soulpope Posted January 2, 2019 Report Posted January 2, 2019 3 minutes ago, jlhoots said: You Get More Bounce With Curtis Counce 👍spot on👍!! Quote
HutchFan Posted January 2, 2019 Report Posted January 2, 2019 (edited) Larry Willis - Inner Crisis (Groove Merchant, 1973) with Harold Vick and Roland Prince Edited January 2, 2019 by HutchFan Quote
HutchFan Posted January 2, 2019 Report Posted January 2, 2019 Woody Shaw - Live, Volume Three (HighNote) Recorded at the Keystone Korner in 1977 Quote
BillF Posted January 2, 2019 Report Posted January 2, 2019 3 hours ago, soulpope said: 25 minutes ago, Peter Friedman said: Remember seeing them one afternoon in Scott's old place in Gerrard Street. Nice music! Malcolm Cecil (bs, 2nd from right) has now left these shores. Tom 1960 discovered him in an upstate NY gig a couple of years ago. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malcolm_Cecil Quote
Coda Posted January 2, 2019 Report Posted January 2, 2019 Andy Biskin clarinet/bass clarinet, arrangements John Carlson trumpet Dave Smith trumpet Kenny Warren trumpet Rob Garcia drums Quote
sidewinder Posted January 2, 2019 Report Posted January 2, 2019 (edited) 1 hour ago, BillF said: Remember seeing them one afternoon in Scott's old place in Gerrard Street. Nice music! Malcolm Cecil (bs, 2nd from right) has now left these shores. Tom 1960 discovered him in an upstate NY gig a couple of years ago. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malcolm_Cecil I’ve got a Tempo LP of that one. Also came out in the US on Jazzland I think (‘The Hooter’). Malcolm Cecil of course well known for his electronics work with Stevie Wonder. Left the UK many moons ago. Edited January 2, 2019 by sidewinder Quote
soulpope Posted January 2, 2019 Report Posted January 2, 2019 1 hour ago, HutchFan said: Woody Shaw - Live, Volume Three (HighNote) Recorded at the Keystone Korner in 1977 Part of a great series .... Quote
Son-of-a-Weizen Posted January 2, 2019 Report Posted January 2, 2019 (edited) Edited January 2, 2019 by Son-of-a-Weizen Quote
duaneiac Posted January 2, 2019 Report Posted January 2, 2019 I forgot about the little quote of "Those Were The Days" (the theme from All In The Family) RRK uses on here. I suppose I get this image of my musical heroes of the past wherein they dwelled in some lofty realm where all they did was play music, listen to music, think about music, talk about music. But they were all folks like us -- they consumed pop culture just like we did. I wonder if The Flying Nun that RRK "saw" was better than the one the rest of us were exposed to. The one disc "best of" version. Quote
HutchFan Posted January 3, 2019 Report Posted January 3, 2019 (edited) NP: The Luis Russell Story: 1929-1934 (Retrieval) Loads of fun. ... And "Red" Allen!!! Earlier: Lucky Thompson - I Offer You (Groove Merchant) Lucky Thompson - S/T (Inner City; from Vogue) 2 hours ago, kinuta said: That's my "desert-island" Ben! Edited January 3, 2019 by HutchFan Quote
HutchFan Posted January 3, 2019 Report Posted January 3, 2019 (edited) Listening to the cuts from this LP that are available on YouTube: Bu Pleasant - Ms. Bu (Muse, 1974) EDIT: Some strong Harold Vick tenor here. . . . I need to get a hold of this LP. Edited January 3, 2019 by HutchFan Quote
jeffcrom Posted January 3, 2019 Report Posted January 3, 2019 Evan Parker/Barry Guy/Paul Lytton - At the Vortex (1996) (Emanem) Darryl Adams - Runnin' Wild in Toronto Volume 2 (Jazz Crusade) Quote
Gheorghe Posted January 3, 2019 Report Posted January 3, 2019 Chet Baker live at "Uncle Poe´s Carnegie Hall" Hamburg 1979. That´s one of my favourite Baker records, I like the really long and extended tracks on all records from that NDR series. Chet Baker ist in top form, and Phil Marcovitz is a great pianist and ideal partner for Chet. And it´s great to have the legendary Mr. Rassinfosse on bass, and a rare occasion to hear Chet Baker with a drummer. I´m a drums freak and actually Baker is the only musician I´d listen to when playing without drums. I hope there will be further albums from that NDR Uncle Poe´s Series, I allready have most of them with exception of those who are not typical jazz musicians so it might be music I´m not listenig to..... Quote
Marzz Posted January 3, 2019 Report Posted January 3, 2019 (edited) On 1/2/2019 at 0:51 AM, sidewinder said: Believe it or not, BBC TV actually did a short Kenny Wheeler documentary which included footage taken at the recording session (CTS, Wembley I think). It was rebroadcast around 2005. The Wheeler 75th and 80th Birthday Big Bands had a similarly eclectic mixture of artists and styles - those bands were full of his friends and colleagues. Duncan Lamont at one end of the spectrum, Evan Parker at the other. Very glad I caught both of those tours. The original Incus ‘Song For Someone’ LP release is quite rare I think. There was a subsequent issue by Incus on thinner vinyl which is more obiquitous. The CD was put out by Evan Parker along with several other choice Wheeler (new) issues at the time. Invaluable ! Thank you very much for mentioning that documentary. I didn't know that but I think I found it on youtube - will be watching that tonight and speaking of Wheeler, now playing... Tony Oxley Quintet - The Baptised Traveller (1969) Edited January 3, 2019 by Marzz Quote
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