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In 1967, On A CBS Summer Replacement Show, ANYTHING Was Possible..


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Posted (edited)

Didn't have tv from about '65 to '67. First memory of watching it again was with Roscoe an Lester Bowie. We were sitting in our kitchen and Lester said the final "Fugitive" was on. We watched the last episode. I remember Lester screaming about the "mf one armed guy".

Edited by Chuck Nessa
Posted

Demonic...yeah...that's about it. And try as I might.... I mean, this type stuff was right in there with the first jazz I got into back in 9th grade and shit, and some of it, like Maynard & Woody, I never got really bent out of shape over liking it, but Buddy...man, his shit "swings" but is in no way relaxed or otherwise conducive to what I want out of life, and therefore music. So for the longest, I avoided it, paid it its fullest props because it deserved it, but otherwise...

And yet, just this weekend, I went out and bought two Buddy Rich PJ CDs, brought'em home, and was fascinated at what I heard. It might not be what I want out of life, but damn, there's some kind of primal power there, real power, and...

I dunno.

Posted

I think I know what your saying here.

I remember the days of talking with guys who were

heavily into the jigsaw puzzle -

the more intricate the better - even those 3-D jobbies!

...and you could really relate to all of it's intricacies,

BUT then sometimes the picture, more often than not,

turned into a boring seaside postcard scene (NOT with Rich tho) and

after a few months, years, etc of being given boring puzzles,

it was easy to dismiss ALL of them - even the "rich" ones -

that you never really wanted to spend time with any of them

or even back away to see the real picture.

Posted (edited)

I think I may have mentioned this in an earlier thread about Jay Corre but Buddy's records were also among the very first I ever owned. I heard my brother's high school jazz band play "Big Swing Face" and that's what first hooked me into jazz when I was 10. I remain very fond of those World Pacific LPs, and it's not "first kiss" syndrome. I know what Jim is saying -- there's something about this band, Buddy, the charts, the vibe, something that emits a compelling charisma. It's definitely in a pocket -- not a Basie pocket mind you, but a pocket nonetheless. (Buddy would often sit in with Basie, which must have been great to hear.) Here's a slightly later edition of the band with Don Menza and Al Porcino. Does any film exist of the band with Art Pepper? http://youtube.com/watch?v=iJA1Ptr4s5Y

Edited by Mark Stryker
Posted

Bexause I had friends who played in Buddy's band over the years, I saw the band more than most people, and I never, ever, saw Buddy play a set that he didn't mean or a solo that didn't thrill. You can't say that aboput many performers.

Here's a clip made at the Top of the Plaza, in my hometown, Rochester, N.Y. I saw many big bands there that played for a week at a time: Buddy, Kenton, Herman, Freguson, Thad & Mel etc. I even saw a Buddy Rich Trio there with Jimmy McGriff and Illinois Jacquet.

This band had a Rochester area native (Mt. Morris), Pat LaBarbera:

Posted

From Down Beat, Sept. 9, 1976. Interview with Philly Joe Jones by Sandy Davis.

Davis: Who are your favorite drummers?

Jones: My favorite drummers are -- and always have been -- Max Roach, Art Blakey, Kenny Clarke, Buddy Rich. I always get looked at funny when I mention Buddy Rich. Shit! If any drummer looks another way when Bernard is doing his thing, he's not only crazy but I'll bet you'll never hear his name get any size in music. Max don't want to play like Buddy and I'm sure it's the same with Art, Kenny and the others; but really, who do you know can upstage Buddy Rich? Or get the same ovation from the audience? If you listen and watch Buddy and have hands and mind, you'll cop something. I played with his big band and have been in competition abroad with all the aforementioned, plus Shelly Manne and Louis Bellson. And then there's Mickey Roker, Freddie Waits and Billy Higgins -- nothing but drummers forever.

Posted

From Down Beat, Sept. 9, 1976. Interview with Philly Joe Jones by Sandy Davis.

Davis: Who are your favorite drummers?

Jones: My favorite drummers are -- and always have been -- Max Roach, Art Blakey, Kenny Clarke, Buddy Rich. I always get looked at funny when I mention Buddy Rich. Shit! If any drummer looks another way when Bernard is doing his thing, he's not only crazy but I'll bet you'll never hear his name get any size in music. Max don't want to play like Buddy and I'm sure it's the same with Art, Kenny and the others; but really, who do you know can upstage Buddy Rich? Or get the same ovation from the audience? If you listen and watch Buddy and have hands and mind, you'll cop something. I played with his big band and have been in competition abroad with all the aforementioned, plus Shelly Manne and Louis Bellson. And then there's Mickey Roker, Freddie Waits and Billy Higgins -- nothing but drummers forever.

Enjoying this thread and this particular post...

Posted

From Down Beat, Sept. 9, 1976. Interview with Philly Joe Jones by Sandy Davis.

Davis: Who are your favorite drummers?

Jones: My favorite drummers are -- and always have been -- Max Roach, Art Blakey, Kenny Clarke, Buddy Rich. I always get looked at funny when I mention Buddy Rich. Shit! If any drummer looks another way when Bernard is doing his thing, he's not only crazy but I'll bet you'll never hear his name get any size in music. Max don't want to play like Buddy and I'm sure it's the same with Art, Kenny and the others; but really, who do you know can upstage Buddy Rich? Or get the same ovation from the audience? If you listen and watch Buddy and have hands and mind, you'll cop something. I played with his big band and have been in competition abroad with all the aforementioned, plus Shelly Manne and Louis Bellson. And then there's Mickey Roker, Freddie Waits and Billy Higgins -- nothing but drummers forever.

Enjoying this thread and this particular post...

Funny, when I saw that clip, the first thing I thought of was how much he sounded like Philly Joe at times. The explosive attack.

Posted

From Down Beat, Sept. 9, 1976. Interview with Philly Joe Jones by Sandy Davis.

Davis: Who are your favorite drummers?

Jones: My favorite drummers are -- and always have been -- Max Roach, Art Blakey, Kenny Clarke, Buddy Rich. I always get looked at funny when I mention Buddy Rich. Shit! If any drummer looks another way when Bernard is doing his thing, he's not only crazy but I'll bet you'll never hear his name get any size in music. Max don't want to play like Buddy and I'm sure it's the same with Art, Kenny and the others; but really, who do you know can upstage Buddy Rich? Or get the same ovation from the audience? If you listen and watch Buddy and have hands and mind, you'll cop something. I played with his big band and have been in competition abroad with all the aforementioned, plus Shelly Manne and Louis Bellson. And then there's Mickey Roker, Freddie Waits and Billy Higgins -- nothing but drummers forever.

Enjoying this thread and this particular post...

Funny, when I saw that clip, the first thing I thought of was how much he sounded like Philly Joe at times. The explosive attack.

I think another link between them is that both made extensive use of the classic drum rudiments as building blocks in their solos and fills -- maybe a drummer or someone with a better understanding of drum techniques than I have could provide details. There are 13 basic rudiments (I think) and then a bunch more ... I can tell when I player is schooled in them but I can't name more than a few.

Posted

I think another link between them is that both made extensive use of the classic drum rudiments as building blocks in their solos and fills.

Absolutely. At times Philly Joe and Buddy sound like they're marching and swinging at the same time.

Posted

Kiener told me that once when they were playing in Vegas, that Frank sent over a couple of pounds of pot for the boys in the band.

How true, I can't say, but it sounds like a nice gesture!

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