Whats on your turntable tonight?


For me its the first or very early LP's of:
Allman Brothers - "Allman Joys" "Idyllwild South"
Santana - "Santana" 200 g reissue
Emerson Lake and Palmer - "Emerson Lake and Palmer"
and,
Beethoven - "Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major" Rudolph Serkin/Ozawa/BSO
slipknot1
Getting an early start on a rainy Saturday in the East:

Roger Waters "Radio KAOS" (Columbia 40795) Interesting work. A bit of a spill over from some of "The Wall" in that Waters continues to explore the numbing effects of the media, in particular radio and television. Shades of what is to come in the now legendary (for sonics) "Amused To Death" Side 2 opens with a large dog barking off to the left as a transistor radio DJ voice begins in the right speaker and moves to the center. Some will argue that Water's solo works are over-indulgent drivel, but his production values are second to none. No excuse if the music is lousy, but sometimes sonics are fun in and of themselves.

Pink Floyd "A Momentary Lapse Of Reason" (Columbia 40599) Too many have dismissed the post-Waters Pink Floyd efforts.
I would invite you to give a listen this LP. "Learning To Fly" and "Sorrow" show some of the spark of the DSOTM and WYWH years.

Supertramp "Paris" (A&M SP-6702) Great live LP, with quiet surfaces and good dynamics. Supposedly the one to get your hands on of this LP is a Canadian pressing. They are alleged to best the excellent Japanese pressings.

Next up:
A Polycarbinate: Pink Floyd "Division Bell" Only because I don't have the LP. The most underated and oft-dismissed of the post-Waters era. I enjoy it's rather cynical look at human relationships. A nice break from the Big Brother, government, media, nihlism Waters is so famous for.
Miles Davis "Kind Of Blue" (Columbia CS 8163) Listened to two different Classic Records reissues tonight. first the 200 gram, then the 45 rpm reissue.

I never tire of listening to this masterpiece. The line up of performers and the selection of music for this album are first rate and perfect for lower volume late night listening. This recording introduced me to Miles Davis, and I have added to my collection "Sketches of Spain", "Bag's Groove" and a few others.

I would ask the more enlightened and experienced posters here to please recommend other Miles Davis recordings similar in style to the above. I also have the better known Coltrane releases as well as almost all of Bill Evans' work as well, but would like to explore Davis a little more. Thanks.
Joe,
Birth of the Cool is a good title similar in many ways to the ones you've mentioned.
However because it's not at all like them, you've also got to check out Bitches Brew. It's the jazz equivalent of Dylan going electric in '66. A chaotic, mesmerizing tornado of sound with many of the later era electric jazz icons: Corea, McLaughlin, Shorter, Lenny White, Dave Holland, Jack DeJohnette.
It ain't no easy listen, but it's something to behold. With the volume way up! Cheers,
Spencer
Actually, KOB, Sketches, and Bag's Groove aren't much like each other either, and that's a defining aspect of Miles' body of work overall. Neither would I consider BOTC to be particularly similar to any of the above for that matter. I'm not much of one for the electric material from In A Silent Way going forward, but briefly would recommend the titles Miles Ahead, Cookin', and E.S.P. if you don't have any of them already. Each one of those also represents a different period and group, with Miles Ahead being more like Sketches, Cookin' more like Bag's Groove, and E.S.P. representing the post-KOB, pre-Bitches Brew acoustic Miles. Check out Sdcampbell's posts on this general subject for a detailed examination.
Thanks gents! I have a coupla more titles on my shopping list. KOB and Sketches really get it done for me, so I am likely to stick with that style. I guess it's the pre-electric acoustic Miles I am after...