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Stereojack

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Posts posted by Stereojack

  1. I've always loved "A Night at the Village Vanguard" on Argo, later reissued as "Man at Work" on Cadet, and most recently under its original title on a Chess CD. THis has been allowed to go out of print, but I gotta think that the geniuses at Universal will dust this one off again soon. It's a great trio album with Richard Davis & Roy Haynes.

    Burrell & Jimmy Smith were always a good fit - I especially like Burrell on "Back at the Chicken Shack". "Blue Bash" and "Organ Grinder Swing" are pretty hot as well.

  2. was charlie's son named "baird" or "laird"? i've seen references to both names.

    what ever happened to him?

    His full name was Charles Baird Parker. He once sent a letter to Down Beat setting the record straight.

    Don't know what happened to him, but Bird's oldest son Leon, born in Kansas City, was a barber, and passed away within the last couple of years.

  3. Stardust / Cross Your Heart / Frenesi:

    October 31, 1957, LA Ray Linn (tp), Buddy DeFranco (cl), Paul Smith (p), Barney Kessel (g), Joe Mondragon (b), Milt Holland (d)

    Medley Dancing In the Dark etc / Indian Love Call / Summit Ridge Drive:

    October 31, 1957, LA Ray Linn (tp), Buddy DeFranco (cl), Paul Smith (p), Howard Roberts (g), Joe Mondragon (b), Milt Holland (d)

    Keeping Myself For You / My Heart Stood Still / Medley It Could Happen To You etc / Concerto For Clarinet:

    November 1, 1957, LA Ray Linn (tp), Buddy DeFranco (cl), Jimmy Rowles (p), Barney Kessel (g), Joe Mondragon (b), Alvin Stoller (d)

  4. Or

    can somebody tell me if a jazzland stereo record (red label) from 1962 must have a deep groove on the label ??

    Original Jazzland pressings have an orange label for mono, black label for stereo.

    After the label was sold to Orpheum around 1964, many of the titles were repressed for the cutout bins with maroon labels.

  5. Chuck, I own a retail store and we accept credit cards with service provided by our bank, and Paypal for our Ebay sales. The fees are about the same for both, but the credit card fees are determined by the volume of business one does - the more volume, the lower the fees. I have been through several providers over the years, with some high fees in the past, but ultimately went with my bank for reasons of convenience.

    I have been very satisfied with Paypal - I have yet to have a problem. I have encountered customers who refuse to deal with Paypal, but I have never heard a valid reason other than "I just don't trust them."

    As for the NoPaypal website link, if one reads between the lines, it is clear that this is a competitor trying to sell you their service, so I would be suspicious of any claims they make.

    Checks are still a valid option, but the risks can be high. Anybody who takes checks will eventually get a bouncer, and the last thing I want to do is chase after somebody! I recommend that you wait several days until the check clears before shipping the merchandise, unless of course you already know the buyer.

    Credit cards are necessary in today's retail world - fully one half to two thirds of my retail business is with credit cards - and I couldn't possibly stay in business if I didn't take them. Perhaps you might consider altering your prices to include processing fees.

  6. Superb pianist! Took some heat from some critics because of his prodigious technique, but I think he backs it up with great ideas and powerful swing. Made a series of great albums for Contemporary (all available on OJC); also recorded for RCA, Atlantic, Pablo, & Roulette.

    I heard a few years ago that Capitol was going to reissue the two Roulette albums on one CD, but AFAIK it hasn't happened.

    Shanachie has released a great TV appearance he made in the early 1960's on VHS, don't know if this has made it to DVD yet.

  7. Seven albums released by Johnny Cash on Memphis' storied Sun Records label will be packaged together in a limited edition box set due May 24 from Varese Sarabande's Varese Vintage label, distributed through Universal.

    "The Original Sun Albums -- The Complete Collection" will comprise "Johnny Cash With His Red Hot and Blue Guitar" (1957), "Johnny Cash Sings the Songs That Made Him Famous" (1958), "Greatest!" (1959), "Johnny Cash Sings Hank Williams ...and Other Favorite Tunes" (1960), "Now Here's Johnny Cash" (1961), "All Aboard the Blue Train With Johnny Cash" (1962), "The Original Sun Sound of Johnny Cash" (1964).

    All of the discs will feature the artwork that appeared on the original release, and each includes six bonus tracks. At deadline, the individual track lists for the albums were not available.

    Many of these albums were issued long after Cash had left Sun. I believe many of the later releases repeat tracks from earlier ones. If these are programmed exactly as the original LP's were, there's going to be a lot of duplication.

  8. BG:Has Rollins ever been a big commercial success? Has most of his earnings come from live performance?

    When Sonny Rollins signed with RCA back in 1961, it was for a figure that was considered to be pretty substantial at the time (can't recall the actual amount). I don't believe that "Alfie" was any more of a "hit" than a number of other Rollins LP's; it appears that Mr. Crouch is talking through his hat again.

    And as for the Marsalis reference, I'm with you Marty!!!

  9. I've been a satisfied Netflix customer for almost 2 years now. We were originally given a 6 month membership as a gift, and continued our membership after the gift period ran out. In the time we have been members we have seen a price increase and then a decrease to below the initial price. We are very happy with the service, and in a few instances when the disc arrived damaged, the replacement process was smooth and hassle-free. The turnaround time is usually 2 or 3 business days. Netflix has revolutionized the movie rental business, and Blockbuster and a few others are getting into the act now. Netflix is now offering a wider variety of plans to suit the needs of individuals, responding to the competion, I guess. I've been a 3-at-a-time member all along, and it works fine.

  10. I have at least one other canyon lp. Canyon 7704 (Stanley was 7701 - there's at least 2 more Canyon lps) "I'm A Loser" by Doris Duke. Produced in Macon Ga by Jerry Williams aka Swampdog. It's a good record.

    Canyon was primarily an R & B label. Swamp Dogg's first album "Total Destruction To Your Mind" was Canyon 7706. Swamp Dogg produced Doris Duke (2 LP's, I think) and Irma Thomas (at least one single, no album) for the label as well. I think the label was owned by Wally Roker.

    There is also a Canyon label which features Native American recordings - no connection.

  11. Is that the latest edition of Bryuninckx you have? I can't afford the update right now.

    In my older edition he links this to a Brew Moore track with Tjader, "Dues Blues"" on Fantasy 3-264. Sound and style etc. would fit into the scheme.

    Mine is not the current edition. I have the series of paperbacks with the brownish covers that came out in the 1980's.

  12. Bruyninckx has "Concert, University of California, Los Angeles, California, early 1958" for the Tjader track - is that info from you, Jack?

    My edition of Bruyninckx says November 5, 1957, San Francisco. I'd be willing to bet that this track can also be traced to Fantasy, but somebody's gotta sit down and compare tracks, and I just don't have the energy. :(

  13. Since we're talking about those Crown LPs:

    Bruyninckx mentions "Jazz Latino" by a Tjader group on Crown CLP 5288 - do you have any more info on that? One guy who offered this on ebay says it is a lengthy 12 minute track.

    Bruyninckx has it wrong. "Jazz Latino" is actually "Bill B" from the Fantasy LP "Jazz at the Blackhawk". It runs 6:50. My edition of Bruyninckx shows "Jazz Latino" as being from the 1/20/57 Blackhawk session, but what Mr. B doesn't know is that it is simply a retitling of one of the tracks on the LP.

    Years ago I had a Crown LP that featured Dave Brubeck and Cal Tjader, among others. The Brubeck track was entitled "At a Perfume Counter", and the Tjader was "Jazz Latino". Eventually I determined that the Brubeck & Tjader tracks were from Fantasy, and once I had the Fantasy albums, there was no need to keep the Crown record, so I can't confirm the catalog number. However, I can tell you with certainty that these tracks are not exclusive to Crown. "At a Perfume Counter" was actually "Crazy Chris", btw, and I see that Raben does show this as being on Crown 5056/5288 as well as the Fantasy issues. So I guess that the Crown LP I had years ago was the one that was offered on Ebay.

  14. This LP is a compilation, and could anybody provide me with info on the titles marked * - thanks as always:

    Side One:

    1. Crazy Time (Dave Brubeck)

    2. Blue Lou (Wardell Gray)

    3. Cold Night *

    4. Big Boy *

    Side Two:

    1. Journey's End (Cal Tjader)

    2. Groovin' High *

    3. Wash Out *

    There are different versions of this available. My copy is a little different from yours:

    1. Crazy Time (aka Crazy Chris)

    2. Blue Lou

    3. Body and Soul

    4. Cold Night

    1. Journey's End - Cal Tjader

    2. Big Boy (Part 1)

    3. Groovin' High

    4. Wash Out

    Big Boy - Lighthouse All Stars - June, 1952, location unknown

    Shorty Rogers (tp), Milt Bernhart (tb), Jimmy Giuffre (ts), Frank Patchen (p), Howard Rumsey (b), Shelly Manne (d)

    Groovin' High - "Just Jazz" All Stars - April 29, 1947, Pasadena, CA

    Howard McGhee (tp), Sonny Criss (as), Wardell Gray (ts), Dodo Marmarosa (p), Red Callendar (b), Jackie Mills (d)

    Cold Night - this track also appears on Crown 5008 (Jazz Surprise) as "High Time". The track features an R&B style tenor sax, no idea who it is.

    Wash Out - again, no details, but the alto player sounds an awful lot like Jackie McLean. Another track by the same alto player (These Foolish Things, issued on a Stan Getz LP on United) has been accredited to Sonny Stitt in some discographies, but I believe that this is false.

  15. I had the pleasure of having Jimmy as a guest on my radio show one afternoon back in the 1980's. Needless to say, it was a delight and he was a gracious person who was happy to reminisce about his many experiences in music . I saw him a few more times in the following years and always enjoyed his company. This is very sad news.

  16. The Commodore album is from a broadcast and has pretty good sound quality. It was first issued as a 2-LP set in the early 1980's, and later included on the Mosaic set. Kelley's playing is quite extraordinary, somewhere between Art Tatum and Lennie Tristano if you can imagine that. Unfortunately the music is hampered by a very mundane clarinet player (who happens to be the leader of the session), a Benny Goodman wannabe.

    The Arcadia album, not actually issued by the IAJRC but by a prominent member of the organization, Dick Raichelson, on his own label, is marred by poor sound quality. Some of the tracks were made on a defective tape recorder which did not erase what was previously on the tape, so there is interference. Still, it is worth checking out since there is so little Kelley in existence.

    Years ago I read an article about Kelley in Down Beat in which a broadcast of "Flying Home" from 1948, I think, was mentioned and praised. That track has yet to surface, to my knowledge.

  17. I've often read that the song Brilliant Coners had twenty-four takes, and the musicians still didn't satisify Monk's "quality control". So, just how many takes were spliced together to get the final version? Were there other Monk compositions that had to have many takes spliced together also? Enquiring minds need to know, or was BC unique in this regard?

    I can't speak for other Monk compositions, but Brilliant Corners was definitely spliced together. Apparently the musicians were introduced to the tune at the recording session, and just couldn't make one flawless take.

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