HutchFan Posted June 23 Report Posted June 23 I've been listening to two Bruce Forman LPs that feature Bobby Hutcherson: There Are Times (Concord, 1987) and Full Circle (Concord, 1984) Quote
JSngry Posted June 23 Report Posted June 23 46 minutes ago, HutchFan said: I've been listening to two Bruce Forman LPs that feature Bobby Hutcherson: There Are Times (Concord, 1987) and Full Circle (Concord, 1984) Never knew of Bobby Hutcherson on any Concord records! Who produced those? Quote
HutchFan Posted June 23 Report Posted June 23 25 minutes ago, JSngry said: Never knew of Bobby Hutcherson on any Concord records! Who produced those? Yup. They're pretty good records. Not mind-blowing. But solid. Chris Long is listed as the producer for There Are Times and Carl Jefferson for Full Circle. Both albums feature the same rhythm section: George Cables (p), Jeff Carney (b), and Eddie Marshall (d). Quote
HutchFan Posted June 23 Report Posted June 23 (edited) On 6/22/2024 at 9:54 PM, JSngry said: Eddie Marshall was always good! Yessir. Both Marshall & Cables played with Hutcherson frequently, so the group sounds like a working unit. Edited June 28 by HutchFan Quote
kh1958 Posted June 23 Report Posted June 23 Leyla McCalla, Sun Without the Heat (Anti) Jimmy Witherspoon with Brother Jack McDuff, The Blues is Now (Verve) Tiny Grimes, Big Time Guitar (United Artists) Quote
soulpope Posted June 23 Report Posted June 23 15 minutes ago, Chuck Nessa said: Excellent .... btw never reissued on CD (any bonus tracks on the vaults ?) .... Quote
Pim Posted June 24 Report Posted June 24 This was the LP that got me into both Frank Wright as Noah Howard 15 years ago. Then as a MP3 file and glad to have a physical copy now it’s in pristine condition but the lamination comes off. Shall I peel it off or shouldn’t I? Quote
mjazzg Posted June 24 Report Posted June 24 3 hours ago, Pim said: This was the LP that got me into both Frank Wright as Noah Howard 15 years ago. Then as a MP3 file and glad to have a physical copy now it’s in pristine condition but the lamination comes off. Shall I peel it off or shouldn’t I? I had an ECM LP where the lamination was peeling, I removed it and I think that was a mistake as it left a cover with adhesive still there. Have you got a plastic sleeve you can place the LP in, with the remaining laminate still present? Great album Quote
clifford_thornton Posted June 24 Report Posted June 24 that's not too bad. I'd let the lamination be. If it was coming off in sheets I'd finish the job. Incredible LP, too. Got mine maybe 25 years ago now, and the labels are solid red with black print. The sleeve has a flipback construction. I think the red label is "first" but they pressed so few of them I'd imagine the design switched mid-run. Quote
jazzcorner Posted June 24 Report Posted June 24 Deja Vue Records DJV 2000028 - Basso-Valdrambrini " Exiting 6" - rec. 1967 - Engineer:Tonono Paolillo Quote
soulpope Posted June 24 Report Posted June 24 43 minutes ago, mikeweil said: Priceless Cover Art .... Quote
Pim Posted June 24 Report Posted June 24 7 hours ago, mjazzg said: I had an ECM LP where the lamination was peeling, I removed it and I think that was a mistake as it left a cover with adhesive still there. Have you got a plastic sleeve you can place the LP in, with the remaining laminate still present? Great album Ah I probably leave it on than. The sight of it annoys me a little bit…. 4 hours ago, clifford_thornton said: that's not too bad. I'd let the lamination be. If it was coming off in sheets I'd finish the job. Incredible LP, too. Got mine maybe 25 years ago now, and the labels are solid red with black print. The sleeve has a flipback construction. I think the red label is "first" but they pressed so few of them I'd imagine the design switched mid-run. yeah mine has the same sleeve but different labels. There were indeed two versions on Calumet. The Japanese pressing was first according to Discogs. That one seems to be even rarer. It was hard enough to track down this French first pressing. Quote
clifford_thornton Posted June 24 Report Posted June 24 The Japanese is definitely not first. Discogs is wrong. If anything they were roughly simultaneous. Producer Pierre Berjot (Musidisc-America-Carson-Calumet) licensed Church Number Nine and the AEC's Chi-Congo to Odeon in the early 70s. The French original of Chi-Congo was on Decca, though that seems to have been a Berjot deal as well. The mystery is the additional track on the Japanese pressing. My guess is Toshiba-EMI felt they could include more music and keep the pressing integrity, and ran off the entire session tape onto disc, whereas Berjot lopped off about ten minutes for the French market. Quote
Rabshakeh Posted June 25 Report Posted June 25 Blind Connie Williams – Philadelphia Street Singer Quote
Gheorghe Posted June 28 Report Posted June 28 13 hours ago, Roger Farbey said: Grachan Moncur III - Evolution This is great and those records together with Jackie McLeans´s "One Stop Beyond" and "Destination Out" are very similar. Same lineup alto, vibes, trombone..... Quote
Pim Posted June 28 Report Posted June 28 With Byard Lancaster, Dave Burrell. It’s a lovely record. Burrells piano is very much out of tune but with these kind of records it has its charm I must say. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted June 28 Report Posted June 28 with Ted Brown, Albert Dailey, Rufus Reid and Joe Chambers Quote
soulpope Posted June 28 Report Posted June 28 1 hour ago, Chuck Nessa said: with Ted Brown, Albert Dailey, Rufus Reid and Joe Chambers Excellent 👌👍 .... Quote
kh1958 Posted June 29 Report Posted June 29 Jimmy Smith, Off The Top (Elektra Musician) Keith Jarrett, The Survivors Suite (ECM) Quote
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