have time to be bothered by any of that. But as far as the Braxton record goes, hey, you made the album you made and used the people that you used, if they did what you hired them to do, the complaint that they didn't/couldn't do past that, well, live and learn. That record is glorious as is. Whatever else it could have been, hey, time machine, go for a time machine. Quote
jeffcrom Posted February 2, 2015 Report Posted February 2, 2015 I'm listening to the Braxton album too right now (on CD, actually, though) and making plans to drive to Tuscaloosa for Braxton's residency at the University of Alabama later this month. On the 18th, he and the UA big band will be playing the whacked-out march and that strange, wonderful last track, among other pieces. Quote
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