Mose Allison:
Still bogus.
Arthur Blythe:
The last Jazz LP I ever purchased, in El Paso, was by Blythe.
Cheers
;
Jazz for aficionados
pjw & pryso I recommend Nicki Parrott's work on Venus records where she frequently records. Always great sound , especially the Sacds, but they are very pricey. http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=PoXvhXL3xEQ http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=iBNm5FlyJvc pjw I thiink it was on friday acman3 posted a link to album "The Rites of Spring" which Clarke, Dimeola and Ponty released at the time I saw them on tour. Check it out if you are interested.. |
frogman Thanks I thought I recognized that very distinctive saxophone style. "Lenox Avenue Breakdown" . That goes way back. I think that lp is tucked away in my collection . Need to give it a listen. Is that James Newton on the flute? Takes a great solo in the first cut. I have been enjoying your recent posts and intend to respond at length when I have more time. I wanted to share music from an artist I saw today on my cable tv jazz channel: The Jazz Professors http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=y38IjcgggxI Also another artist who does big band that I think deserves recognition: Mark Masters Ensemble http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=vpBRfMMtvBE |
The jazz musicians who I knew up close and personal, were driven ((unfortunately, not to make money) they were driven to create. A musician I had not seen or heard for a few years (we were friends) came back with a new sound that I was totally unfamiliar with, that was spectacular; he was hard bop improvisational. When we see or hear Jimmy Smith do his thing, he makes it look easy; all pros make their thing look easy, maybe it is for them. The only thing I know about hard bop improvisational jazz is how to listen to it, and I claim to be able to qualify how good it is. On our first outing (I say "Our", because we renewed our friendship, and he moved into my apartment) at "Helens Black Eagle", a club that cherished "improvisational hard bop" we wowed the crowd; they were mesmerized. During that Summer, we had a lot of fun and repeatedly wowed crowds. That was in 69, and the only verification I recall was a write up about his performance on center stage at the VP Fair we have here in St. Louis. Many years later, I was talking to a musician telling him how good my friend was, and he responded; "He was good, but he wasn't that good". The musician I was talking to, was on par with Horace Silver, not one easily impressed. Maybe he didn't hear him after he got that good, I thought to myself. That was when I searched for every note my friend had recorded, and I only verified that "He was good, but not that good". The music he was playing that Summer was new, plus it had not, nor was it ever recorded; consequently, I have nothing to prove he was "That good". While I can not judge all "improvisational hard bop jazz musicians" by my friend, being on center stage, and mesmerizing a crowd of people is what drove him. |