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Posted (edited)
34 minutes ago, soulpope said:

Simply superb ....

Yes!!!  The first of Palmieri's AMAZING run of records in the early 70s ... from Superimposition to Unfinished Masterpiece.  All extraordinary.

:wub:

 

3 hours ago, soulpope said:

bb9884f4cac0c223e17144b2e3838627c9e7e72f

One of Jordan's best. :tup 

 

Edited by HutchFan
Posted

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Back with an early spin of this marvellous double. A reminder of just how good Alan Skidmore’s groups are/is, what a rhythm section with John Taylor, Chris Laurence, Tony Oxley. Time to dig out ‘Once Upon A Time’ again on Deram/Nova.

Posted (edited)
14 hours ago, HutchFan said:

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Art Pepper - Winter Moon (Galaxy)

Aha! Very fond memories of this. That was one of the first Jazz albums I ever heard and connected with. My entry point was looking for music that sounded like the orchestrated music on earlier Tom Waits albums. Not sure how close this was but it worked

Edited by mjazzg
Posted

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Yusef Lateef - 10 Years Hence [Atlantic, 1975]

First listen to a new arrival.  Always room for more of Lateef's flute, and other horns, playing in this house. Albert Heath laying down some very serious rhythms.

Posted
9 hours ago, mjazzg said:

Aha! Very fond memories of this. That was one of the first Jazz albums I ever heard and connected with. My entry point was looking for music that sounded like the orchestrated music on earlier Tom Waits albums. Not sure how close this was but it worked

Love that. We all come to jazz from different places, but any pathway that leads to new discoveries is a good one!  :)

 

Posted
16 minutes ago, HutchFan said:

Love that. We all come to jazz from different places, but any pathway that leads to new discoveries is a good one!  :)

 

Amen to that!

Posted (edited)
1 hour ago, mjazzg said:

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Yusef Lateef - 10 Years Hence [Atlantic, 1975]

First listen to a new arrival.  Always room for more of Lateef's flute, and other horns, playing in this house. Albert Heath laying down some very serious rhythms.

Never got into Yusef’s Atlantic material. Too much chug-a-chug guitar riffing from the likes of Cornel Dupree et al for me. The CTIs are even worse. Big fan though of his Savoy/Verve/Riverside/Impulse stuff. His very late recordings e.g. with the Belmondos are enjoyable too. I feel that in that middle period he lost his way somewhat. Of course, he wasn’t the only one around that time.

Edited by sidewinder
Posted (edited)
54 minutes ago, sidewinder said:

Never got into Yusef’s Atlantic material. Too much chug-a-chug guitar riffing from the likes of Cornel Dupree et al for me. The CTIs are even worse. Big fan though of his Savoy/Verve/Riverside/Impulse stuff. His very late recordings e.g. with the Belmondos are enjoyable too. I feel that in that middle period he lost his way somewhat. Of course, he wasn’t the only one around that time.

I tend to agree.  This is on the right side of that line, no guitar. However it does feature Lateef or someone else making the most extraordinary vocal noise which can only be described as a distressed sheep on side 4.

Also, big thumbs up for the later stuff with Adam Rudolph and others on YAL label

Edited by mjazzg
Posted
51 minutes ago, mjazzg said:

I tend to agree.  This is on the right side of that line, no guitar. However it does feature Lateef or someone else making the most extraordinary vocal noise which can only be described as a distressed sheep on side 4.

Also, big thumbs up for the later stuff with Adam Rudolph and others on YAL label

 Not heard the Rudolph stuff, will have to check it out. I did see Lateef live with the Belmondo project, very late in life and that was memorable. Even watching him pack his array of instruments away was a treat.

Posted
9 hours ago, sidewinder said:

 Not heard the Rudolph stuff, will have to check it out. I did see Lateef live with the Belmondo project, very late in life and that was memorable. Even watching him pack his array of instruments away was a treat.

Was that at the Barbican or possibly South Bank?  I saw him later in life and also remember the packing of the instruments.   Don't recall the band though, thought it was smaller than on the Belmondo recording that I have

Posted
12 hours ago, HutchFan said:

Now spinning:

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Up next:

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2016 Elemental reissue

 

Great stuff, Larry Young one of my favourites, but I think my very favourite album of his is "Unity". 

Art Pepper Quartet wonderful, great music and my favourite Quartet with him. But the cover photo is terrible. It looks like they pissin´ and Art Pepper just was not photogenic anyway, I mean you see his face and think about drugs and jail.... and somehow mean.
On the other hand , for example Chet Baker: You see he´s a live-long junkie, but he had that nice smile until the very end. When he did not disappear, he was on time, and very very articulate and if you wanted to meet him after the gig for an autograph or a photo, he could be so nice and had that smile. You can see it also on that very late interview in London, which is on video from a concert....

Posted (edited)
4 hours ago, mjazzg said:

Was that at the Barbican or possibly South Bank?  I saw him later in life and also remember the packing of the instruments.   Don't recall the band though, thought it was smaller than on the Belmondo recording that I have

No, at NorthSea. He was playing in one of the more low-profile outer enclosures, so it wasn’t crowded. He had the whole lot lined up - tenor, flute, argol.. The Belmondo band had the quintet plus chamber ensemble, very nice. Several familiar tracks including ‘Before Dawn’.

That NorthSea also had the last time I saw James Moody. Roy Hargrove too. Roy Haynes was also there, already a sprightly 80+ and still going strong. Another highlight was Jack DeJohnette and his Tony Williams Lifetime project.

Edited by sidewinder

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