chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted August 19, 2009 Report Posted August 19, 2009 have you ever seen anyone w/ a complete BN 45 collection.....i mean some of these from the 50s....FUNK IN DEEP FREEZE 45? ive never seen or heard about or seen on ebay one of those in my life...where ARE all they? Quote
mikeweil Posted August 20, 2009 Report Posted August 20, 2009 Any idea how many copies were pressed of a Blue Note 45? Quote
jeffcrom Posted August 20, 2009 Report Posted August 20, 2009 I've got three - Lou Donaldson, Sonny Red & Freddie Roach. A little off-topic, but I do have a complete collection of High Water 45s. This was a blues label started by David Evans in the late 70s. They issued 20 or so 45s in picture sleeves with info about the artists on back. Included were folks like R.L. Burnside, Junior Kimbrough, and Jessie Mae Hemphill, all when they were pretty much unknown outside of Mississippi. Quote
marcello Posted August 20, 2009 Report Posted August 20, 2009 From the sixties, I have Art Blakey's Indestructible with "Calling Miss Khadija" on it. I bought it as a lark because I knew Miss Khadjia a little bit. She was Steve Davis' wife (from the Coltrane quartet) and McCoy Tyner's sister in law. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted August 21, 2009 Report Posted August 21, 2009 I have about 20 - JOS, Thad, Burrell, Sonny Clark, Bennie Green, Fred Jackson, Hubbard, Parlan, Byrd, Silver, 3 Sounds, Joe Hen, Freddie Roach, Eric Gale and Lee Morgan. Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted August 21, 2009 Author Report Posted August 21, 2009 but these mobley 50s singles i dont think have ever turned up in the collectors market.... Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted August 21, 2009 Report Posted August 21, 2009 My Burrell 45 has Hank on it. DB Blues / KB Blues from Feb 10, 1956. Quote
Bill Nelson Posted August 21, 2009 Report Posted August 21, 2009 I've gotten three without trying too hard: 45-1708 Bennie Green - Soul Stirrin' 45-1868 Lou Donaldson - Funky Mama (Pts. 1 and 2) 45-1918 Lee Morgan - The Rumproller (Pts. 1 and 2) They came from a defunkt jukebox operator and were $2 each. If you're a serious collector, you should seek out anyone unloading jukebox singles from the 60's. Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted August 21, 2009 Author Report Posted August 21, 2009 what, is this 1971? Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted August 21, 2009 Author Report Posted August 21, 2009 maybe its just timing. most of mine i aquired at .50 a pop at a garage sale (a garage sale of a retired record store owner-in-town)....incl. the message from kenya, from that 1st series... ...but hank mobley funk in deep freeze 45 single??!? omfg! if that is somewhere in this universe, i want it brought to me Quote
WD45 Posted August 21, 2009 Report Posted August 21, 2009 I have a Big John Patton 45 of Fat Judy, Parts 1 & 2, plus a Miles Davis 45 on Blue Note. Only ones that I have ever seen. Quote
kh1958 Posted August 21, 2009 Report Posted August 21, 2009 I have four: Horace Silver's Filthy McNasty (45-1817), Ike Quebec, Shu Shu/Liebestraum (45-1875). Both of these have a solid blue label with a 43 W.61st Street Address. Art Blakey's Moanin (45-1735), Cannonball Adderley, Somthin' Else (45-1738). The latter two have blue and white labels, with A Division of Liberty Records on the label. Quote
DMP Posted August 21, 2009 Report Posted August 21, 2009 There's a CD of Blue Note singles, although I've always suspected there were a couple of ringers in there. Quote
Bill Nelson Posted August 22, 2009 Report Posted August 22, 2009 Many of the Blue Note (and Riverside) 45s went straight to jukebox jobbers -- guys who stocked the jukes in bars and pool rooms. This would've been most prevalent from the late 50's thru the 60's. As far as over-the-counter retail sales, you'd have to visit 'Soul Shacks' in black neighborhoods. Quote
Dan Gould Posted August 22, 2009 Report Posted August 22, 2009 I searched Blue Note 45s on ebay - Jimmy Smith, Three Sounds, and Horace Silver definitely had the most listings. Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted August 22, 2009 Author Report Posted August 22, 2009 in my exp they are many times really cheap, eg. MUCH cheaper than their album counterpart would ever be......i havent ever bought one on ebay, just real life.... correct dan gould....i have a boatload of jimmy n horace and in my experience i see them around the most as well but id like to meet one collector of the whole series, or where some of these are...beacuse they are rarer than TRUE BLUE on lp...i swear to god i want to know where the funk in deep freeze 45s are Quote
The Magnificent Goldberg Posted September 27, 2009 Report Posted September 27, 2009 I just looked through and only found four JOS - Back at the chicken shack pts 1 & 2 (1877) Freddie Roach - I know/Googa mooga (1890) These have the half/half blue/white labels Sonny Red - Bluesville/Stay as sweet as you are (1761) Horace Parlan - C jam blues/Up in Cynthia's room (1770) These two have the solid dark blue labels. Missing - probably misfiled and I didn't see them as I was looking through Lou Donaldson - Blues walk/Masquerade is over JOS - Can heat/When my dreamboat comes home I used to have quite a few BN 45s. In the early 60s, BN LPs were hellishly expensive (nearly twice the price of a UK manufactured LP) over here - so I bought 45s, which weren't so much more than UK 45s. But generally, as I got LPs, I ditched the 45s. I read somewhere - somewhere here, I think - that BN usually pressed about 3,000 45s and 2,000 usually went into juke boxes. MG Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted September 27, 2009 Author Report Posted September 27, 2009 you got a freddie roach? im sure thats impossible to find. but I want Funk in deep freeze on 45. i bet it would sound double as good as the lp....isnt 45 supposed to be the ideal rpm for music playback or something? what do u guys know about that:? Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted September 28, 2009 Author Report Posted September 28, 2009 picked up BN 45-1843 today, six bucks-- whats up w/ #3: do you think BN 45-1844 was manufactured, or was it just "slotted for a spot in the catelgoue" etc BN 45-1842 Fred Jackson - Dippin' In The Bag c/w Hootin' 'N Tootin' Fred Jackson (ts) Earl Van Dyke (org) Willie Jones (g) Wilbert Hogan (d) Rudy Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, February 5, 1962tk.4 Dippin' In The Bag tk.22 Hootin' 'N Tootin' BN 45-1843 Fred Jackson - Preach Brother c/w Easin' On Down Fred Jackson (ts) Earl Van Dyke (org) Willie Jones (g) Wilbert Hogan (d): same session Rudy Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, February 5, 1962tk.12 Easin' On Down tk.20 Preach Brother BN 45-1844 Fred Jackson - Southern Exposure, Pt. 1&2 (not released) Fred Jackson (ts) Earl Van Dyke (org) Willie Jones (g) Wilbert Hogan (d): same session Rudy Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, February 5, 1962tk.13 Southern Exposure Quote
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