HutchFan Posted November 17, 2019 Report Posted November 17, 2019 Duke Ellington - The Golden Duke (Prestige, 2 LPs) LP 1 - music from 1946 originally released on Musicraft Quote
soulpope Posted November 17, 2019 Report Posted November 17, 2019 4 hours ago, HutchFan said: 👍👍👍and many more !!! Quote
kh1958 Posted November 17, 2019 Report Posted November 17, 2019 Kokoroko (Brownswood) Jupiter and Okwess, Troposphere Stanley Turrentine, Hustlin' (Blue Note Tone Poet) Quote
HutchFan Posted November 17, 2019 Report Posted November 17, 2019 This again: Terumasa Hino Sextet - Fuji (Catalyst, licensed from Victor Japan, 1972) Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted November 18, 2019 Report Posted November 18, 2019 guys im in a hurry rtnow ill b back later butdid i messup too bad not getting the JOHN GRAAS on the super rare rare rare ANDEX label--- art pepper, bill perkins and other wcj legends on it....but only side 2 a classical/jazz fusion suite, very composed and structured piece with sections for improv? it was 20 bux. i didnt get jimmy smith all day long-1 for ten 1500 series, so i didnt walk way w/ zero jazz classics, but.... Quote
JSngry Posted November 18, 2019 Report Posted November 18, 2019 Dude - liner notes by Wesley LaViolette!!! Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted November 18, 2019 Report Posted November 18, 2019 also got les strand plays jazz classics on the baldwin organ his 2nd lp the only one i need now its the 3rd fantasy: plays Duke Ellington Quote
mjazzg Posted November 18, 2019 Report Posted November 18, 2019 George Sams - Nomadic Winds [Hat Art] very pleased to discover this. Short at just over 30 minutes but it's quality Quote
corto maltese Posted November 19, 2019 Report Posted November 19, 2019 On 12-11-2019 at 6:40 PM, mjazzg said: I've bought two of their Company reissues. Nicely done but unconvinced that cutting them at 45rpm enhances the experience of this music very much, especially when they were sidelong pieces at 33rpm. I sent them an email with this observation and they got very upset... I have an original of that Music Improv Co. title. Excellent stuff, as is the ECM Why were they upset? Until now I've been very impressed by their Incus series. Quote
mjazzg Posted November 19, 2019 Report Posted November 19, 2019 2 hours ago, corto maltese said: Why were they upset? Until now I've been very impressed by their Incus series. Just by me questioning the decision to cut at 45rpm and the resultant abrupt non-fades. Evidently one of those is on the original which I don't know so I was happy to stand corrected on that one. Quote
Gheorghe Posted November 19, 2019 Report Posted November 19, 2019 I purchased this in the 70´s, Charles Brackeen was completely unknown to me besides the fact that he once was Joanne Brackeen´s husband. I bought it for Don Cherry , Haden, Blackwell, since I was very much into the Ornette Coleman-Don Cherry thing which was new and exiting for me. I was , and still am astonished how much it is in the spirit of Ornette Coleman. Charles Brackeen even phrases like Ornette, it sounds almost like "Ornette on Tenor". Anyway, a beautiful, relativly obscure thing, worth listening to. Quote
HutchFan Posted November 19, 2019 Report Posted November 19, 2019 Speaking of Joanne Brackeen ... I've been listening to this LP over-and-over-again today: Joanne Brackeen - Snooze (Choice, 1975) with Cecil McBee & Billy Hart Subsequently reissued on Candid as Six Ate. 5 stars. Quote
HutchFan Posted November 19, 2019 Report Posted November 19, 2019 From one superb trio record to another ... Stanley Cowell - Equipoise (Galaxy, 1979) with Cecil McBee & Roy Haynes Beautiful. Quote
soulpope Posted November 19, 2019 Report Posted November 19, 2019 22 minutes ago, HutchFan said: From one superb trio record to another ... Stanley Cowell - Equipoise (Galaxy, 1979) with Cecil McBee & Roy Haynes Beautiful. !!! Quote
HutchFan Posted November 19, 2019 Report Posted November 19, 2019 (edited) Larry Coryell - Toku Do (Muse, 1988) Very enjoyable -- in no small part because of this primo rhythm section: Stanley Cowell. Oh yeah. Beaver Harris. Yessir. And Buster Williams!!! Plus the album is named after Buster's composition "Toku Do." I'm always in favor of props for Buster. Larry sounds pretty good too. Edited November 19, 2019 by HutchFan Quote
HutchFan Posted November 19, 2019 Report Posted November 19, 2019 More Coryell ... This is one of his strongest records, I think. Quote
soulpope Posted November 20, 2019 Report Posted November 20, 2019 10 hours ago, HutchFan said: Speaking of Joanne Brackeen ... I've been listening to this LP over-and-over-again today: Joanne Brackeen - Snooze (Choice, 1975) with Cecil McBee & Billy Hart Subsequently reissued on Candid as Six Ate. 5 stars. 👍Cecil McBee👍 .... Quote
Gheorghe Posted November 20, 2019 Report Posted November 20, 2019 Since Larry Coryell was mentioned: Here as a sideman, but very much in demand . Quote
Misterioso Posted November 21, 2019 Report Posted November 21, 2019 Konitz Meets Mulligan (Pure Pleasure reissue) Quote
JSngry Posted November 21, 2019 Report Posted November 21, 2019 I have unconditional love for Earl Coleman, but I would hesitate to recommend this record to somebody who didn't. His pitch is at times really wobbly, and the record is actually a program of Coleman vocal tracks alternating with Ted Dunbar solo tracks. That programming decision is nowhere explained in the notes (and isn't even hinted at on the cover) and one is left wondering if Coleman was in bad voice that day and Don Schlitten called the session (NP: Don Schlitten - Callin' the Session!!!) and called on Dunbar to make it a record. I'd think f it had been an actual concept that it would have been pimped as such. But still - I have unconditional love for Earl Coleman. No matter where the notes land, the words always come out in the right place and in the right way. Quote
HutchFan Posted November 22, 2019 Report Posted November 22, 2019 (edited) I'm enjoying this Sammy Nestico-arranged Basie record from 1971. It was released on Daybreak Records; not to be confused with the Dutch Daybreak label that released Jimmy Knepper and Ben Webster LPs, among others. No, this is the short-lived American Daybreak label based in Hollywood that also released music by Bing Crosby and Laurindo Almeida. Incidentally, the vinyl is REALLY thin, and it turns out that (the American) Daybreak was (per the small print on the cover) "manufactured and distributed by RCA Records." Makes me wonder if it's a dreaded Dyna-Flex wafer-thin platter! ... Fortunately, recorded sound quality is plenty listenable, neither terrible nor great. Edited November 22, 2019 by HutchFan Quote
HutchFan Posted November 22, 2019 Report Posted November 22, 2019 NP: Jeremy Steig & Eddie Gomez - Rainforest (CMP, 1980) Kurt Renker's CMP label released some excellent music. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.