montg Posted October 4, 2004 Report Posted October 4, 2004 Man, those are unbelievable line-ups. I really like the Eldridge/Carter combination in their Verve studio meeting (in the Mosaic box)..it'd be nice to hear them together in the Sweden set...Heck, it'd be nice to hear any of those sets. It boggles my mind that Verve sits on material like this while devoting their energy to Jazz for lovers compilations and their money to signing pop stars like Al Jarreau. Quote
Cornelius Posted October 4, 2004 Report Posted October 4, 2004 (edited) montg, Yeah, don't it just make you want to cry? But the corporation is there to make money. From that view, there's no need to wonder why this music is unreleased. But considering that the corporation touts itself as a worthy custodian of this great art (which, being jazz, is not just great art, but also the manifestion, the expression of a profoundly heroic culture), the lack of availability of these works is obscene. P.D., I don't think there were any VSPs made of this material. Aside from the vinyl releases, re-releases, and compilations, the few CD tracks that I know to have trickled out are: "Blue 'N Boogie" on Dizzy's Diamonds. "The Mooche" on Stan Getz & Dizzy Gillespie "All The Things You Are" on Stan Getz: Best Of The Verve Years, Vol. 1 "Stuffy" on Coleman Hawkins And Roy Eldridge At The Opera House Edited October 4, 2004 by Cornelius Quote
P.D. Posted October 4, 2004 Report Posted October 4, 2004 (edited) Ok but they weren't VSP's but they were budget verves Buddy Rich & Gene Krupa, The Drum Battle verve 815 146 Ella Fitzgerald verve 815 147 The Coleman Hawkins Set verve 815 148 The Rarest Concerts verve 815 149 Bird & Pres Carnegie Hall 1949 verve 815 150 Norgran Blues verve 815 151 The Trumpet Battle 1952 verve 815 152 One O'Clock Jump 1953 verve 815 153 The Challenges 1954 verve 815 154 Blues in Chicago verve 815 155 my mind tells me I might have an Oscar Peterson set too. None of this was in the JATP box None has seen CD as far as I know ( usual Japanese disclaimer) Put together this would be a nice second JATP box as long as the packaging wasn't so stupid and verve didn't gouge us by putting it on 10 CDS 6 or 7 would probably suffice.. umless there is much unissued material.. which there should be,, These weren't 40 min concerts. I can pull the albums and give track / personnel details if anyone needs them. I know I don't have the Ella, but might have the Krupa / Rich.. in spite of the interminable drum solos. Edited October 4, 2004 by P.D. Quote
Roger Hiles Posted October 15, 2004 Report Posted October 15, 2004 I was just reading about Verve copy-protecting the new Jimmy Smith reissue, and had a scarry thought-- Does anyone know if Verve is copy-protecting this set? Yikes! Quote
jazzbo Posted October 21, 2004 Author Report Posted October 21, 2004 Wow! Preorder price dropped 7 dollars or so at cduniverse! Quote
Peter Posted November 10, 2004 Report Posted November 10, 2004 Anybody pick this up? Your thoughts? Looking for some reviews from board members. Thanks! Quote
Tom in RI Posted November 10, 2004 Report Posted November 10, 2004 It doesn't fit exactly but I would have liked this to also include the 1956 Metronome All Star session. Has that been out on cd? Would have made a nice bonus, unless Mosaic or someone else could gather all the Metronome sessions together. Can't think of the other magazines that sponsored All Star dates off the top of my head. Quote
Brad Posted November 10, 2004 Report Posted November 10, 2004 I'm waiting for this too but since I coupled the order with the new Bud Powell cd I won't get it until sometime next week. Regading the Metronome All Stars, I don't know if there's enough there for a Mosaic or even a Select. I have a Bluebird cd and an LP that has some of the same material as the CD and I think it covers most of 1940-1949. Quote
Matthew Posted November 10, 2004 Report Posted November 10, 2004 I picked this set up this morning and am listening to Jams 1 & 2. Like the music very much so far, it has more of a "musical" quality that the JATPs, not playing to the crowd as much. Sound is typically Verve, seems a little lite on the bass, but overall good. Notes well written, and the blurb on the front said that this is a "limited edition" set, if that means anything to people. Sounds like this will be in heavy rotation for awhile -- I'm a sucker for this stuff. Quote
jazzbo Posted November 10, 2004 Author Report Posted November 10, 2004 Mine may be there waiting for me tonight. .. I hope, as having a day off tomorrow would make that quite opportune! Thanks to a friend I've had all this music for a few years. . . cool stuff! Quote
Alfred Posted November 11, 2004 Report Posted November 11, 2004 I was just reading about Verve copy-protecting the new Jimmy Smith reissue, and had a scarry thought-- Does anyone know if Verve is copy-protecting this set? Yikes! 'Copy-protected' or 'NOT copy-protected'? That's the question! Quote
jazzbo Posted November 11, 2004 Author Report Posted November 11, 2004 I don't believe it is copy-protected. Quote
Dan Gould Posted November 11, 2004 Report Posted November 11, 2004 Still missing from the reissue box is the August 1957 Jam Session that gathered Harry Edison, Lester Young, Ben Webster, Oscar Peterson, Herb Ellis, Ray Brown and Louis Bellson on 'Someone To Watch Over Me' and the same musicians plus Jimmy Rushing on 'Goin' to Chicago'. The session has never seen the light of the day! If this has never been reissued, is there an album title associated? Is it Jam #9 or did it have a name like Tour de Force? It sounds like the tapes don't exist, so I might have to go searching for this one! Quote
mikeweil Posted November 11, 2004 Report Posted November 11, 2004 (edited) Regarding the Metronome All Stars, I don't know if there's enough there for a Mosaic or even a Select. I have a Bluebird cd and an LP that has some of the same material as the CD and I think it covers most of 1940-1949. Metronome magazine collaborated with several labels, I remember Capitol (Cuscuna included some on the CD Birth of the Cool Vol. 2. Having them all in one package regardless of the label would really be a perfect fit for Mosaic. Edited November 11, 2004 by mikeweil Quote
jazzbo Posted November 11, 2004 Author Report Posted November 11, 2004 Brownie, could this be the August 1957 "jam" you are talking about? It's all I see listed with Pres involved for August of that year. unissued performance, Hollywood Bowl, LA 8/22/57 JATP Sweets, Pres, Frog, OP, Herb Ellis, Ray Brown, Louis Bellson, Jimmy Rushing* Polka Dots and Moonbeams Blues Goin' To Chicago* How High the Moon Someone to Watch Over Me I think this is it and here is what it says below: "This concert was reportedly recorded by Norman Granz; other tunes may have been played." Likely NO ONE has this, it hasn't been out on record according to this (discographic pages of Japanese Pres box). Quote
brownie Posted November 12, 2004 Report Posted November 12, 2004 Lon, this might be it. The August 1957 Jam Session item I mentioned was picked up from the Tom Lord discography. The only two tunes mentioned there are 'Someone to Watch Over Me' and 'Goin' to Chicago'. What you are listing - with the added titles - is even more exciting! Quote
jazzbo Posted November 12, 2004 Author Report Posted November 12, 2004 Yes it's exciting but unless they're a saving it for a second JATP box, I don't think even Verve has it so it may never surface. . . . Quote
Brad Posted November 12, 2004 Report Posted November 12, 2004 (edited) Regarding the Metronome All Stars, I don't know if there's enough there for a Mosaic or even a Select. I have a Bluebird cd and an LP that has some of the same material as the CD and I think it covers most of 1940-1949. Metronome magazine collaborated with several labels, I remember Capitol (Cuscuna included some on the CD Birth of the Cool Vol. 2. Having them all in one package regardless of the label would really be a perfect fit for Mosaic. Unfortunately, based on what I've been able to find out, there's not enough there for a Mosaic. The Metronome All Stars recorded between 1939 and 1961 and usually they only recorded a couple of songs a year, at least in their heyday. There are basically four lps and one cd that contain Metronome materia. There is the Bluebird (RCA) cd that contains 15 cuts between 1939 and 1950 (including the famed Overtime and Victory Ball) and some of these are alternate takes. There is a Tax lp, which contains the Columbia sessions for 1940, 1941, 1942, 1946 and 1950. The Camden lp is the RCA material on the cd and there is a Clef lp of the 1956 All Stars which has 6 songs. A search turned up this CD. Since the Bluebird is OOP, this is probably worth getting. I'm not even sure there's enough there for a Select. Edited November 12, 2004 by Brad Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted November 12, 2004 Report Posted November 12, 2004 Also the 1953 MGM date with Roy Eldridge, Kai Winding, John LaPorta, Warne Marsh, Lester Young, Terry Gibbs, Teddy Wilson, Billy Bauer, Eddie Safranski, Max Roach and Billy Eckstine. Recorded July 9, 1953 How High the Moon parts 1 & 2 5:20 St. Louis Blues parts 1 & 2 6:18 This session is included in the Eckstine "Everything I Have Is Yours" set on Verve. Quote
jazzbo Posted November 12, 2004 Author Report Posted November 12, 2004 I have a Capitol LP that has some of these. . . nice stuff. I think that there may be enough to make a short Select. . . but it would hardly be likely to be worth the licensing trouble. . . . Quote
brownie Posted November 12, 2004 Report Posted November 12, 2004 The French Fremeaux label issued a 2CD set that had all takes (including all three takes of the 'Victory Ball' 1949 Metronome All Stars session with Dizzy, Navarro, Miles, Bird et al) of all the Metronome and Esquire All Stars dates from 1939 to 1950. http://www.fremeaux.com/pages/catalogue/fi...pg_Jazz-591.htm Excellent compilation. Sound is pretty good! Quote
vibes Posted November 13, 2004 Report Posted November 13, 2004 I was just reading about Verve copy-protecting the new Jimmy Smith reissue, and had a scarry thought-- Does anyone know if Verve is copy-protecting this set? Yikes! 'Copy-protected' or 'NOT copy-protected'? That's the question! Just got my set, and am making mp3's right now. No copy protection. Quote
Roger Hiles Posted November 14, 2004 Report Posted November 14, 2004 (edited) Good to know they didn't copy-protect this set-- looks like I've run out of reasons not to buy this! (Oh well, savings accounts are over-rated anyway). Edited November 14, 2004 by Roger Hiles Quote
neveronfriday Posted November 15, 2004 Report Posted November 15, 2004 Let's see: Amazon Germany has this one for Euro EUR 79,99. Amazon UK has it for £39.99 which equals Euro 57.16. Amazon France has it for Euro 43,86. That's the EU for you. I guess I'll let my good friends in France have the money. Or I'll wait for 2001 (Zweitausendeins) to mark it down a bit. Cheers! Quote
brownie Posted November 15, 2004 Report Posted November 15, 2004 Let's see: Amazon Germany has this one for Euro EUR 79,99. Amazon UK has it for £39.99 which equals Euro 57.16. Amazon France has it for Euro 43,86. That's the EU for you. I guess I'll let my good friends in France have the money. Or I'll wait for 2001 (Zweitausendeins) to mark it down a bit. Cheers! Strange that Amazon.fr states this interesting price. The boxes I have seen in the Paris stores are about double that money! If Amazon.fr confirms the price, I'll look no further for a Christmas present! Quote
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