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king ubu

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Everything posted by king ubu

  1. I don't really see the points in these "reunions" of bands that may have existed only for one album (sure, the BN guys played together in different groupings all the time, but...) - same for Mwandishi - what's the point? You can't go back in time... Propositions like having Rollins together with some real good musicians again for a change, make much more sense (not to diss Anderson & Scott, but hey... they're just not in his league - and Cranshaw, whom I never found the most interesting bassist anyway, has to be one of the worst electric bass players in jazz... utterly boring is a kind judgment of his contribution to Rollins' music).
  2. which of those is the one in question?
  3. True about Soderbergh, but then for me, he could continue doing great films like "The Limey" and stop doing the others... but then he somehow succeeds in making even his money ones looking good and lovingly done - not something you see in many Hollywood productions. Rather either they're just totally unremarkable, or then they got that "cool" style, which is pretty uncool anyway (if you want cool, go for some film noirs, or stuff like Louis Malle's "Ascenseur pour l'echafaud", not that bluish spacey crap you see in so many Hollywood productions). I guess it's a question of style, and Soderbergh is simply so good as a director, that he succeeds in making stylish films even if it's about the money... or he simply does not want to lose his credentials with film buffs such as me...
  4. Back when I was 13 or 14 or so a friend played me some Yellowjackets, and I haven't liked it even back then, when I was just entering into jazz via late (80s) Miles (which I still like, to some extent, but play much less often than back then.... I went on to Trane and Mingus and Monk quickly from there, so I guess my interest in the likes of the Yellowjackets or Spyro Gyra - the same friend wanted to make me hip to them, too, but they always were boring and simplistic to me, also Corea's electric schtick - has more likely diminished than grown over the years...)
  5. Lots of good recommendations already, but just let me add another for the Columbia 4CD box. Even though I'd have preferred a complete set, for someone getting started on Basie it's a great place, I'd say, presenting different sides of the Count, and also including the great live sets on CD4 (most of which, or all of which, were on Masters of Jazz discs, before).
  6. Fact is everybody who wants to continue making films in the US has to sell out... Polanski or someone (who does films in that league, speaking of costs - although not in the US any longer...) once said in an interview that it was normal for even big names such as him, to do a few films to earn money, and then in between they can afford to do one they really want to do. I assume if his "Pianist" hadn't been the success it was, he'd not have done "Oliver Twist" for another few years, but instead done a few shitty ones to get the money in first... So what about Wong: my guess is: either he'll leave it at one Hollywood film, or if he sticks around, I'd be afraid he's going to sell out, yes. So let's hope he does just this one, let's hope he can lead Norah to act in a sensible way, and let's hope he's out of the big business again after that, doing real films... (Oh, yes, I am *not* the world's biggest Hollywood fan... but hey, look at the sh*t they produce nowadays, and compare that with what they produced in the 40s and 50s - sad times!)
  7. Well yes, maybe you're right. But this sounds like a money-project, not an artistic one, doesn't it? Also I still don't know if this is about doing a remake of "Lady from Shanghai" - if it is, it's simply one of the most stupid decisions any film moghul can make... Welles' film is magnificient. His own and Hayworth's performances are perfect. No way this needs a remake, and no way I'd want Wong to fail with it! Even less with a non-actor with pretty face starring... I like Wong's film a lot, and I find Norah's first disc quite ok, too (I own it, btw, picked it up before all the grammy hype started), so this is not about bashing. It's just plain stupidity to do a remake of one of the greatest director's greatest films.
  8. I think he did mostly studio and TV work, writing and playing, in Hamburg. I even saw him play organ in the role of George Frederic Handel in a hilarious film after an Alejo Carperntier novel. There was a film done out of that book??? "Barocknovelle" is it's german title - much fun to read! I second Emmanuel Bex mentioned above!
  9. he's good enough for her Rita...
  10. She looks splendid with the right hair colour, no?
  11. Hey, wait a minute.... "Lady from Shanghai"???? WTF???????? Norah the next Rita?
  12. I guess her being the father of Ravi will help lending is acting crediblitise smo e?
  13. Here's one, but I have no idea if this is the original cover:
  14. *do* go! I saw them in November, and it was one hell of a great concert! Beautiful music, from beginning to end... from Ellington to "conducted" pieces (meaning the violin lady, the 'bonist, or - most funny to watch - the elderly cello-maniac jumping around in the middle of a stage like doing some kind of tarantella and giving handsigns to all the other musicians...) What a great bunch of musicians! And Mengelberg, although looking pretty old and tired, still is able to create whole soundscapes with just a couple of strokes. Among the horns, all were fine, wtih Delius (definitely a madman...) and Moore (what a great clarinet player he is! I too often just think of him as an alto player) providing highlights and Baars being the least compelling musician. Bennink is of course just great, so is Honsinger (the cello maniac). And the sound they get is simply stunning. All of jazz' history is in it, plus a lot more (free improv, european influences, marching music...), yet in the end they create something out of it that is standing on/for its own, completely, out of these most disparate sources they're using.
  15. WHOAH, Frank Wright in the car??? I guess I'd never be with my girlfriend (or soon 5 years) if I had tested her like that...
  16. Late as so often, but still: Happy birthday!
  17. Sure, that may be true, but then listen to Miles at the Fillmore to hear some terrific trumpet playing that goes far beyond being a "stylist", I'd say. But then, I always thought of Miles being a synthi player, mainly... check "Decoy" for evidence...
  18. Looks like all of Vince's efforts are for naught!!! I couldn't find any sticker in my French Cellar Door box - but I guess that was the freedom fries effect in play, there
  19. aerobics a "more important cultural result"??? a mind-boggling thought of universal importance, I confess...
  20. Chuck, I like your definition. But how about adding the time factor? "organized sounds in time"?
  21. king ubu

    Funny Rat

    Have you heard his solo FMP disc, "Portrait", David? I think that one's excellent!
  22. That sums it up quite nicely. But let me just repeat one thing: Moreau is so absolutely gorgeous in that film!
  23. 3sat, Saturday February 11, 2006, 02:55-04:00 (actually Sunday a.m. but the website lists the after midnight programme still in the previous day's entry): Tomasz Stanko Quartet Jazz Baltica 2005 Mit Tomasz Stanko (Trompete), Marcin Wasilewski (Klavier), Slawomir Kurkiewicz (Bass) und Michal Miskiewicz (Schlagzeug) Erstausstrahlung Der polnische Trompeter Tomasz Stanko kann mit Fug und Recht als eine Leitfigur des europäischen Jazz bezeichnet werden, als einer, der dem amerikanischen Einfluss früh eigenständige Idiome entgegenzusetzen vermochte. Im Quintett seines Mentors Krzysztof Komeda fand Stanko bereits in den 1960er Jahren zu einer lyrischen Sprache, in der sich die Schwermut der Volksmusik seiner Heimat mit freien, von Coleman, Ayler und Mingus beeinflussten Strukturen kreuzte. Gefühl für das Wesentliche Mehr als 40 Jahre nach seiner ersten Band "Jazz Darings" zeichnet Stankos Spiel heute ein untrügliches Gefühl für das Wesentliche aus. Den dunklen, poetischen und intensiven Trompetenton intoniert der 63-Jährige so traumwandlerisch sicher, dass er ihn spielend zwischen melancholisch-kontemplativen und dramatisch-expressiven Stimmungen changieren lassen kann. Während Stanko in den 1990er Jahren mit diversen Aufnahmen sein internationales Renommee weiter ausbaute, formierte er 1994 ein Quartett mit jungen Talenten aus Polen. Acht Jahre lang reifte dieses Trio um den Pianisten Marcin Wasilewski an seiner Seite, bis sie zusammen mit der CD "Soul of Things" ein erstes Ausrufezeichen setzten. Jazz Baltica 2005 Beim JazzBaltica Festival 2005 spielte die Formation unter anderem Stücke ihres aktuellen Albums "Suspended Night". Diese Einspielung wurde in Polen mit Gold ausgezeichnet und ließ den "Guardian" sogar Vergleiche zu Miles Davis' legendärem "Kind of Blue"-Album ziehen. ***** I'll try and get it recorded for me... saw another Stanko tv broadcast (from Polish tv, I think) that was fantastic, so this comes recommended, for anybody within reach of 3sat.
  24. king ubu

    Funny Rat

    I thought you'd chime in Hans! ***** Quick follow up on my Ayler order: here's what I pay for: - 004 Brötz - 017/018 Gahnold - 032 Wallin - 048/049 Feza seems I'll get two free items... and seems they will not be titles that I have already (033 Ayler, 036-040 Lyons, 050/151 Dynamic Duo). Great service from Jan Ström, I must add! I didn't get any mail initially because my online-order never arrived.
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