HutchFan Posted July 25 Report Posted July 25 9 hours ago, soulpope said: Gaudi architecture in a different perspective on "Barcelona" (Enja Records) .... Exactly. The photo is very similar. It's another view of the benches at Park Güell: Also, I think those are the spires of the Sagrada Familia silhouetted on the right. (Not certain though.) Quote
adh1907 Posted July 25 Report Posted July 25 12 hours ago, JSngry said: Reviews were good. But no real radio play that I could tell. And I don't know how much as support Atlantic gave it. A great record, but nothing crossover neither the music or the attitude. But that's ok, they kept him on the roster and let do that other stuff at his own pace. Thanks, I’m guessing the ‘you must read the back of this album’ hype was Joel Dorn’s idea. It worked, as I remembered it for 50 years! 9 hours ago, Rabshakeh said: Did he play these a lot when you grew up? As in, were you already familiar with this great music as a kid? Yes, the music seeped into us three kids. All now jazz fans. We loved the catchy stuff, Roland Kirk, Monk - Lulu’s back in town. After I got punk out of my system I returned to jazz and a deeper appreciation, I hope. Stick with it and in a few year’s time your offspring will be whistling "The Ragman and the Junkman Ran from the Businessman They Laughed and He Cried"! Quote
adh1907 Posted July 25 Report Posted July 25 (edited) ‘Sweet Blossom Dearie’, live at Ronnie Scott’s, 1967, with Tubby’s old rhythm section, Freddy Logan and Allan Ganley. Beautifully recorded, Fontana, mono. Edited July 25 by adh1907 Quote
HutchFan Posted July 25 Report Posted July 25 Prompted by an Eddie Harris post by @Kevin Bresnahan on another thread: I don't have any of EH's original Vee-Jay albums, only this 2-LP compilation. Quote
JSngry Posted July 25 Report Posted July 25 33 minutes ago, HutchFan said: Prompted by an Eddie Harris post by @Kevin Bresnahan on another thread: I don't have any of EH's original Vee-Jay albums, only this 2-LP compilation. They're well worth looking for at sensible prices, especially if you can live with less than pristine conditions. Same with his three Columbia records. Quote
HutchFan Posted July 25 Report Posted July 25 18 minutes ago, JSngry said: They're well worth looking for at sensible prices, especially if you can live with less than pristine conditions. Same with his three Columbia records. I'll keep an eye out for them. (I do have Here Comes the Judge on Columbia.) Quote
HutchFan Posted July 25 Report Posted July 25 1 hour ago, JSngry said: Maybe prioritize these two? Many thanks, Jim. I will! Quote
HutchFan Posted July 26 Report Posted July 26 (edited) More Eddie Harris: A terrific album. That opening cut is relentlessly funky. I like this album even better than Swiss Movement. Edited July 26 by HutchFan Quote
soulpope Posted July 26 Report Posted July 26 45 minutes ago, HutchFan said: More Eddie Harris: A terrific album. That opening cut is relentlessly funky. I like this album even better than Swiss Movement. You can't go wrong with Jerry Jemmott .... Quote
kh1958 Posted July 28 Report Posted July 28 (edited) The Genius of Ravi Shankar (Columbia) Erroll Garner, Magic Keys (Philips) Edited July 29 by kh1958 Quote
HutchFan Posted July 28 Report Posted July 28 Now spinning: Maynard Ferguson & His Orchestra - A Message from Newport / Newport Suite (Roulette, 2 LPs) The vinyl is wafer-thin, but the music still sounds good. Quote
JSngry Posted July 28 Report Posted July 28 16 minutes ago, HutchFan said: Now spinning: Maynard Ferguson & His Orchestra - A Message from Newport / Newport Suite (Roulette, 2 LPs) The vinyl is wafer-thin, but the music still sounds good. Those were all wafer thin vinyls! Do you also have this one? It was my favorite of the Maynar EOAE releases: Also wafer-thin vinyl. Quote
HutchFan Posted July 28 Report Posted July 28 3 minutes ago, JSngry said: Do you also have this one? Nope. Guess I should track it down, eh? Quote
JSngry Posted July 28 Report Posted July 28 Indeed! I got the Ferguson Mosaic (finally) but these 2-fers are a lot more convenient. Except for the first one (white cover) that was half Ferguson and half Herbie Mann. For some reason they only used cuts from the dance albums, which are good (enough), but the meat is on these four + a few others. It was a good band with a good book. Willie Maiden, Slide Hampton, and Don Sebesky were the main writers, and then post-Roulette, Mike Abene cam in and did some good work, Quote
HutchFan Posted July 28 Report Posted July 28 20 minutes ago, JSngry said: I got the Ferguson Mosaic (finally) but these 2-fers are a lot more convenient. Well, that other 2-fer sounds mighty tempting. This fish is hooked. 😜 Another item for the list! Quote
Teasing the Korean Posted July 28 Report Posted July 28 (edited) Wendy Carlos - A Clockwork Orange (WB) After this, we may play her Columbia LP of the same title, which has some repetition, but also full-length versions of some of the excerpts on the WB. Edited July 28 by Teasing the Korean Quote
HutchFan Posted July 28 Report Posted July 28 Next up: Ken McIntyre - Home (SteepleChase, 1975) My LP is the U.S. release on Inner City Quote
Teasing the Korean Posted July 28 Report Posted July 28 Claude Denjean - Moog (London/Decca Phase 4) Quote
optatio Posted July 28 Report Posted July 28 3 hours ago, HutchFan said: Now spinning: Maynard Ferguson & His Orchestra - A Message from Newport / Newport Suite (Roulette, 2 LPs) The vinyl is wafer-thin, but the music still sounds good. 👍 - German issue by Bellaphon here [1972] Quote
Teasing the Korean Posted July 29 Report Posted July 29 McCoy Tyner - Sama Layuca (Milestone) Found this filed under T in my Exotica section. At first I thought it was misfiled, as I probably have 15 Tyner LPs in the Jazz section. After playing it, I think filing it under Exotica was a deliberate choice. Quote
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