sidewinder Posted September 27, 2015 Report Posted September 27, 2015 (edited) Recorded 60 years ago on Tuesday ! Edited September 27, 2015 by sidewinder Quote
kh1958 Posted September 27, 2015 Report Posted September 27, 2015 Jimmy Giuffre Trio, Travelin' Light (Atlantic black label), Duke Ellington, Afro-Bossa (Reprise,mono promo), and Junior Mance, Harlem Lullaby (Atlantic mono promo). Quote
Clunky Posted September 27, 2015 Report Posted September 27, 2015 European Jazz Consensus-----Four for Slavia-------(EMI Electrola GmbH)Skidmore and Dudek responsible for sax duties with drum n bass. Wonder who was responsible for the lame band name? 1977 Hamburg. Quote
B. Clugston Posted September 27, 2015 Report Posted September 27, 2015 (edited) Contemporary Hungarian Music, Zoltan Jeney and Laszlo Sary (Hungaraton). Early 1970s works from two Hungarian composers--very nice and adventurous.Excellent choice. Many treasures to be found on the Hungaraton label in the 1970s and 1980s, especially by composers of the Budapest New Music Studio (Jeney and Sary were both founding members).I've yet to find a dud on that label. Zsolt Durko is another favourite. Do you have any other recommendations? Hungaraton also did that amazing edition of Bartok's works. Edited September 27, 2015 by B. Clugston Quote
clifford_thornton Posted September 27, 2015 Report Posted September 27, 2015 Only stuff I have on Hungaroton is traditional Hungarian folk music... but those sets are stunning. Quote
mjazzg Posted September 27, 2015 Report Posted September 27, 2015 Roscoe Mitchell, Tony Marsh, John Edwards - Improvisations [ OtoRoku] Quote
clifford_thornton Posted September 27, 2015 Report Posted September 27, 2015 Sun Ra - Unity - (Horo, IT orig) Quote
aparxa Posted September 28, 2015 Report Posted September 28, 2015 Enjoying the lunar eclipse with Steve Lacy Quote
soulpope Posted September 28, 2015 Report Posted September 28, 2015 Prompted by a mention elsewhere on the boardIMO his best ever album (although very closely followed by "Illusions") .... Quote
tomatamot Posted September 28, 2015 Report Posted September 28, 2015 Kenny Drew – Undercurrent ( Blue Note - DBLP-014 ) Quote
kh1958 Posted September 28, 2015 Report Posted September 28, 2015 Herbie Mann, Family of Mann (Atlantic) Quote
Leeway Posted September 28, 2015 Report Posted September 28, 2015 The reissue but not bad. Love the album; it has that sincere yet occasionally cheesy quality of the time, very full of personality. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted September 28, 2015 Report Posted September 28, 2015 (edited) The reissue but not bad. Love the album; it has that sincere yet occasionally cheesy quality of the time, very full of personality. I have an original of it - you're right in that it's not bad, but nor is it my favorite Howard LP from the era (that would have to be Berlin Concert or Live in Europe Vol. 1). Edited September 28, 2015 by clifford_thornton bad grammar Quote
Leeway Posted September 28, 2015 Report Posted September 28, 2015 Tribal Ghost - John Tchicai, et al. A lovely album. Quote
B. Clugston Posted September 29, 2015 Report Posted September 29, 2015 Julius Hemphill, Blue Boyé (Mbari). 2 LPs of Hemphill on alto, soprano and flute, often overdubbed. There's another similarly constituted 2 LP set from that era on Sackville. Quote
jeffcrom Posted September 29, 2015 Report Posted September 29, 2015 Gordon Jenkins Presents Marshall Royal (Everest mono). It may tell you something about the kind of afternoon I had to say that this easy-listening-ish album is just what I needed. To be fair to Marshall, there is far more jazz content here than on the similar Johnny Hodges/Lawrence Welk album from around the same time. Quote
mjazzg Posted September 29, 2015 Report Posted September 29, 2015 Garrison Fewell!Indeed. I urge everyone to hear the posthumous trio date with Roy Campbell and Luther Gray 'Invisible Resonance Trio' on Creative Music Nation. Especially if you enjoy 'Tribal Ghost' Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted September 30, 2015 Report Posted September 30, 2015 (edited) um....i dont wanna freak out on this point, but im 3/4 of the way thru side 1, and this is wayyyy different than classic duke- its totally a concept album, theres narration.....i thought it was going to be: Duke Ellington & His Orch + Candido: swingin duke latin fusion featuring Candido Camero. well its like that but with like a broadway twist. is that the strayhorn input? is this -the only- lp in his cannon like this? it really does flow like a concept album. was there actually a TV b'cast to correspond w/ this, i wasnt clear on that on wikipedia, like i cant find it on youtube. im going to keep it (and pray for some candido solos on side 2) but im going to go back to classic duke: im telling you, he goes back to his classic live thing here: Vancouver 1970. you know whose in the band? Julian Priester. (like about the same time he joined mwandishi) the last recording of johnny hodges i think. before i figured out it was from 1970 i swear i thought it was an aircheck from the 40s, they are swingin that hard on this. ....DRUM gets better 1/2way through side 2..... Edited September 30, 2015 by chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted September 30, 2015 Report Posted September 30, 2015 ok my final analysis of this lp, is: theres some swingin' candido twds the very end worth the price of admisson. will be kept & filed with the other period Columbia white label promos, if i had to guess, id say....maybe next to Jo Stafford's Greatest Hits. that sounds about right. (catalogue order). Quote
corto maltese Posted September 30, 2015 Report Posted September 30, 2015 (edited) Contemporary Hungarian Music, Zoltan Jeney and Laszlo Sary (Hungaraton). Early 1970s works from two Hungarian composers--very nice and adventurous.Excellent choice. Many treasures to be found on the Hungaraton label in the 1970s and 1980s, especially by composers of the Budapest New Music Studio (Jeney and Sary were both founding members).I've yet to find a dud on that label. Zsolt Durko is another favourite. Do you have any other recommendations? Hungaraton also did that amazing edition of Bartok's works.Sorry for replying late and I don't have my records here, but I would recommend really almost anything by the New Music Studio composers (I'm particularly fond of Zoltan Jeney). Hungaroton also released a string of excellent electronic/electroacoustic records by Hungarian composers. And there's Kurtág, of course...(I'm not an expert on "straight" classical music, but given the high quality of so much contemporary/avant-garde releases on the label, I would imagine their standards to be pretty high there too. The Bartok edition you mentioned is a case in point.) Edited September 30, 2015 by corto maltese It's Hungaroton. Quote
mjazzg Posted September 30, 2015 Report Posted September 30, 2015 Peter Brotzmann Octet - Machine Gun [FMP]Peter Brotzmann, Peeter Uuskyla - Red Cloud On Silver [Omlott]Marshall Allen, Kash Killion - Two Stars in the Universe [Little Rocket] Quote
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