mrjazzman Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 Has anyone heard the new cd recorded i believe in Dolphy's garage with Brownie. Is it worth buying. I've read that Dolphy was in a Parkerish mood early on...................... Quote
RDK Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 It's not worth buying, but it might be worth a free download if you know where to look... Quote
B. Goren. Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 I've listened to it in a local music store. The sound is terrible. I agree with Ray: It's not worth buying. Quote
mrjazzman Posted January 7, 2006 Author Report Posted January 7, 2006 thanks to the both of you......... Quote
chuckyd4 Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 A recording like this would represent a turning point in my jazz buying/collecting habits in the last few years. Early on, I would have snapped up something like this, thinking I needed to have every little scrap by my favorite artists. More recently I've decided I'm perfectly happy with the sessions I love, and don't need tinny recordings of someone like Dolphy from his garage. Maybe if I was writing a book about him, but certainly not just for the enjoyment of listening to him. That said, I haven't heard it myself. Quote
couw Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 ... download if you know where to look... look here Quote
AllenLowe Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 (edited) I disagree - Dolphy is such a major figure than any early scrap, no matter how tinny, is valuable - Edited January 7, 2006 by AllenLowe Quote
B. Goren. Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 I disagree - Dolphy is such a major figure than any early scrap, no matter how tinny, is valuable - Allen, have you listened to this recording? Quote
White Lightning Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 I disagree - Dolphy is such a major figure than any early scrap, no matter how tinny, is valuable - As a matter of fact, No one can tell for sure it's Dolphy on that recordings, not even the Dolphy-ite experts. Quote
White Lightning Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 Apropo, Here's MY Dolphy (the Ginger Cat, not my niece...) Quote
AllenLowe Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 just ordered it - I'll know if it's him - Quote
chuckyd4 Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 I disagree - Dolphy is such a major figure than any early scrap, no matter how tinny, is valuable - You're right, we do disagree. Again, this is without my having actually heard the recording in question. I do agree it would be interesting to hear once, as it would be interesting to read a grammar school essay by Faulkner for instance, if such a thing existed. But there are so many other albums by artists that I love in their mature prime, and which I still don't own, that I dare say those would be far higher up on my list of things I need to buy. Since we disagree, maybe you can be the one who buys it, and then send me a copy for free? Quote
ep1str0phy Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 Apropo, Here's MY Dolphy (the Ginger Cat, not my niece...) Interestingly enough, I named my dog Ayler. He has a white patch just below his lower jaw. Quote
AllenLowe Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 Eric Dolphy was 26 years old in 1954 - a bit past his adolescence - this is EXTREMELY important stuff - Quote
gnhrtg Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 I heard these, once - as someone was seeding more discs of live unreleased Brownie and most were better music, actually - and my impression then was that it's ok but that, yes, I'd rather listen to Dolphy from 4-5 years after and onwards. Not all that distinctive and playing in a style where I'd find a good deal of others preferable to him. I'm with chuckyd4 here, I think, I try to buy more as a fan of this music and less like a collector/completist. Quote
Harmon Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 why didn't he become the natural member of the MR-CB-Quintet? Jürgen Quote
AllenLowe Posted January 7, 2006 Report Posted January 7, 2006 it has nothing to do with being a completist - any musician as important as Dolphy goes through several musical stages - in his case we have virtually no documentation of this period - so it is essential - just like Bird fom 1940-1942 - we need to see what he was doing at a formative stage - it's called natural intellectual criousity Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted January 8, 2006 Report Posted January 8, 2006 Allen, what you say is fine for completest freaks, historians and other "nut cases". I say that with great affection for completest freaks, etc, but for listening pleasure it's a hard sell for folks without 25 Dolphy cds. Also, FWIW this is not the equivalent of Bird in '40-42. Earlier Dolphy in decent sound is out there. Quote
AllenLowe Posted January 8, 2006 Report Posted January 8, 2006 the only early Dolphy I know of is with the Roy Porter band - what are you referring to? Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted January 8, 2006 Report Posted January 8, 2006 the only early Dolphy I know of is with the Roy Porter band - what are you referring to? Time for more research, you "historian". Quote
AllenLowe Posted January 8, 2006 Report Posted January 8, 2006 (edited) research done - there are recordings in 1948 and 1949 that Dolphy is apparently on, but not identifiable as a soloist - next is 1958 with Chico Hamilton - so something like this from 1954, when he is working toward maturity is, as I've said, absolutely essential - Edited January 8, 2006 by AllenLowe Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted January 8, 2006 Report Posted January 8, 2006 you got me - I don't want you. Quote
ep1str0phy Posted January 8, 2006 Report Posted January 8, 2006 it has nothing to do with being a completist - any musician as important as Dolphy goes through several musical stages - in his case we have virtually no documentation of this period - so it is essential - just like Bird fom 1940-1942 - we need to see what he was doing at a formative stage - it's called natural intellectual criousity Again--to stress an already exhausted point--to whom does this apply? May we speak in degrees? I don't think that many would argue that this sort of pseudo-bootleg esoterica (the Dolphy/Brownie album in question) is as "essential" as "Out to Lunch." At the risk of dissolving into semantics, what is "essential" anyway? Essential to he "in-crowd," or essential to everyone? Does the lay-collector--especially of the sort just beginning to listen to Dolphy--really need this material? Moreover, does knowledge of the entire history of an artist--from cradle to grave--really constitute a comprehensive "understanding"? Or can you really, truly "get" Dolphy from a few seconds of "Hat and Beard"? I know of enough individuals with an intelligent, passionate "feel" for Dolphy, none of whom have gotten past the canonical "five-star" albums. As far as I'm concerned, that sense of musician/listener communion is of paramount importance--far more valuable than whatever may be divined from a few low-fidelity home recordings. Quote
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