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Members Weekly Music Recommendations-Dec. 19


thebes

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Run here, run there, traveling, staying, shopping, working, cooking,

hard to tell if this is the season of joy or the season of the

witch. Not to worry, though, because we got big boxes a plethora

of gizmos to send out some signals, and best of all some sweet sounding

music to ease our cares.

Format's simple: Name of artist or group, name of album, type of

music as best you can (rock, blues etc.), and recording format (cd, lp

etc.)

As usual I'll start it off with:

Eubie Blake, Claude Hopkins, Dill Jones, Teddy Wilson, "Jass Piano Masters, lp, big band/ragtime and jazz

tt's a compilation from a live session, mixed recording, values and

more a grab bag than a thematic compilation, still it has it's

attraction. The foremost being Eubie Blake, one of our greatest

american musicians. He practically invented ragtime and was

playing it in dancehalls, cathouses and bars before any of us were ever

born. Rediscovered in the 70's, it's amazing to listen to him and

realize that from what he was playing back at the turn of the century,

you can emotionally and thematically rediscover the origns of the jazz

age, blues and ultimately, rock. Mixed recordings values, but his

stuff on this release is very well done.

So what do you have to share this week?

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This is a CRAZILY good album with the typical Holman TIGHT arrangement that are always full of surprises. The charts were all written for this date and for the players Holman had in mind.

I know of no other big band record of the era that swings as hard or has the richness of timbre and crazy counterpoint-- well, it's just a freaking GREAT record.

The band includes Bill Perkins, Pete Christeib, Bob Enevoldsen and all the usual hotshot LA players.

Sadly, I think this one is now out of print, but you should be able to track it down.

KILLER!

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I had been looking for this Gerry Rafferty cd for quite a while. I know I could have ordered it but I just kept looking and last week I found it at the mall.

Gerry Rafferty, Right Down the Line, The Best of Gerry Rafferty.
I just love the sax on Baker Street.



Edit: Hey Gary, do you remember I asked if you had this when I was at your house?

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Today I attempted to turn on a buddy to Lovano, Frisell, and Motian in Tokyo. B0000047CA.01._PE_SCMZZZZZZZ_.jpg

It's a record that requires a bit of work for most (including yours truly). If you happen to try it, don't give up too easily. It's worth it when it clicks. Look for it on EMT. Might be an import. I found it used at a great shop on Nantucket. The content varies from cacophony to quiet lyricism, and sometimes manages both simultaneously. The live recording quality is above reproach as well.

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I just received this from my favorite store.

This is available in a SACD Stereo Hybrid and is a fantastic recording. Lush Life wont wow anyone looking for a ton of material, but what it lacks in quantity, it makes up it quality. There are only 5 tracks totaling a little over 30 minutes of pure Coltrane.

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I always thought Jimmy Smith WAS hard bop. That is until someone started calling it "soul jazz." And then in the late 80's/early 90's they changed it to "Acid Jazz."

Now they call some of the hard bop "Jam Music." On Sirius 17, "Jam On," you now hear Coltrane quite often. They play "My Favorite Things" at least twice a week. I also heard them play "Time Out" last week. What's next? It's all because Branford Marsalis played with The Dead on occasion. Suddenly Branford is "Acid Rock/Jazz." Go figure. Play with The Dead once and you're suddenly a Jam Band and loved by all Dead Heads around the world.[:^)]

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You are SOOOO right about this, Gary. I often see 10 Sun Ra and 10 Coltrane albums on the shelf of people I've met who are into "Jam" music and NO OTHER JAZZ. I mean, if you have 10 Sun Ra records and 10 Coltrane records you'd think you'd own at least of COUPLE of Cecil Taylor and Ornette Coleman records too--dontcha think?

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The Moody Blues - December

Audio CD (October 28, 2003)

Label: Polydor / Pgd

01. Don't Need A Reindeer

02. December Snow

03. In The Quiet Of Christmas Morning (Bach 147)

04. On This Christmas Day

05. Happy Xmas (War Is Over)

06. A Winter's Tale

07. The Spirit Of Christmas

08. Yes I Believe

09. When A Child Is Born

10. White Christmas

11. In The Bleak Midwinter

Moody Blues and Christmas... what more could anyone want?

This is a must have CD.

Greg

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Forgot to mention I will be on the road this coming Monday. Will

be in Syracuse which has a 100% chance to have a white christamas

(suprise, suprise). First one that thinks of it please take over

the posting privlidges and put up a new weekly thread. Thanks and

happy holidays.

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