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Posted

Duke Ellington “Volume 10: 1947-1951” Neatwork cd

I’m glad I picked up this one–it has a few alternates and a number of unissued Columbia sides I have never heard before.

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Posted

Mainstream_1958.jpegTanganyika_Strut.jpegJazz_way_out_2.jpg
Revisting Wilbur Harden Savoy run (with Coltrane+Fuller+Flanagan). Very worthy records, all in all. Love Harden's large, soft sound. Flanagan shines as well.

Posted

Streaming via bandcamp (for the moment):

sirone~~~~~_artistryw_101b.jpg

Sirone - Artistry (Of the Cosmos, 1979); reissued on moved-by-sound
with:
Sirone - Bass
James Newton - Flute
Muneer Bernard Fennell - Cello
Don Moye - Percussion

Beautiful.

 

Posted
3 hours ago, HutchFan said:

Streaming via bandcamp (for the moment):

sirone~~~~~_artistryw_101b.jpg

Sirone - Artistry (Of the Cosmos, 1979); reissued on moved-by-sound
with:
Sirone - Bass
James Newton - Flute
Muneer Bernard Fennell - Cello
Don Moye - Percussion

Beautiful.

 

Fabulous, top five for me. Took a few copies to get a clean one but we'll worth it.

I hear good things about the reissue, it's a needle drop but not at all noticeably a friend assures me

Posted (edited)
45 minutes ago, felser said:

John Klemmer - Brazilia Album Reviews, Songs & More | AllMusic

I have a soft spot for this record.

 

Fight The Big Bull featuring Steven Bernstein – All Is Gladness In The Kingdom (Clean Feed, 2010)

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Edited by Rabshakeh
Posted
50 minutes ago, mjazzg said:

Fabulous, top five for me. Took a few copies to get a clean one but we'll worth it.

I hear good things about the reissue, it's a needle drop but not at all noticeably a friend assures me

I just sold my original LP, which I bought sealed/unplayed, in favor of the new CD. It sounds perfectly fine to me. 

Posted

I just finished playing my favorite Horace Silver recording, "The Hardbop Grandpop". It's just a fun record and swings like hell. Silver's bouncy piano is well placed in the mix and the band is tight. And what a band - with Claudio Roditi, Steve Turre, Michael Brecker, Ronnie Cuber, Ron Carter & Lewis Nash.

Primary

Posted (edited)

IMG-3841.jpg

I remember spinning this one the first time. I was still living with my parents on the attic room of their house and had a pretty nice stereo set up that my brother left to me when he left the house. I was 17 years old and just getting into the more free kind of jazz. I put on disc one sat down and was stunned for the coming 50 minutes. I had never heard something like that before. The version of Afro Blue remains the best with the Classic Quartet IMO. The interruption remains very annoying.

Edited by Pim
Posted
1 minute ago, Pim said:

IMG-3841.jpg

I remember spinning this one the first time. I was still living with my parents on the attic room of their house and had a pretty nice stereo set up that my brother left to me when he left the house. I was 17 years old and just getting into the more free kind of jazz. I put on disc one sat down and was stunned for the coming 50 minutes. I had never heard something like that before. The version of Afro Blue remains the best with the Classic Quartet IMO

Nice to read a story about the first impressions of a certain record. My youth was similar to yours. And in my case I think it was Coltranes "Live at the Village Vanguard Again", the one with Pharoah Sanders, Alice Coltrane , Rashied Ali. And I had similar feelings with all my first 60´s avantgarde albums: Sun Ra´s "Nothing Is", Pharoah Sanders "Live at the East", Ornette Coleman´s "Empty Foxhole). 

It is strange that my main preferences were 40´s bebop and 60´s free jazz. 

17 hours ago, mikeweil said:

NjctMTcyNS5qcGVn.jpeg

I think I have that, with those long tracks . It´s great horn playing, but somehow something from the rhythm section (bass and drums) is missing for me. It sounds incredible straight and metronomelike from the rhythm. Dex and Gray are extraordinary, Howard McGhee is one of my favourites, maybe I´m not a big fan of Sonny Criss in comparation to them. 

Posted
9 hours ago, bresna said:

I just finished playing my favorite Horace Silver recording, "The Hardbop Grandpop". It's just a fun record and swings like hell. Silver's bouncy piano is well placed in the mix and the band is tight. And what a band - with Claudio Roditi, Steve Turre, Michael Brecker, Ronnie Cuber, Ron Carter & Lewis Nash.

Primary

A reminder to self to dig this one out. Those late period Horace’s are fun !

45 minutes ago, BillF said:

👍

👍

Now playing:

an-afternoon-at-birdland.jpg

Reminds me of the gig where JJ was deploying his slide right over my head ! Any other trombonist I would have been worried but, no sweat, JJ’s movements were with absolute precision.

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