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Posted

Enjoyed  both sides of Vol. 1 for sure, but didn't quite see how Buckner's work, enjoyable though it is, is also (as Jim seems to imply)  that unusual or weird. Freewheelingly loose it is, if you will, especially in this jam session context, but all the other players seem to deal with it in a more or less unthreatened, swirl of a cape manner, the way a matador might deal with a rampaging bull. Of particular interest, I thought, was the way Roland Hanna (whose solos IIRC follows Buckner's on both tracks) seem to have imbibed some of Milt's freewheeling juice.

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5 hours ago, soulpope said:

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This old warhorse is imperturbable ....

Old warhorse? Hand me my cane and sllppers.

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Posted (edited)

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40 minutes ago, Larry Kart said:

Old warhorse? Hand me my cane and sllppers.

"Old" is a relative term. I'd just turned 8 years old when that record was made in February 1976. So it pre-dates my first forays into jazz by about ten years.

;)

Edited by HutchFan
Posted
41 minutes ago, Larry Kart said:

Enjoyed  both sides of Vol. 1 for sure, but didn't quite see how Buckner's work, enjoyable though it is, is also (as Jim seems to imply)  that unusual or weird. Freewheelingly loose it is, if you will, especially in this jam session context, but all the other players seem to deal with it in a more or less unthreatened, swirl of a cape manner, the way a matador might deal with a rampaging bull. Of particular interest, I thought, was the way Roland Hanna (whose solos IIRC follows Buckner's on both tracks) seem to have imbibed some of Milt's freewheeling juice.

61mYxGW7SaL._AC_SR250,230_.jpg

 

These kind of lengthy Jam Session recordings are far from favorites of mine. They usually have a few good solos, but just one long set of solos gets rather tedious in my opinion. There are, of course, some exceptions such as the lengthy Jam Session with Bird, Hodges, Carter, etc.

I would find these very long tunes much more interesting if there were arrangements with some group playing between and setting off each soloist.

Posted

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Does it bother anyone besides me that the photo on this 1971 recording is from 1947? Sure, that's a terrific photo of Monk -- and a famous one. But why not choose an image that's from around the time that the record was made??? That photo is anachronistic. 

... Of course, the music is far beyond all criticism. 

 

Posted
6 minutes ago, HutchFan said:

Does it bother anyone besides me that the photo on this 1971 recording is from 1947?

Count me in. Here is another example for this practice of using cover photos of a much younger musician

Chet certainly did not look like that in 1982.

Posted (edited)
25 minutes ago, Misterioso said:

Chet certainly did not look like that in 1982.

Yep.

Another VERY famous anachronistic cover photo:

davis_miles_kindofblu_105b.jpg

This was the first version of KoB that I purchased. I soon realized that the photo was out-of-time AND reversed! :o

Edited by HutchFan
Posted
4 hours ago, HutchFan said:

51-nwDteVfL.jpg

Does it bother anyone besides me that the photo on this 1971 recording is from 1947? Sure, that's a terrific photo of Monk -- and a famous one. But why not choose an image that's from around the time that the record was made??? That photo is anachronistic. 

... Of course, the music is far beyond all criticism. 

 

It bothers me too. I hate to see cover photos that are from another period of the live of the Artists. 

It also happens in the opposite manner: You see a cover photo of a later period of the Artists, only to discover that the Music is from an early stage of his Career .

Posted

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Wayne during these years was like Elliot Carter. Or somebody, I don't know. Just lightening fast (or faster) motivic development in the service of a looooong developmental arc. To do this in an improvisational setting (and comparing all the Lost Quintet performances, the improvisational element is quite well-revealed), is a glorious triumph of some of the human potentials,

Posted

I heard Griff in April 1978 just before he returned to the States. 

This record was done shortly after his return. 

Then I saw the working quartet with Ronnie Matthews in spring 1980. 

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