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
Flight to Denmark, a jazz trio album by Duke Jordan, Ed Thigpen, and Danish bassist Mats Vinding, recorded in 1973 (Steeplechase Records RJ-6004). An elegant and simple trio album, well-recorded (though it's definitely a PIANO trio album rather than a jazz TRIO album. One of the best party-background-music-albums-I've-never-heard-but-I'd-love-the-disc records I own. And I''m using a recently obtained FR-7f cart which is magic with this kind of music.
Jennifer Warnes, "Famous Blue Raincoat" - 45 rpm reissue
...I continue to be impressed with just how good this 45 rpm reissue sounds. Just a great mastering job by Bernie Grundman. These are going fast, so if you have any interest in an outstanding pressing of this music, act soon. Of course, if the music is not for you...
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"The Thelonius Monk Quartet with John Coltrane at Carnegie Hall" - Mosaic MQ1-321 (Wow!! To think that the tapes of this live 1957 performance sat in the Library of Congress archives untouched and never released for over 40 years is just an amazing story unto itself. Notwithstanding the erroneous jacket credits duplicated from the CD cover, this LP is mastered from the original analog mastertapes and the sound quality is excellent. The interplay of Monk and Coltrane in this live setting is something to treasure! Highly recommended.)

"Smithsonian Collection of Classic Jazz" Smithsonian P6 11891 - coming as primarily a classical music listener, I've been trying to learn more about jazz over these past half dozen years. This 6LP Smithsonian Collection has been on my shelf for a dozen years and I'm sorry not to have started working my way through its contents earlier. Listening to just one side at a time and reading the extensive materials in the enclosed booklet is serving as an excellent tutorial on the history of jazz and its development. Much of what I'm listening to elsewhere is making a lot more sense now.

Ken Burns "History of Jazz" series -- OK, this is a DVD. But the photos, film clips, commentary and soundtracks are great for this jazz novice. I know this has been a controversial series among jazz cognoscenti, but it's serving as a great resource for me to gain context and some appreciation for the history of the music.
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My sister in laws neighbor just gave me her old record collection. Many seem to never have been played:

The Eagles Greatest Hits 71 -75

The Judds (great recording)

Journey - Escape

The Police - Ghost in the Machine

There's a lot more, and a lot of it is crap, but after cleaning these, there are no pops, no scratches, nothing. It's a good Friday.