Dan Gould Posted December 31, 2025 Report Posted December 31, 2025 Let's get this party started, if anyone is so inclined New Year's Eve. 10 tunes / 66 minutes or so. Same programming approach as a year ago, in this case five pairs of different performances of the same tune. All but one are standards and I expect will at least be ID'd. One track is an absolute gimme but that means its probably 50/50 ID'd/missed. No Percy France, no Gene Harris. Actually there isn't even a faux Gene Harris track to throw you off. https://thomkeith.net/2026-organissimo-blindfold-tests/ Quote
felser Posted 22 hours ago Report Posted 22 hours ago 1 – Highly enjoyable, especially enjoying the bass player and piano. **** 2 – Funkier than I’m used to from Dan! Electric sax(es) wear, as does wah-wah guitar Composition and arrangement don’t anything for me. Dave Sanborn? * 3 – Things ain’t what they used to be, indeed! Back on the enjoyable good foot. ***1/2 4 – All the things you are. I like the bass player, but the whole thing is pretty ragged, though still enjoyable ***1/2 5 – Who Can I Turn To. Nicely done all around, love the pianist’s work! Enjoyed the guitar. **** 6 – Things… again. Good blues playing, but I enjoyed the approach on the first version more. *** 7 – Killer! This is the one cut I need if I don’t already own it! I should be able to ID the song, but am going blank on the title. I bet the whole album is good. ****1/2 8 – Who Can I Turn To, in a comatose version. Not doing well with this cut and especially this tenor player, though it’s probably someone you love. Sorry. ** 9 – All The Things You Are, slowed down and on clarinet. I like this tune fast, though I don’t hate on this the way I did the previous cut. But I also don’t need to hear it again. **1/2 10 – See comments to #2, although at least the sax isn’t electrified, and the conga solo is kind of cool. *1/2 No artist ID’s, a range of responses, and I look forward to the reveals on my favorite cuts (1,5,7 especially, but also 3,4), and I expect I have one or two of them on the shelves already. Have a safe and prosperous 2026, my friend! Quote
Dan Gould Posted 10 hours ago Author Report Posted 10 hours ago (edited) 11 hours ago, felser said: 1 – Highly enjoyable, especially enjoying the bass player and piano. **** 2 – Funkier than I’m used to from Dan! Electric sax(es) wear, as does wah-wah guitar Composition and arrangement don’t anything for me. Dave Sanborn? * YES - Sanborn. Chosen purely to allow me to include track 10. I wonder if anyone can ID it and from there, knock off #10 too. BTW my info doesn't mention electrified sax. 3 – Things ain’t what they used to be, indeed! Back on the enjoyable good foot. ***1/2 4 – All the things you are. I like the bass player, but the whole thing is pretty ragged, though still enjoyable ***1/2 5 – Who Can I Turn To. Nicely done all around, love the pianist’s work! Enjoyed the guitar. **** Have never heard the song as anything but a ballad so this one really stood out. 6 – Things… again. Good blues playing, but I enjoyed the approach on the first version more. *** Again ... alternate approaches. I nearly chose The Three Sounds version from the Moods LP which is even slower and a major favorite from the first time I heard it. 7 – Killer! This is the one cut I need if I don’t already own it! I should be able to ID the song, but am going blank on the title. I bet the whole album is good. ****1/2 You loved the track but had no guesses on the one chosen as a Gimme. I wonder how long it will take before you smack yourself on the head when somebody does get it. 8 – Who Can I Turn To, in a comatose version. Not doing well with this cut and especially this tenor player, though it’s probably someone you love. Sorry. ** Well I already had a gimme and I wasn't going to use Dex's version from Clubhouse! 9 – All The Things You Are, slowed down and on clarinet. I like this tune fast, though I don’t hate on this the way I did the previous cut. But I also don’t need to hear it again. **1/2 To me this may be even more extreme in the opposite direction than the bouncy Who Can I Turn To. The clarinetist mentions in the liners wanting to bring this tune back to what it was written as, a lovely ballad. I think he does that in spades, and it was a big revelation to me. Mileage. 10 – See comments to #2, although at least the sax isn’t electrified, and the conga solo is kind of cool. *1/2 Hoping @mikeweil listens and has thoughts on the congas. No artist ID’s, a range of responses, and I look forward to the reveals on my favorite cuts (1,5,7 especially, but also 3,4), and I expect I have one or two of them on the shelves already. Have a safe and prosperous 2026, my friend! You also and thanks as always for your unvarnished thoughts! Edited 10 hours ago by Dan Gould Quote
randyhersom Posted 7 hours ago Report Posted 7 hours ago No misses! 1. Sounds like two different tracks were merged into track 1. The first had me thinking Lockjaw. 2. and 2 repeats the second part of 1. Parts of it almost exactly duplicate Pickin Up the Pieces by Average White Band. Wonder which came first. No worries either way, an enjoyable piece of R&B played by capable jazz players. 3. a Duke cover. Is it Things Ain't What They Used to Be? Illinois Jacquet? Live, so maybe JATP? 4. All the Things You Are. Something about the opening made me think of Ira Sullivan. 5. Guitar and tenor featured prominently. 6. Nice greasy bassline. Is it Things Ain't What They Used to Be? 7. Fast bebop. Jaws and Griff? 8. Is this Who Can I Turn to? Nice gruff tenor, but maybe not as gruff as Ben Webster, so maybe a good time to guess Percy France. 9. All the Things You are slowed down to ballad pace on a clarinet. Buddy DeFranco? 10. Average White Band? Nah, too long for a radio band. An enjoyable piece of R&B played by capable jazz players. Quote
Dan Gould Posted 7 hours ago Author Report Posted 7 hours ago 26 minutes ago, randyhersom said: No misses! Music to my ears!! 1. Sounds like two different tracks were merged into track 1. The first had me thinking Lockjaw. @tkeith! I made a mistake on the upload of Track 1 to Thom's server, which I caught yesterday and Thom had fixed. When I double checked his correction, the fix hadn't seemed to take but when I tried on a different PC all was fine. So I have no clue how you heard my original error. 2. and 2 repeats the second part of 1. Parts of it almost exactly duplicate Pickin Up the Pieces by Average White Band. Wonder which came first. No worries either way, an enjoyable piece of R&B played by capable jazz players. Never heard this tune or, to my knowledge Average White Band unless they had a hit that I would unwittingly know. Felser got the leader above. 3. a Duke cover. Is it Things Ain't What They Used to Be? Illinois Jacquet? Live, so maybe JATP? Yes to Things Ain't. Not Jacquet, not JATP. 4. All the Things You Are. Something about the opening made me think of Ira Sullivan. Not Ira. The trumpeter is an artist I did not expect to hear with the leader. 5. Guitar and tenor featured prominently. 6. Nice greasy bassline. Is it Things Ain't What They Used to Be? Correct. 7. Fast bebop. Jaws and Griff? YES! Though the tune is ID'd more as swing. 8. Is this Who Can I Turn to? Nice gruff tenor, but maybe not as gruff as Ben Webster, so maybe a good time to guess Percy France. I did mention above Percy does not make an appearance this year. 9. All the Things You are slowed down to ballad pace on a clarinet. Buddy DeFranco? Not Buddy DeFranco. Not as well known. 10. Average White Band? Nah, too long for a radio band. An enjoyable piece of R&B played by capable jazz players. Glad you enjoyed the selections Randy and Happy New Year! Quote
randyhersom Posted 6 hours ago Report Posted 6 hours ago I do the download. Pickin' Up the Pieces by Average White Band was indeed a seventies radio hit that you and the late David Sanborn might unwittingly know. I think I can deduce then, that 1 and 7 are the same tune, Quote
Dan Gould Posted 6 hours ago Author Report Posted 6 hours ago 12 minutes ago, randyhersom said: I do the download. Pickin' Up the Pieces by Average White Band was indeed a seventies radio hit that you and the late David Sanborn might unwittingly know. Ahh, that's the name of that song. Something that couldn't be avoided if you heard top 40 radio. Both tunes are from the same approximate time period but I don't really hear them as that similar. I think I can deduce then, that 1 and 7 are the same tune, Correct, every tune has its matching/different/better performance. Quote
Dub Modal Posted 4 hours ago Report Posted 4 hours ago Happy new year! 1 - Old school style on the tenor sax. Great tone and playing. Is it the Stitt/Gonsalves duo on Impulse? Was thinking someone like Hank Jones on keys so this kind of makes sense but it's a wild guess. 2 - Average White Band? It's not Pick Up the Pieces but damn, sounds a whole lot like it. If it's not them, then I'm guessing Eddie Harris. 3 - Jam session? The sax honks in the intro are entertaining. Off time and totally random sounding, like someone's fucking around and having fun. Bluesy as hell. Is Earl Bostic involved? 4 - No idea. The recording has the rhythm section a bit buried - there's drums back there somewhere but I can barely make them out. 5 - Coming up with no ideas here. The sax has some Webster-ish style, but I think this was recorded way later than Ben's day. tough one for me. 6 - Dipping way into the blues well again, and I'm loving the slow tempo. Roland Hanna? No idea on sax or elsewhere. At this point I'm realizing that whatever the obvious song is I'm going to miss the hell out of it. 7 - Oh, this must be it. Of course I can't name it but it's really familiar. At the risk of embarrassment, is it Johnny Griffin and Jaws? Whoever it is, it's my favorite track so far of this BFT. 8 - Here we go with some B3. Nice. Love the guitar as well. Well done by whoever's playing. Reverb is present. I can't tell who this is. Wild Bill on organ? 9 - All right, some clarinet. Art Pepper? Having a hard time making a judgement of when this was recorded. 10 - Going out with a bang here. Ronnie Laws maybe? Thanks for putting this together. Enjoyable listen. Quote
Dan Gould Posted 4 hours ago Author Report Posted 4 hours ago 19 minutes ago, Dub Modal said: Happy new year! 1 - Old school style on the tenor sax. Great tone and playing. Is it the Stitt/Gonsalves duo on Impulse? Was thinking someone like Hank Jones on keys so this kind of makes sense but it's a wild guess. Nope, not Stitt, Gonzalves or Hank Jones. 2 - Average White Band? It's not Pick Up the Pieces but damn, sounds a whole lot like it. If it's not them, then I'm guessing Eddie Harris. Not Eddie Harris but this Average White Band/Picking up the Pieces thing must be real. 3 - Jam session? The sax honks in the intro are entertaining. Off time and totally random sounding, like someone's fucking around and having fun. Bluesy as hell. Is Earl Bostic involved? Not Bostic, and I do believe the sax honks are part of the arrangement. They don't strike me as off time. They are rather close-mic'd which I thought some would mention. Not Bostic. 4 - No idea. The recording has the rhythm section a bit buried - there's drums back there somewhere but I can barely make them out. 5 - Coming up with no ideas here. The sax has some Webster-ish style, but I think this was recorded way later than Ben's day. tough one for me. 6 - Dipping way into the blues well again, and I'm loving the slow tempo. Roland Hanna? No idea on sax or elsewhere. At this point I'm realizing that whatever the obvious song is I'm going to miss the hell out of it. Not Hanna. Quite a bit younger. 7 - Oh, this must be it. Of course I can't name it but it's really familiar. At the risk of embarrassment, is it Johnny Griffin and Jaws? Whoever it is, it's my favorite track so far of this BFT. Yes, Griff and Jaws. Everybody likes the Gimme track but nobody is ID-ing the tune or recording. 8 - Here we go with some B3. Nice. Love the guitar as well. Well done by whoever's playing. Reverb is present. I can't tell who this is. Wild Bill on organ? 9 - All right, some clarinet. Art Pepper? Having a hard time making a judgement of when this was recorded. After Pepper died that is for sure. 10 - Going out with a bang here. Ronnie Laws maybe? Nope. Thanks for putting this together. Enjoyable listen. Glad to hear it and thanks for your comments. Quote
Dub Modal Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago Sanborn was nowhere on my radar for track 2. Nice work @felser Once the track is ID'd, the recording date vs AWB's Pick up the Pieces will be interesting Quote
felser Posted 43 minutes ago Report Posted 43 minutes ago 1 hour ago, Dub Modal said: Sanborn was nowhere on my radar for track 2. Nice work @felser Once the track is ID'd, the recording date vs AWB's Pick up the Pieces will be interesting The AWB album with 'Pick Up The Pieces' was released Aug 1974, and the first Sanborn solo album came out in 1975, so 'Pick Up The Pieces' likely came first. 'Pick Up The Pieces' was the #1 pop single in the USA for the week of Feb 22 1975. Quote
JSngry Posted 15 minutes ago Report Posted 15 minutes ago And "Cut The Cake" went to #10. Their Soul Searchin'" album went platinum as well, and they made a not-bad album with Ben E. King They actually crossed over a bit to Black audiences as well, for a while. So...in the air there for a while. Quote
felser Posted 9 minutes ago Report Posted 9 minutes ago My favorite by them, a superior cover of an already-great Isley Brothers song: Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.