John Tapscott Posted June 24, 2014 Report Posted June 24, 2014 (edited) Not going to pick a single track. Every track is just a "sterling" example of what makes Silver's music so good and enjoyable. Edited June 24, 2014 by John Tapscott Quote
The Magnificent Goldberg Posted June 24, 2014 Report Posted June 24, 2014 'Jug and McGee', from 'House warming' by Gene Ammons (with Howard McGee)MG Quote
Balladeer Posted June 28, 2014 Report Posted June 28, 2014 Loo-Padoo - Tony Fruscella/Bill Triglia Septet (Tony´s Blues, Jazz Factory) Quote
John Tapscott Posted June 29, 2014 Report Posted June 29, 2014 (edited) "Isotope" (Joe Henderson) from Edited June 29, 2014 by John Tapscott Quote
Peter Friedman Posted June 29, 2014 Report Posted June 29, 2014 "For All We Know" - from CD of the same title by David Hazeltine Quartet on the Smoke Sessions label. Excellent solos by both Hazeltine and Seamus Blake. Quote
JohnS Posted June 30, 2014 Report Posted June 30, 2014 Section C by Cecil Taylor. The version included on a Marty Krystal/Buell Neidlinger lp. Not only exciting piano but also I really like Shepp's playing. Quote
paul secor Posted June 30, 2014 Report Posted June 30, 2014 It's also on the Cecil Mosaic, which was issued about six years after the Neidlinger release. Perhaps Mr. Neidlinger just wanted to get the music out there or perhaps he was testing the waters to see what would happen if he issued previously unreleased material from the Candid sessions. Quote
JohnS Posted July 1, 2014 Report Posted July 1, 2014 Cheers Paul. I guessed so. I don''t have the Mosaic, just the Candid cds. It's all terrific stuff, I heard Air when it first came out, it expanded my listening immediately Quote
sidewinder Posted July 1, 2014 Report Posted July 1, 2014 'Hello To The Wind' by the Woody Shaw Concert Ensemble from the 'Complete Muse Sessions' Mosaic. Stunning ! Quote
Steve Reynolds Posted July 3, 2014 Report Posted July 3, 2014 "Outer Space" from Roscoe Mitchell Quartet - Before there was Sound Alvin Fielder roars, Favors with bow is pristine, Fred Berry more modern than 1965 and the leader is wonderful and searching on alto saxophone Quote
Neal Pomea Posted July 4, 2014 Report Posted July 4, 2014 (edited) Jeanette James and her Synco Jazzers, The Bumps (what a groove by everyone involved!) Mary Lou Williams' first records were with this group. James was the vocalist of the group, later named John Williams' Synco Jazzers. This song is instrumental. This was on Really the Blues cd 4. Edited July 4, 2014 by Neal Pomea Quote
soulpope Posted July 12, 2014 Report Posted July 12, 2014 Charlie Haden+Hampton Hawes "As Long There Is Music" (Artist House) Quote
jeffcrom Posted July 14, 2014 Report Posted July 14, 2014 Bessie Jones and the Sea Island Singers/Hobart Smith/Ed Young/Nat Rahmings - "Reg'lar, Reg'lar, Rolling Under." Alan Lomax was usually concerned with recording folk music as he found it, but in 1960 he put together an ensemble to record music which would approximate the earliest African-American music. He brought together musicians who represented some of the oldest musical traditions hanging on in America at the time. Georgia's Sea Island Singers and Mississippi hill country fife player Ed Young came from isolated, majority-black areas whose music reached back to the antebellum period. White banjoist Hobart Smith, from Saltville, Virginia, learned to play from older black musicians as early as 1911, and his participation in this project was enthusiastically endorsed by the other musicians. Nat Rahmings was a Bahamian drummer whose playing, on a deep-toned drum, has just the syncopated bounce/swing you would expect early American black drumming to have. There's no way to really know, of course, if early African-American music sounded like this. But I've always found this session to be moving and compelling, and "Reg'lar, Reg'lar, Rolling Under" is my favorite track. Quote
StarThrower Posted July 21, 2014 Report Posted July 21, 2014 Weather Report-Tears/Umbrellas Live In Tokyo Quote
danasgoodstuff Posted July 23, 2014 Report Posted July 23, 2014 Oska T, Very striking Is this from the Monk family, or European 'grey market' issue, octet right? Quote
Peter Friedman Posted July 25, 2014 Report Posted July 25, 2014 "Marionette" by the Charles McPherson Quartet This a video from Jazz on the Tube in recognition of Charles McPherson's birthday. Both McPherson and pianist John Campbell marvelous solos here that should not be missed. Quote
Steve Reynolds Posted July 26, 2014 Report Posted July 26, 2014 The 25 minute first piece from the second set last night @ Cornelia Street Cafe Again, if one is really into the outskirts of avant-garde combinations, NEVER leave before the second set. Decent first set, THEN: Doom metal free jazzish improvisational skronk care of Malaby, Monder, Hebert & Williams In a sane world it is a side long track on an upcoming underground LP that gets played on a radio station as it's awe inspiring power transcends the fact it is wholly improvised and this world will never ever hear anything like it, before, since or ever after. Easily the best "track" I heard all week Quote
Balladeer Posted July 26, 2014 Report Posted July 26, 2014 Chet Baker - Portrait in Black and White (from Live in Tokyo) Quote
jazzbo Posted August 8, 2014 Author Report Posted August 8, 2014 "You are Beautiful" from "Secret Ellington." Just an amazing duet performance, and the engineering and production transform it into something piercingly touching to me, just makes me a puddle, brings out a bundle of recent emotions in me, all great emotions to revisit. Quote
BillF Posted August 8, 2014 Report Posted August 8, 2014 "Gone Jelly Blues" from Art Hodes' solo piano album, Pagin' Mr Jelly. Quote
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