rostasi Posted Friday at 09:25 PM Report Posted Friday at 09:25 PM https://substack.com/home/post/p-194528027 Quote
Kevin Bresnahan Posted Saturday at 11:53 AM Report Posted Saturday at 11:53 AM I'm up for the Henderson date on CD. My days of buying new vinyl when there's a CD option are slowly going away. I already have too many LPs that I don't have room for. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted Saturday at 09:09 PM Report Posted Saturday at 09:09 PM shop here sold out of the Cecil before I could get over there... drat. If anyone has a line on a copy I would be appreciative! Quote
Ken Dryden Posted Saturday at 09:34 PM Report Posted Saturday at 09:34 PM I've enjoyed the Yusef Lateef, Mal Waldron, Ahmad Jamal, Bill Evans, Michel Petrucciani immensely. I have been impressed with disc 1 of the Henderson, I haven't yet played the Cecil Taylor set. Quote
AllenLowe Posted Saturday at 11:29 PM Report Posted Saturday at 11:29 PM On 2/4/2026 at 2:43 PM, clifford_thornton said: The Annie Ross is pretty cool. Looks like the Cecil is from Paris and not Maeght (as I'd been told) and I will definitely pick it up despite my aversion to the liner note author. I won't mention any names but Phil Freeman is a know-nothing, with a vengeance. Quote
Rabshakeh Posted Sunday at 10:26 AM Report Posted Sunday at 10:26 AM 10 hours ago, AllenLowe said: I won't mention any names but Phil Freeman is a know-nothing, with a vengeance. He's a classic jazz entrepreneur/critic. I don't mean that in a positive way. But I don't dislike him like you do. I would follow one of his recommendations over a recommendation from someone like Chinen. I think his special skill is at least finding out when music has a pulse, which is pretty rare for younger professional jazz critics these days. Quote
mjazzg Posted Sunday at 12:33 PM Report Posted Sunday at 12:33 PM I thought his Cecil book was really disappointing. Very little insight into the man and it became a simple chronological description of the gigs played. I believe there's another bio on the horizon which will hopefully do Taylor justice. As for RSD itself, well the first Little Feat album is one I'm very happy to be reacquainted with. Quote
Eric B Posted Sunday at 01:53 PM Report Posted Sunday at 01:53 PM Thrilled to have found a copy of Buster Williams’s “Pinnacle” at my local. This is the one Mwandishi-adjacent LP that I could never track down. Agree Phil Freeman sucks big time. Sophomoric grouches singularly enthusiastic about “out” music are my least favorite jazz-guy archetype. Quote
Rabshakeh Posted Sunday at 03:32 PM Report Posted Sunday at 03:32 PM There are worse out there, surely. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted Sunday at 04:19 PM Report Posted Sunday at 04:19 PM Freeman is awful. Always has been. Quote
jcam_44 Posted Sunday at 04:20 PM Report Posted Sunday at 04:20 PM 19 hours ago, clifford_thornton said: shop here sold out of the Cecil before I could get over there... drat. If anyone has a line on a copy I would be appreciative! https://www.theingroove.com/products/cecil-taylor-unit-fragments-the-complete-1969-salle-pleyel-concerts-rsd-lp?variant=43432707752142 Quote
Dub Modal Posted Sunday at 04:46 PM Report Posted Sunday at 04:46 PM The Cecil isn't there yet, nor the rest of their 2026 batch of releases that I can tell, but most Elemental albums eventually show up on bandcamp. Quote
felser Posted Sunday at 05:41 PM Report Posted Sunday at 05:41 PM I'm excited to pick up some of these titles on CD Online Day (sic) in a week or so. Starting with the Henderson, Lateef, and Terry Callier. Quote
Aggie87 Posted Sunday at 08:00 PM Report Posted Sunday at 08:00 PM 22 hours ago, clifford_thornton said: shop here sold out of the Cecil before I could get over there... drat. If anyone has a line on a copy I would be appreciative! There are a number of RSD shops that are offering it for sale on their websites now (they can't sell them online until the day after RSD): https://rsdmrkt.com/item/696a4ac0aa6e4202f1ced95d Quote
clifford_thornton Posted Monday at 12:02 AM Report Posted Monday at 12:02 AM thanks; Da Bastids had it & I ordered! Quote
howard.zinman Posted yesterday at 01:40 AM Report Posted yesterday at 01:40 AM Grabbed the the Cecil. I couldn't pass it up. I did pass on the other zvi albums. I can't buy everything. Quote
mjazzg Posted 16 hours ago Report Posted 16 hours ago Anyone bought the Mark Murphy? I'm tempted but would love a steer on the sound quality Quote
clifford_thornton Posted 15 hours ago Report Posted 15 hours ago 12 hours ago, howard.zinman said: I did pass on the other zvi albums. I can't buy everything. yeah, I'm okay with owning the other Elemental/Resonance releases on CD. Quote
Pim Posted 12 hours ago Report Posted 12 hours ago I’m waiting for them to appear on Spotify. I want to listen first before buying. I’ve never liked the way Resonance and Elemtal issue vinyl so it’s cd for me too. Quote
AllenLowe Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago On 4/19/2026 at 11:32 AM, Rabshakeh said: There are worse out there, surely. if you can, find his comments on Charlie Parker, who he thinks was just a harmonic trickster, essentially, who was a virtuoso but, to Freeman, uninteresting. How can anyone who thinks that be taken seriously as a critic? Here is from my Substack column about Freeman: " 1) He says: "He (Byas) came up in the 1930s, when tenor players were supposed to be just one part of a big band, taking the occasional, short solo without disrupting the action on the dance floor." This is a pretty bizarre claim; horn soloists, as Lester Young said frequently, were early on inspired by and offered their own prompts to the dancers. Lester said specifically: "The rhythm of the dancers comes back to you when you are playing." And he was far from the only one; there was Dick Wilson with Jimmy Lunceford’s band, Johnny Hodges and Ben Webster with Duke Ellington’s band, all of whom were public soloists for dancers. And more. Phil, try listening to some records. 2) He compares Byas' tone to Lester Young, which is….well, strange. Byas’ tone was not anything like Lester Young's but related to that of Coleman Hawkins, who was his prime early influence. But strangest of all was Freeman’s comments about bebop, which he doesn’t like much, and Charlie Parker. What he said about Parker was really a disqualifier; how can someone who does not understand basic musical principles write about jazz ? Freeman tells us, in reference to a bebop recording: “Anyway, listening to this mostly makes me think about why Charlie Parker’s music has never had the impact on me that it has had on so many others. Like, I can hear that he’s a virtuoso player, and I acknowledge his influence — he changed the way players after him approached composition, improvisation, and even their tone on their instruments. But any time I read about Parker being called the greatest saxophonist ever, or whatever, I always think Sure, for one particular value of “great.” “His melodically and harmonically adventurous, chord-flipping style (which he famously described as “playing clean and looking for the pretty notes”) is one way to play jazz. But it’s not the only way, by any means. Personally, I have always been more drawn to players with more rawness and grit to to their sound. And I don’t just mean free jazz.” " Quote
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