
Caravan
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Everything posted by Caravan
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Add Benny Carter (holding newspaper) and blues guitarist T Bone Walker (the spectacled gentleman on the right) to the personal
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Ben Webster and Don Byas welcoming the JATP crew at Amsterdam airport, November 19, 1966 (Ben next to Dizzy, Don next to Hawk).
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That clip from "JATP 1967" is in fact from Oct 1966. Saw Hawk that year with that package. Others were Dizzy, Clark Terry, Zoot Sims, James Moody, Teddy Wilson, Bob Cranshaw, Louie Bellson. That same year I saw Ayler and had seen Coltrane the year before. Memories.
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Has this already been posted? https://youtu.be/jol3rDRS0j8?si=yRtNnx1i3F4gBsId https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=2HLE_JqP9Zk
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"Rollins '57: Sonny Rollins Takes the Lead"
Caravan replied to ghost of miles's topic in Jazz Radio & Podcasts
" In 1957 he was coming off a superlative year; he [.........] continued to work with Clifford Brown....." Clifford Brown died in 1956. -
Rather surprisingly, I found Wilson's better. Despite high expectations (or maybe because of them), Koloda's book is kind of a disaster, considering that it is supposed to be the result of years of work and research. I almost didn't find a single page without factual errors or ridiculous interpretations. It's good though that he spoke with Donald while he was still with us.
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Some fine Sam Dockery solo piano (and talking) here: https://freshairarchive.org/guests/sam-dockery Always had a weak spot for Sam Dockery ever since I first heard him in the early 1960s.
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Sam Dockery 1999. Love it.
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Saw the Quartet, August 1, 1965 at the Comblain-la-Tour festival in Belgium.
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Archie Shepp Bill Dixon Helsinki 1962
Caravan replied to cliffpeterson's topic in Miscellaneous Music
"Don Warren" = Don Moore (of 1963 New York Contemporary Five fame) and "Howard McGray" = Howard McRae (who also played in the 1962 Dixon-Shepp Quartet on Savoy. -
Sonny Rollins "Rollins In Holland: 1967 Studio And Live Recordings"
Caravan replied to ghost of miles's topic in New Releases
There was another concert at jazzclub Persepolis in Utrecht, May 6. I was there too. Don't know if it was recorded. -
Sonny Rollins "Rollins In Holland: 1967 Studio And Live Recordings"
Caravan replied to ghost of miles's topic in New Releases
king ubu: Musis Sacrum is NOT the same as the Akademie voor Beeldende Kunst. The concert was at the aula of the Akademie. I was there. -
Jimmy Heath Big Band, Philadelphia 1948, with Heath conducting, Bird soloing and Coltrane in the reed section.
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Sunny Murray Earl Freeman Don (Rafael) Garrett Art Taylor Frank Wright Bobby Few
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Oscar Pettiford
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I played a lot of chess with (bassist) Victor Kaihatu and with (trombonist) Radu Malfatti.
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Don Byas recorded with the Platters while the latter were in Paris in 1957. Indeed, just a gig, no big deal.
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There is more: https://youtu.be/n0yT6Igk32s https://youtu.be/XlXNrouuLlI
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Shatz wrote: "....Rodgers and Hammerstein’s “This Nearly Was Mine” on his 1960 album The World of Cecil Taylor—one of the last standards he would ever perform...." In 1962 (Copenhagen and Stockholm) he was still playing What's New? and Flamingo, the latter of Earl Bostic (but not written by) renown.
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The personnel listed in that cd is wrong. It is Art Farmer, Eddie Bert, Teo Macero (ts), Monk, Mingus, Willie Jones (dr), recorded Oct 6, 1955. It also contains a little "interview" with Monk, in which he "explains" the tunes played. More about this session can be found here, where Teo Macero recalls some hilarious moments of that day. Note that Macero names Dannie Richmond as the drummer, but it really is Willie Jones, who was working with Monk at the time (in as far as Monk was working at all during that period).
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I have been informed that "Leo planned his decease himself, he had been ill for several years. It all went in accordance with the rules (law) and accompanied by doctors". Little Leo was a good friend of mine. May he have found the peace he had been longing for so long.
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I suspect the culprits are European. In fact, as soon as I heard the drummer, I thought "Europe". The garnerish pianist that comes after it is - towards the end - identified as Danish, with German bass and drums.
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Are you guys referring to the "unidentified live performance" that comes right after the Bob LaPlante interview? That's not Byas, but - guess what - unidentified performers.