Tom in RI Posted October 9, 2009 Report Posted October 9, 2009 Sometime in the late 70’s or possibly early 80’s I picked up a bunch of cheap records on the Hall of Fame Jazz Greats label. Some of the records were clearly studio dates from other labels and put out, I presume, without proper license. They also had at least 4 records of Jazz at the Philharmonic material. Cadence identified these as coming from 2 JATP concerts from Hartford 9/17/54 and Chicago 2/10/55. These include JG 628, 631, and 632. My questions are: Does anyone know the source of JG 630 “The Titans”? This features Sonny Stitt, Dizzy Gillespie and Stan Getz. I assume its from one of the two shows making up 628, 631 and 632. I don’t have JG 629, does anyone have this and is it also more JATP material? JG 628 The Great Jam-boree Jazz Concert Blues (Hartford) The Swing Set (Chicago) Rich’s Explosion (Chicago) The Blues (Chicago) JG 631 Jazz Moods I Didn’t Know What Time It Was (Chicago) Lover Man (Chicago) The Man I Love (Hartford) Tenderly (Chicago) My Old Flame(Chicago) Body and Soul (?) A Ghost of a Chance (?) Imagination (Hartford) I’ll Never Be the Same (Hartford) Stardust (Hartford) JG 632 Jazz Berry Jam The Modern Set (Chicago) Bellson Drum Solo (Hartford) The Challenge (Hartford) Willow Weep for Me (Chicago) As far as I can tell, Verve issued two lps worth of material from these two concerts in 1983, I have been searching through my stuff but I can’t find them. AllMusic doesn’t have track listings, can anyone tell me what is on them? I also have JG 633 which has 3 cuts by the Gene Krupa 4tet and an 11 ½ minute track by Max Roach/Clifford Brown. Anyone know the date of this Roach/Brown tune, if there was anymore from this date, and has it been released anywhere else? Thanks. Quote
BeBop Posted October 9, 2009 Report Posted October 9, 2009 JG 628 The Great Jam-boree Jazz Concert Blues (Hartford) The Swing Set (Chicago) Rich’s Explosion (Chicago) The Blues (Chicago) "Great Jamboree" or "Geat Jamboree", as mine reads? Quote
Tom in RI Posted October 9, 2009 Author Report Posted October 9, 2009 I had to look twice, but yes its The Geat Jamboree on the front, and The Great Jamboree onthe back. Quote
AllenLowe Posted October 9, 2009 Report Posted October 9, 2009 I can't help you, but I do recall those old cheesey jazz records (many of which I bought in supermarkets) with great nostalgia. Even if half of them were, in reality, recorded by Mario Luisitania and his Strawhat 5. Quote
BbM7 Posted October 9, 2009 Report Posted October 9, 2009 I can't help you, but I do recall those old cheesey jazz records (many of which I bought in supermarkets) with great nostalgia. Even if half of them were, in reality, recorded by Mario Luisitania and his Strawhat 5. Mario was definitely a Geat. Quote
Tom in RI Posted October 9, 2009 Author Report Posted October 9, 2009 I missed lps in supermarkets by just a few years. I do have a couple or three records with the sticker on the shrink wrap at 88 cents. I bought the majority of the above mentioned lps at a department store at, I think, $1.97 or thereabouts. Quote
AllenLowe Posted October 9, 2009 Report Posted October 9, 2009 my very first Charlie Parker record was from Waldbaums - though one cut (That's Earl Brother) was actually Sonny Stitt - Quote
Brute Posted October 9, 2009 Report Posted October 9, 2009 To quote Jimmy Witherspoon, "All My Geats Are Gone". Quote
BruceH Posted October 17, 2009 Report Posted October 17, 2009 I missed lps in supermarkets by just a few years. I do have a couple or three records with the sticker on the shrink wrap at 88 cents. I bought the majority of the above mentioned lps at a department store at, I think, $1.97 or thereabouts. At least I didn't miss the era of records in department stores! When the heck were there records in supermarkets? Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted October 17, 2009 Report Posted October 17, 2009 I bought my first 12" lp (Fats Domino on Imperial) from a grocery store in 1957. It was sealed in a plastic bag. The store was Mac's Super Value in Story City, IA, a farming community with a population of around 1200 souls. Quote
BruceH Posted October 17, 2009 Report Posted October 17, 2009 Wow...you could get Fats Domino and bacon, both at the same place. Now that's livin'! Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted October 17, 2009 Report Posted October 17, 2009 Choices better than Wal-Mart today. I mean, just imagine New Orleans R&B for sale in that place at that time! Quote
The Magnificent Goldberg Posted October 18, 2009 Report Posted October 18, 2009 Choices better than Wal-Mart today. I mean, just imagine New Orleans R&B for sale in that place at that time! Yes - over here, too. Your average record shop or department store, or the WH Smiths bookshops would cover a whole range of music - at least, the range that was issued over here on British labels. And they often had a good back catalogue (45s and LPs) in stock. A shop I used to visit in Hove in the sixties had a shelf full of old London American 45s, going well back to the mid fifties, behind the counter and they'd let me sit on the floor pulling them out and filling in my Chuck Willis etc collections. All that changed when retail price maintenance was made illegal in 1964 or 1965. Once the big stores could sell for what they thought was a competitive price, the indie shops didn't have a chance and the range of music reduced quite soon. MG Quote
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