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Posted (edited)

From Miles in 1969 to Morgan in 1970:

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7 minutes ago, mikeweil said:

..... Saturday was Groove day here, but I couldn't find the time to post it, so Here they come. finishing the round with the OJC  CD of "Misty" which I pulled from the mailbox today.

A Groove day is a GOOD day.  :g

 

Edited by HutchFan
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Posted

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I lack the perspective to be able to do much more than "appreciate" this one. although I certainly DO appreciate it.

However, as with so many things, Stan Kenton should have been getting THIS guy to write for him in the 70s. It's really interesting writing in more than a few spots. But the the solos happen, and that's where I drift off. Again, I lack the perspective to really get it then.

Posted (edited)

Some while ago I was listening to this

Quebec_45.jpg

and now to to this

ike-quebec-blue-harlem-quintets-swing_1_

So Quebec from the beginnings of BN and the early sixties, I think. And he performs in both with the same emotion and forcefulness.

Edited by Bluesnik
Posted
10 minutes ago, Bluesnik said:

Some while ago I was listening to this

Quebec_45.jpg

and now to to this

ike-quebec-blue-harlem-quintets-swing_1_

So Quebec from the beginnings of BN and the early sixties, I think. And he performs in both with the same emotion and forcefulness.

True.

Posted
9 hours ago, HutchFan said:

71Ma-gSv7ML._SX466_.jpg

Art Farmer - Brass Shout and Aztec Suite (Blue Note, originally UA)
I love the big fat bottom that Don Butterfield's tuba brings to Brass Shout.  I guess Benny Golson deserves credit for the arrangements -- and Percy Heath too for the way that he and Butterfield dance around one another so beautifully in the basement.

 

and

81LzKB6Qr%2BL._SL466_.jpg

Miles Davis Quintet - Live in Europe 1969: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 2 (Sony Legacy)
Disc 2

Incredible.  All of them.  But Wayne!  Phew!!!

 

The Miles 1969 is really interesting. Such a large range of program, they played some old swing stuff like "NO Blues" or "Milestones" and also the then brand new Bitches Brew stuff like "Miles runs the Voodoo down"...… Only the tune "Directions" never really reached me, somehow it´s too free, but not free in the manner I like it (Ornette Coleman), but in a colder, more intellectual manner…..

Posted
16 hours ago, Peter Friedman said:

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Funny I never knew this with this title, *or* Take This Hammer  which Discogs indicates was the original release. But since I recognized the tune, I knew I had it from some oddball "blues" LP box I got years ago, pretty sure it was the only session I transferred to digital (maybe the other was Odetta?). Anyway, with Teddy Edwards, so many, many :tup from me.

Posted
16 hours ago, soulpope said:

Desert island platter ....

It really is. Three founders of bop with the great Pierre Michelot, such a great Album of vintage bop played at it´s best. they all really cook on this Album.

Posted

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simultaneously exciting and depressing. The energy level is high, and Red Holloway is in his primest of prime forms here, but Sonny Stitt, in keeping up and not falling behind, sounds...tired, and old, like an aging warrior who is doing this because there's nothing else he CAN do...he's still got skills, but you can also hear that he's wearing himself out.

No matter how good it is, hearing Stitt here can possibly ask the question of it this is all there is to this, maybe there's something else to be had out of this life.

?

Records like this need to exist, because that's a question that should always be asked.

Posted
18 hours ago, JSngry said:

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Art Davis, Elvin Jones, and presumably God, all in the same place at the same time doing the same thing.

and yet...

It's a subgenre--the swinging jazz priest/reverend. There is a follow-up album on RCA, with less esteemed sidemen, but live at Baker's Keyboard Lounge.Image result for father Tom Vaughn

Posted
8 minutes ago, kh1958 said:

It's a subgenre--the swinging jazz priest/reverend. There is a follow-up album on RCA, with less esteemed sidemen, but live at Baker's Keyboard Lounge.Image result for father Tom Vaughn

and there's one more RCA, look for it if you like...the cat got a 3-record deal with RCA.

It's actually called Cornbread...

Posted

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Tab Smith is one of those guys who, since I have only a couple of discs featuring him, and since I only listen to those discs infrequently (i'm sure it's been years since I last listened to this CD), each time I do listen to him, it's like making a new discovery each time!  "Hey, this guy's good!".

Posted

Right now the second disc, with the for me a bit hard to understand "Directions", the Spanish Key from the later album Bitches Brew, and strange enough for that period, a swinging "No Blues" and Nefertiti from earlier periods. 

Download.jpg

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