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Everything posted by Larry Kart
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Former Member bill barton
Larry Kart replied to alocispepraluger102's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
FWIW, as I wrote the other day to a friend here: Sadly, or much worse than sadly, it's part of the human condition, which of course is no excuse. OTOH, I don't know Barton personally, only through his posts on Organissimo, so I don't have to deal with that personal sense of confusion, anger, you name it. -
Tried to merge the threads, but it didn't work. I give up.
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Sorry, Jim, I had to delete your "Dinosaur" post on the duplicate thread on this topic because for some reason I was unable to merge the two threads. Please feel free to post it again here.
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Heard that band on a package tour before I knew who Dolphy was. He made quite an impact; on bass clarinet it sounded like he'd invented a new instrument, which was more or less the case.
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Former Member bill barton
Larry Kart replied to alocispepraluger102's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
OK -- but let's be careful here about assuming that this is our Bill Barton or, if it is, that these charges are true. -
Check out Johnny Frigo (one of the composers, along with Herb Ellis and Lou Carter, of "Detour Ahead"). Frigo's way with the jazz violin was not the only way, but I like it a lot: http://www.npr.org/search/index.php?programId=24&prgTitle=Piano+Jazz&searchinput=johnny+frigo At the time of this encounter with Marian McPartland, he was a mere 81.
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You had confidence in it? Why?
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The Casals. I was impressed by the transfers. Best I'd heard of that material.
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My already low hopes have been dashed: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4j9JOYtWpr0
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Above I said that IMO Dave Binney sometimes runs figures into the ground. I've just heard his 2010 album "Barefooted Town" (CrissCross) and don't hear anything of the sort.
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GRRR!
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Got me some Mother Teresas signed by John Wayne Gacy.
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The autographed by Wynton thing is kind of mind-boggling. How could anyone involved think this was a good idea?
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Thanks, Jim.
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Thanks, Niko. I keep forgetting about the Smalls archive because normally I don't listen much to music on the computer.
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Thanks everybody. I'm listening to clips. So far I like Jaleel Shaw's relaxed fluidity and would like to hear more of Logan Richardson, though he may prove to be too system-driven for me; again, I'd like to hear more. Even though he's been around for a good while and made lots of records, does Dave Binney count here? Some Binney I've liked a good deal; other Binney not so much. At times he seems to play beyond the point he should IMO, runs figures into the ground. BTW, does anyone have an answer to this YouTube problem. Some clips play right through, others stop and start with that rolling white ball effect, which leads me to depart. Any remedies?
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No, Lage Lund is a guitarist, and because he's on Vinson's album and Vinson is on an album by another guitarist Jonathan Kreisberg I took the liberty (so to speak) of introducing that side topic. BTW, unless you're just toying with me, my original post identified both Lund and Kreisberg as guitarists. Radley is too.
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After a post in praise of Vinson by Tom Storer on the "Live Music" forum, I weighed in to say that I'd found Vinson's playing attractive on a recent album by the at times rather slick but IMO talented guitarist Jonathan Kreisberg, "Shadowless" (Vinson is a member of Kresiberg's band). Since then I bought a copy of Vinson's "Stockholm Syndrome" (Criss Cross), with guitarist Lage Lund, pianist Aaron Parks, bassist Orlando LeFleming, and drummer Kendrick Scott. Though I basically like his rather lean, lithe, pony-like tone, this second encounter with Vinson left me feeling that there may be too many near-rote melodic and harmonic gestures in his playing for my taste, that it's too much about patterns of "substitutions," a la Osby perhaps. Vinson admits to a fondness for Paul Desmond -- not a negative in my book, though Desmond for that matter could get overfond of sequences, as Lee Konitz once pointed out. Oddly enough, though, I also hear a connection to circa 1958 Cannonball Adderley, when he was alongside Coltrane in Miles' sextet. I know -- how could "rather lean" go together with the inherent juiciness of Cannonball's timbre? Well, Vinson's timbre does seem to echo the relative evenness of Cannonball's characteristic timbral "gargle," albeit Vinson bleaches it out in a personal manner; and he also echoes the rather fiddly harmonic busy-ness that Cannonball got into while playing alongside Trane. I wonder if Vinson knows the work of Hal McKusick, who also had an at once lean and gargle-y tone and often wound up juggling a pack of similar melodic-harmonic gestures, though they were his own? I'll probably keep listening to Vinson but wonder what other altoists in this general bag have caught the ears of others here. If indeed they are in this bag, two that I've been impressed by are Greg Ward (from the Chicago area, now mostly based in New York), and Loren Stillman. (Edited to add: I know from abundant experience that Ward has a broader range than "mainstream modern," extending well into what is called "free" playing, and I believe Stillman does too. That the consequences of their broader range(s) can be heard in their "MM" work is probably among the reasons I'm drawn to them.) BTW, I've seen praise directed at Lage Lund, but so far I don't get it. If I had to pick, I'd take Kreisberg, for all his sometime slickness, or Nate Radley, though I've heard less of him recently than I would like, or Liberty Ellman (a very "system oriented" player, but for me his system works and doesn't seem to be playing him).
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YouTube/Mac computer question
Larry Kart replied to Larry Kart's topic in Miscellaneous - Non-Political
Thanks, Shawn. I thought I was losing my mind. -
Running OS X Version 10.6.8 on the IMac I bought back in April, and tonight when I went to YouTube to listen to something there was almost no sound. Checked the volume control, and it was where it should be, diddled with it and still almost no sound. Went it to System Preferences; fiddling with the output volume slider there did nothing. Oddly, when I rebooted the computer, its "I'm back" sound was the same volume as always. Any thoughts, suggestions? P.S. I just played something on ITunes. Volume there is normal.
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Nope. But this particular tale did seem rather Byzantine to me, especially the Phil Spector part.