soulpope Posted March 28, 2019 Report Posted March 28, 2019 5 hours ago, Gheorghe said: Great Wayne Shorter album. Fantastic tunes, especially "House of Jade" and "Yes and No", and of course the title track. And the best musicians to play with him . I´m very pleased that on BN records you really can hear the drummer, so Elvin Jones really is very very well recorded. Probably my favourite Wayne Shorter Blue Note euvre .... at least for today 😎 .... Quote
JSngry Posted March 28, 2019 Author Report Posted March 28, 2019 Not going to be for everybody, but no matter. It's a lost gem. Eckstine/Riddle worked! Quote
JSngry Posted March 28, 2019 Author Report Posted March 28, 2019 Bringing about meaningful change the only way that matters - through the water supply. Quote
JSngry Posted March 28, 2019 Author Report Posted March 28, 2019 god, the blogosphere, iPods, the perfect combination. but like all perfections, it couldn't last (or at least it didn't last). this is a perfectly high-quality portrait of music/record business economics in action. the music itself, eh...if that's what you want, you have many other options. edit to add that the music itself is not totally without interest once/if you accept the premise. Quote
JSngry Posted March 28, 2019 Author Report Posted March 28, 2019 27 minutes ago, JSngry said: god, the blogosphere, iPods, the perfect combination. but like all perfections, it couldn't last (or at least it didn't last). this is a perfectly high-quality portrait of music/record business economics in action. the music itself, eh...if that's what you want, you have many other options. edit to add that the music itself is not totally without interest once/if you accept the premise. upon further review...the business/economics angle is very real, as the record was produced by Wayne Henderson, 1969, World Pacific Jazz...leveraging that Jazz Crusaders juice into some business opportunity. We know where that all led. Musically, though, there's a tuba on damn near every track, and it too a second or two for it to sink in that it's there to give the charts a black marching band sound. Don't know if Leonard Feather mentions this in his liner notes, but with the benefit of 50 years hindsight, it seems obvious now (again, once you accept the premise that this record is primarily a business deal). Quote
felser Posted March 28, 2019 Report Posted March 28, 2019 Listening to and greatly enjoying this, another, different type of a "perfectly high-quality portrait of music/record business economics in action". Quote
paul secor Posted March 28, 2019 Report Posted March 28, 2019 2 hours ago, Peter Friedman said: Disc 2 Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted March 29, 2019 Report Posted March 29, 2019 17 minutes ago, paul secor said: I have a hard time dealing with that one. Quote
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