tomatamot Posted July 14, 2013 Report Posted July 14, 2013 ROOTS - Salutes the Saxophone ( vol. 2 ) Quote
kh1958 Posted July 14, 2013 Report Posted July 14, 2013 Doug Carn, Spirit of the New Land (Black Jazz), Boogaloo Joe Jones, What It Is (Prestige/Fantasy, green label RVG), and Rusty Bryant, Friday Night Funk for Saturday Night Brothers (Prestige/Fantasy, green label RVG). Quote
mjazzg Posted July 14, 2013 Report Posted July 14, 2013 Sadik Hakim Trio: Witches, Goblins, etc. (Steeplechase) Am I the only person that finds the "etc" in the title intriguing/redundant/lazy? They couldn't think of other otherworldly entities? or they didn't have space on the sleeve? Quote
paul secor Posted July 14, 2013 Report Posted July 14, 2013 Sadik Hakim Trio: Witches, Goblins, etc. (Steeplechase) Am I the only person that finds the "etc" in the title intriguing/redundant/lazy? They couldn't think of other otherworldly entities? or they didn't have space on the sleeve? Blame Sadik Hakim. He titled the tune. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted July 14, 2013 Report Posted July 14, 2013 ^ Beautiful. Now: Steve Gunn - Time Off - (Paradise of Bachelors) Excellent contemporary folk-rock. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted July 14, 2013 Report Posted July 14, 2013 An early '80s MCA reissue (missing 2 tunes - produced by Steve Hoffman) of Quote
Kevin Bresnahan Posted July 14, 2013 Report Posted July 14, 2013 Just finished: Art Pepper - Neon Art Volume One Now playing: She & Him - Volume 3 Quote
paul secor Posted July 15, 2013 Report Posted July 15, 2013 Howard McGhee: The Sharp Edge (Black Lion/Trio Japan) (Couldn't find an image that matched the cover of my copy) Some beautiful playing by Howard McGhee on this one. Quote
jeffcrom Posted July 15, 2013 Report Posted July 15, 2013 (edited) Roy Eldridge - Rockin' Chair (Verve). A beautiful, noiseless Japanese pressing. Later: Just looked at an Eldridge discography to pin down the dates and personnel. There really weren't any records Roy made as a leader between 1962 and 1972? Wow - that's an absolute crime. Edited July 15, 2013 by jeffcrom Quote
tomatamot Posted July 15, 2013 Report Posted July 15, 2013 ART ENSEMBLE OF CHICAGO - Art Ensemble Of Soweto Quote
jeffcrom Posted July 15, 2013 Report Posted July 15, 2013 Humphrey Lyttelton - Jazz at the Royal Festival Hall (UK Parlophone 10"). I no longer remember where I got this record, but I'm glad I found it. This 'Merican has a soft spot for the better European trad bands. They add their own flavor to the basic New Orleans style, and often have a more varied and interesting repertoire than American "dixieland" bands. Quote
Homefromtheforest Posted July 15, 2013 Report Posted July 15, 2013 Sun Ra "night of the purple moon" (intergalactic, USA) Hans Reichel/Eroc "kino" (teldec, Germany) David Durrah "angelic streams" (qpsm, USA) Quote
BillF Posted July 15, 2013 Report Posted July 15, 2013 Humphrey Lyttelton - Jazz at the Royal Festival Hall (UK Parlophone 10"). I no longer remember where I got this record, but I'm glad I found it. This 'Merican has a soft spot for the better European trad bands. They add their own flavor to the basic New Orleans style, and often have a more varied and interesting repertoire than American "dixieland" bands. Played that one thin when I was 17. One of my first records - 10" LP. Quote
jeffcrom Posted July 15, 2013 Report Posted July 15, 2013 Jim Hall - Jazz Guitar (PJ). The rough condition of my copy became easier to take when I learned that the original tapes are gone, and that subsequent issues had edited tracks and overdubbed drums. This again. Quote
tomatamot Posted July 15, 2013 Report Posted July 15, 2013 PEPPER ADAMS - The Cool Sound Of Pepper Adams Quote
sidewinder Posted July 15, 2013 Report Posted July 15, 2013 (edited) Humphrey Lyttelton - Jazz at the Royal Festival Hall (UK Parlophone 10"). I no longer remember where I got this record, but I'm glad I found it. This 'Merican has a soft spot for the better European trad bands. They add their own flavor to the basic New Orleans style, and often have a more varied and interesting repertoire than American "dixieland" bands. Played that one thin when I was 17. One of my first records - 10" LP. Saw Humph in concert a couple of years before he passed on (the previous time I saw him was around 1976 when he had Bruce Turner, Kathy Stobart and Mike Pyne in the band). Had a nice chat with him at the interval about his radio show and the merits of Horace Silver (!) and he kindly signed one of his books for me. I was even able to put in a personal request to have some Horace played on his BBC radio show. A very nice person and hugely influential over the years on my jazz listening.. On the same theme, I'll dig this 10" on Parlophone out (Vic Lewis's old audition copy) Edited July 15, 2013 by sidewinder Quote
paul secor Posted July 16, 2013 Report Posted July 16, 2013 Howard McGhee: Maggie's Back in Town Quote
paul secor Posted July 16, 2013 Report Posted July 16, 2013 Art Pepper: So in Love (Artists House) Quote
tomatamot Posted July 16, 2013 Report Posted July 16, 2013 Cornelis Vreeswijk - Jazz Incorporated. Quote
paul secor Posted July 16, 2013 Report Posted July 16, 2013 Jo Jones: Papa Joe and His Friends (Denon) Has there ever been a more subtle and more inventive drummer in the history of jazz than Jo Jones? Quote
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