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Posted
7 hours ago, Peter Friedman said:

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Saw Alain Jean-Marie in a European rhythm section backing Joe Magnarelli and Dmitry Baevsky in Southport, UK a few years ago, but I've never heard any of his albums.

This one looks promising. Must give it a listen:

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6 hours ago, EKE BBB said:

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:tup :tup

4 hours ago, John Tapscott said:

See the source image

:tup

2 hours ago, EKE BBB said:

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:tup

Posted
12 hours ago, EKE BBB said:

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It´s interesting that in my early youth, the only available Miles-First Quintet album available was "Steamin ´" while the others "Cookin´, Relaxin´, Workin´" we didn´t know about yet. "Steamin" was actually my first jazz LP and the music that turned me to a live long jazz fan. 
Cookin´ Relaxin´was later on a 2 LP thing as it was quite often those days. 
I might say, when I was a kid, goin to school etc. "Miles-Coltrane-Garland-Chambers-Philly J.J." were what I might say "my heroes". Garland the first real jazz pianist I heard (I heard Peterson before but forgot about him after hearing Garland) , and Chambers determined me to buy a bass fiddle with some money my Grandma had left for me..... ,made me practice that bass fiddle day and night and boy I had blisters on my fingers.... 

5 hours ago, John Tapscott said:

:tup

Now:

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Disc 2 

Is this all the 5 BN´s plus "Our Man in Paris" ? Roost means the 1947 session with "April" on it and the 1953 session with "Embraceable You" on it ? It´s interesting that people talk more about the BN 1953 session than the Roost session from the same period. I almost never read something my concrete about the 53 Roost session, it is great, both the ballads and the fantastic "Woody´n You" and the only version of "Bag´s Groove" I heard from Bud. 
But in General I like most the things with horn players added like the first BN and the side B of the third one, and the Dexter session...

3 hours ago, HutchFan said:

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Terrific.  :tup 

 

If I listen to vocal jazz, Billy Eckstine is my first choice, but in my case with the Big Band 1944-1947. I think the last side of the Savoy Double Album "Mr. B. and the Band" is allready something Hollywood-ish with those syropy strings added. 

I could listen for hours to Billy Eckstine and the bop bigband, but there is not so much material...., and I like Kenny Hagood, Johnny Hartman, well those male singers who worked with the boppers, and some Sarah from that time (Mean to Me, Don´t blame me), 
I saw at some friends place once a thing Billy and Sarah and said I must listen to it, and it was great singin, but the band sounded like some of those no name mainstream studio bands of the fifties...

Posted (edited)
4 hours ago, jazzcorner said:

More Parker on Verve - all excellent IMO

 

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In my collection, the "Fiesta" "Bird and Diz", "Swedish Schnapps", and "Cole Porter" have the same album covers, the others were Vol. 1 "Night and Day", Vol. 2 "Strings", Vol. 3 "Now´s the Time", Vol. 7 "Jazz Perennial"....so on,

I don´t know who gave them the vol. numbers, since it´s not chronological. I think it is 8 volumes, it was Japanese LPs. I think the one I listened most too is "Swedish Schnapps". 

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Edited by Gheorghe
Posted (edited)

Trio Hurricane - Suite of Winds (Okka, 1986)R-3130552-1318609943.jpg

I haven't listened to this one in ages. Not sure why, because it's so bloody great.

Glenn Spearman on the rampage with a still young and fresh William Parker, really turning up the heat.

Mental note: listen to more Glenn Spearman.

Edited by Rabshakeh
Posted

Steve Swallow "Real Book" 

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Drums – Jack DeJohnette
Piano – Mulgrew Miller
Producer, Composed By, Arranged By, Bass – Steve Swallow
Tenor Saxophone – Joe Lovano
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Tom Harrell

Posted

The Contemporary Jazz Quintet "Location" Strata cd

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Drums, Percussion – Bud Spangler, Dan Spencer
Electric Bass, Electric Upright Bass – Ron Brooks
Electric Piano – Charles Eubanks
Electric Piano, Piano – Ken Cox
Flugelhorn, Trumpet, Percussion – Charles Moore
Guitar – Ron English
Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Leon Henderson

Posted
48 minutes ago, jazzbo said:

The Contemporary Jazz Quintet "Location" Strata cd

CS678946-01A-BIG.jpg

Drums, Percussion – Bud Spangler, Dan Spencer
Electric Bass, Electric Upright Bass – Ron Brooks
Electric Piano – Charles Eubanks
Electric Piano, Piano – Ken Cox
Flugelhorn, Trumpet, Percussion – Charles Moore
Guitar – Ron English
Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Leon Henderson

:tup

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