Peter Friedman Posted Monday at 09:05 PM Report Share Posted Monday at 09:05 PM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jazzbo Posted Monday at 09:28 PM Report Share Posted Monday at 09:28 PM Now on to disc 4, the first of the box set that I have not ever heard before. . . and I’m happy (though not too surprised) to discover the sound quality is up to the previous two night’s excellent standard. And the music is yet more of this quintet discovering what they can and will do, listening to each other and stretching out and into the changes. Amazing material! “Miles in France 1963 & 1964 The Bootleg Series, Vol. 8” disc 4 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Rabshakeh Posted Monday at 11:53 PM Report Share Posted Monday at 11:53 PM Masayoshi Takanaka – T-Wave His records always have such great covers, and the internet loves them. I listen to them every once in a while to remind myself what they sound like and why I do t really care for them. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HutchFan Posted Tuesday at 01:16 AM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 01:16 AM Now playing: Jimmy Owens - The Monk Project (IPO, 2011) Trumpet – Jimmy Owens Tenor Saxophone – Marcus Strickland Trombone – Wycliffe Gordon Tuba, Baritone Saxophone – Howard Johnson Piano – Kenny Barron Bass – Kenny Davis Drums – Winard Harper Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ghost of miles Posted Tuesday at 01:50 AM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 01:50 AM (edited) I sure did love the Rare Groove series. Edited Tuesday at 01:55 AM by ghost of miles Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gheorghe Posted Tuesday at 06:24 AM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 06:24 AM 14 hours ago, HutchFan said: I love the sax-bass-drum trio format. But this one is a little different. Swallow's electric bass gives the album a different sonic texture compared to sax-bass-drum trio albums that use upright basses. . . . So you get a bit less low-end heft and a bit more guitar-istic delicacy. IMO, this is the best Eastern Rebellion album -- in no small part because of Big George. this might be interesting, I never heard about it. Dave Liebman is one of my earliest heroes in music. Adam Nussbaum I think was his drummer in a band in the late 70´s with the blood young John Scofield and Ron McLure and most of all Terumaso Hino who played a Don Cherry like pocket trumpet. Steve Swallow does not much appear in my discography but what I had heard sounded great. I think I have him only on acoustic, let´s say with Paul Bley, or with Jimmy Giuffree. In any case this might be exactly what I am lookin for.... 9 hours ago, Peter Friedman said: Is there a tune "Moonglow" on it ? I think I had heard that somewhere. As much as I like Lou Donaldson I find he should have made more records with good contemporanious fellow musicians like Art Taylor, Paul Chambers, Wynton Kelly or something like that. I never really liked the 3 sounds. It´s fantastic trio that is sure, but too much in that Oscar Peterson way of trios....... 10 hours ago, jazzcorner said: East Wind EW 8040 (Japan 1976) - Lennie Tristano " Descent Into The Maelstrom" - rec. 1961 & 1966 - Engineering: Lennie Tristano a.o. Oh , this is one of the strangest records I have. The Descent sounds like Cecil Taylor. I bought that very early I think right when it came out in 1976 and still was not really ready for quality. That´s why I liked mostly the tracks that is trio, because I liked the loud drumming, but now I have heard again to it and the drumming of this Nick Stabulas or what is his name is terrible. I don´t know what Tristano thought about it, but the stuff should have had a better bass player and drummer. The faster track is actually "You stepped out of a dream" . But Tristano never had the patience to play a them clearly. He just starts with 2 or 4 bars of it and than starts to improvise. But jazz is first of all music, not exercises and I fear with all the genious Tristano had, in later years he lost the trace and became only a bitter and unpleasant teacher, too far away from musicianship..... The two tracks solo in Paris in the mid sixties sound good but once again it is not wholly played the ballad which should be "Darn that dream" a tune I love , I really love that tune..... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
soulpope Posted Tuesday at 07:04 AM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 07:04 AM 12 hours ago, Rabshakeh said: Charles Kynard – Your Mama Don't Dance Great bassgrooves from Chuck Rainey .... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jazzbo Posted Tuesday at 09:23 AM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 09:23 AM 11 hours ago, jazzbo said: Now on to disc 4, the first of the box set that I have not ever heard before. . . and I’m happy (though not too surprised) to discover the sound quality is up to the previous two night’s excellent standard. And the music is yet more of this quintet discovering what they can and will do, listening to each other and stretching out and into the changes. Amazing material! “Miles in France 1963 & 1964 The Bootleg Series, Vol. 8” disc 4 Again, because mid-way through yesterday's listening my wife decided to turn "Viet Nam in HD" up way loud downstairs and the Quintet was punctuated with explosions and helicopter sounds loudly brom behind . . . not ideal. Great performance! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jazzcorner Posted Tuesday at 09:36 AM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 09:36 AM 3 hours ago, Gheorghe said: Re: Lennie Tristano LP on East Wind Oh , this is one of the strangest records I have. The Descent sounds like Cecil Taylor. I bought that very early I think right when it came out in 1976 and still was not really ready for quality. That´s why I liked mostly the tracks that is trio, because I liked the loud drumming, but now I have heard again to it and the drumming of this Nick Stabulas or what is his name is terrible. I don´t know what Tristano thought about it, but the stuff should have had a better bass player and drummer. The faster track is actually "You stepped out of a dream" . But Tristano never had the patience to play a them clearly. He just starts with 2 or 4 bars of it and than starts to improvise. But jazz is first of all music, not exercises and I fear with all the genious Tristano had, in later years he lost the trace and became only a bitter and unpleasant teacher, too far away from musicianship..... The two tracks solo in Paris in the mid sixties sound good but once again it is not wholly played the ballad which should be "Darn that dream" a tune I love , I really love that tune..... Full agreement to your critic! to quote you: 'Jazz is first of all music' I don't know myself how to take that LP. Looking back at his Capitol sessions this LP came to me like a shock. Cecil Taylor like is a good description and I am not a fan at all for such sounds. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jazzbo Posted Tuesday at 10:26 AM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 10:26 AM Dexter Gordon "The Other Side of Round Midnight" Blue Note cd Music not used in the film. I'm not crazy about that film. . . and I like this album better than the soundtrack album. Dexter Gordon, Wayne Shorter, Freddie Hubbard, Palle Mikkelborg, Herbie Hancock, Cedar Walton, Ron Carter, Mads Vinding, Pierre Michelot, Billy Higgins Tony Williams, Bobby McFerrin, John McLaughlin, Bobby Hutcherson Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Gheorghe Posted Tuesday at 11:20 AM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 11:20 AM 51 minutes ago, jazzbo said: Dexter Gordon "The Other Side of Round Midnight" Blue Note cd Music not used in the film. I'm not crazy about that film. . . and I like this album better than the soundtrack album. Dexter Gordon, Wayne Shorter, Freddie Hubbard, Palle Mikkelborg, Herbie Hancock, Cedar Walton, Ron Carter, Mads Vinding, Pierre Michelot, Billy Higgins Tony Williams, Bobby McFerrin, John McLaughlin, Bobby Hutcherson such a coincidence. Yesterday I read the chapter about the film in Maxine Gregg-Gordon´s book about Dex. How Freddie Hubbard was flown to Paris without anybody tellin him he´s gonna make a film, and then just play a blues, and oh yeah, also on a fine "Rhythm a Ning". But I think the tracks on this BlueNote album also were on the film, especially As Time Goes Bye, which I missed on the Columbia LP. But Blue Note should have made an album of some of Dexters post film performances as the "Round Midnight All Stars". I saw some on video and it is much better than the short film tracks. He had slowed down but still had something to say. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
soulpope Posted Tuesday at 11:32 AM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 11:32 AM 1 hour ago, jazzbo said: Dexter Gordon "The Other Side of Round Midnight" Blue Note cd Music not used in the film. I'm not crazy about that film. . . and I like this album better than the soundtrack album. Share your view on the 🎥 and the music not indispendable .... btw great Cover Photography by Carol Friedman .... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jazzbo Posted Tuesday at 11:41 AM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 11:41 AM (edited) 20 minutes ago, Gheorghe said: But I think the tracks on this BlueNote album also were on the film, especially As Time Goes Bye, which I missed on the Columbia LP. Any shared tracks would be alternate takes. Now playing: Dora Morelenbaum “Pique” Since I love her parents’ work, it’s a no brainer that I am learning to love this one. 800×800 405 KB Edited Tuesday at 11:42 AM by jazzbo Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
jazzbo Posted Tuesday at 12:02 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 12:02 PM Duke Ellington "Blues in Orbit" Columbia/Analogue Productions SACD I have both the Mobile Fidelity SACD and this one from Analogue Productions (plus Redbook versions from Columbia, and an LP). Both the SACD are excellent sounding. I love this music! 500×500 37 KB Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
optatio Posted Tuesday at 12:11 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 12:11 PM 1 hour ago, jazzbo said: Dexter Gordon "The Other Side of Round Midnight" Blue Note cd Music not used in the film. I'm not crazy about that film. . . and I like this album better than the soundtrack album. Dexter Gordon, Wayne Shorter, Freddie Hubbard, Palle Mikkelborg, Herbie Hancock, Cedar Walton, Ron Carter, Mads Vinding, Pierre Michelot, Billy Higgins Tony Williams, Bobby McFerrin, John McLaughlin, Bobby Hutcherson 👍 - as LP from 1986 on my shelf - liner notes by Michael Cuscuna! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
HutchFan Posted Tuesday at 01:57 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 01:57 PM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Simon8 Posted Tuesday at 02:06 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 02:06 PM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JSngry Posted Tuesday at 02:24 PM Author Report Share Posted Tuesday at 02:24 PM 22 minutes ago, HutchFan said: One of the most literal of album titles. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Ken Dryden Posted Tuesday at 02:29 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 02:29 PM My 1994 interview with Art Farmer, followed by this CD: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
soulpope Posted Tuesday at 02:40 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 02:40 PM Speaking of The Jazz Crusaders .... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Teasing the Korean Posted Tuesday at 03:09 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 03:09 PM Lou Donaldson - Gravy Train (Blue Note, stereo) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Peter Friedman Posted Tuesday at 04:13 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 04:13 PM I slept on this one when it was first issued long long ago. Hearing it now, I find it is a good one. Some fine playing by Johnny Griffin and Bobby Timmons Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
EKE BBB Posted Tuesday at 04:21 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 04:21 PM Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Tapscott Posted Tuesday at 04:24 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 04:24 PM 4 hours ago, jazzbo said: Duke Ellington "Blues in Orbit" Columbia/Analogue Productions SACD I have both the Mobile Fidelity SACD and this one from Analogue Productions (plus Redbook versions from Columbia, and an LP). Both the SACD are excellent sounding. I love this music! 500×500 37 KB 👍 Love it! Now: Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
soulpope Posted Tuesday at 04:32 PM Report Share Posted Tuesday at 04:32 PM Dexter Gordon in good mood and the Rhythm Section is top notch .... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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