Holy Ghost Posted yesterday at 05:21 AM Report Posted yesterday at 05:21 AM Still waiting to put the CD in this sleeve (customed the sleeve to CD size already) Quote
Late Posted 18 hours ago Report Posted 18 hours ago 9 hours ago, JSngry said: Coltrane said (in the Kofsky interview?) that the reason he "pulled back" for a quick minute was that he messed up his favorite mouthpiece and it took him a bit to find another one that gave him what he really needed. I've read that too. His sound on Ballads and the Hartman date is not the sound one hears on Africa Brass, for example. I wonder what he did to his Otto Link? As far as adjusting the physical qualities of a mouthpiece, I thought the main practice was trying to increase the inner bore size, if just by millimeters. I know Steve Lacy did that with his soprano mouthpiece, and then used an alto ligature (which wouldn't affect the bore, but would allow the reed to vibrate more freely) in order to get the most open soprano sound possible. Back to rare-ish Japanese compilations, this one looks good: I would spin this comp! Quote
Kevin Bresnahan Posted 17 hours ago Report Posted 17 hours ago It took me a long time to find an affordable copy of Belden's "Princejazz". It's seems to be pretty rare. Quote
JSngry Posted 16 hours ago Report Posted 16 hours ago 1 hour ago, Late said: I've read that too. His sound on Ballads and the Hartman date is not the sound one hears on Africa Brass, for example. I wonder what he did to his Otto Link? As far as adjusting the physical qualities of a mouthpiece, I thought the main practice was trying to increase the inner bore size, if just by millimeters. I know Steve Lacy did that with his soprano mouthpiece, and then used an alto ligature (which wouldn't affect the bore, but would allow the reed to vibrate more freely) in order to get the most open soprano sound possible. Back to rare-ish Japanese compilations, this one looks good: I would spin this comp! You can adjust any physical part of a mouthpiece, tip opening, lay, chamber, any of it. Quote
dougcrates Posted 12 hours ago Report Posted 12 hours ago These DJ mixes released by Blue Note Japan in the late 90s were a nice introduction to all the samples that had been used on rap songs. Quote
Dub Modal Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago 5 hours ago, dougcrates said: These DJ mixes released by Blue Note Japan in the late 90s were a nice introduction to all the samples that had been used on rap songs. Nice. Don't think I knew about these. Quote
Holy Ghost Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago Still waiting to put the CD in this sleeve (customed the sleeve to CD size already) Biz Markie??? This is a rare BN now? We talking about the same dude in that Mtv video back in the day with the Mozart wig playing on that toddler's piano, rapping just a friend? That dude? Wow. Quote
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