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
Bill Evans Trio - "With Symphony Orchestra" [Verve/Polydor (France) LP reissue '66/'7?]

Count Basie & His Orchestra - "One O'Clock Jump" [Columbia LP '56, rec. '42-'51]

Xavier Cugat & His Orchestra - "Viva Cugat!" [Mercury stereo LP '61]

Small Faces - "The Autumn Stone" [Immediate (England) 2LP comp. '69]

The Turtles - "Wooden Head" [Rhino LP reissue '70/'84]

The Dramatics - "Whatcha See Is Whatcha Get" [Volt LP '72]
Ascenseur pour l'echafaud
Elevator to the Gallows

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia....

Ascenseur pour l'échafaud is a 1958 French film directed by Louis Malle. It was released as Elevator to the Gallows in the USA (aka Frantic) and as Lift to the Scaffold in the UK. It stars Jeanne Moreau and Maurice Ronet as criminal lovers whose perfect crime begins to unravel when Ronet is trapped in an elevator. The film is often associated by critics with the film noir style.

The score by Miles Davis has been described by jazz critic Phil Johnson as "the loneliest trumpet sound you will ever hear, and the model for sad-core music ever since. Hear it and weep."
"Sad-core"???

I haven't heard (or seen) this, but I oughta...Thanks to the prompt I looked it up on IMDB, and noticed that the bass player was Pierre Michelot (Jacques Loussier Trio) and the drummer Kenny Clarke (MJQ).

Then pursuing that further, additionally noticed that ex-pat Clarke also had a music credit for "An Occurence At Owl Creek Bridge" (an Oscar-winning French short of the Ambrose Bierce story, picked up here as a last-season Twilight Zone episode), which I haven't seen since we were shown it in grade school but well remember, so great an impression did it make on me at the time...Things you never knew!
The Blue Nile - 'Peace At Last'. 1996 LP On Warner Brothers. Super hard to find on vinyl, but well worth it. Well recorded, if a bit bass-heavy. Great music as always from Paul Buchanan. More acoustic than their previous two Linn releases, but just as excellent, if not more emotive and personal.
Shakin' Street - S/T [Columbia promo LP '80] With Ross The Boss (Dictators) on lead guitar and produced by Sandy Pearlman (who may have helped Blue Oyster Cult, though not The Clash), and named after an MC5 classic, how wrong can you go? Fortunately not all that very much, at least for rockin' purposes, with Tunisian-born leader/singer Fabienne Shine (also a French ex-model and Johnny Thunders gal pal) kickin' out the jams as good as she looked (even if the cliched lyrics and generally disposable tunes are no great threat to any of the songwriters in the aforementioned bands).

Johnny Winter - "First Winter" [Buddah LP '69] Doesn't collect all his pre-fame single sides, just those produced by Huey P. Meaux (in addition to being a reknowned Houston hit producer and studio owner, also a convicted child pornographer, who died earlier this year), but such non-blues Winter originals as the psych/folk-rock "Birds Can't Row Boats" and the fuzzed-up Texas garage raver "Coming Up Fast" sound much better here than on the usual-suspect genre comps. Incredibly, Winter managed in just one year, 1969, to have four different albums come out on four different labels!

The Pentangle - "Basket Of Light" [Reprise LP '69] Unplugged before there was an unplugged. (Brief aside: During the whole dubious "Unplugged" fad of the mid-90's, I always wondered why some contrarian-leaning band didn't release an all-electric live album entitled "Plugged".)

Sparks - "A Woofer In Tweeter's Clothing" [Bearsville LP '72] Pros: It's new-wave music, in 1972(!). Cons: It's largely unlistenable, in any year.

Rose Maddox - "The One Rose" [Capitol mono LP '60] Very hot honky-tonk-verging-on-rockabilly re-recordings of her earlier singles, including three Hank Williams numbers, with the scorching plank-spanking supplied by Maddox brothers Cal and Henry - twangalicious!

Shirley Scott Trio - "Scottie" [Prestige mono LP '58] Feminine master of the more subtle, calliope-toned Hammond jazz organ, as opposed to her more hyper and growly (and famous) male peers

Shirley Scott Trio - "For Members Only" [Impulse! mono LP '63] With large band accompaniment on side 1 arranged and conducted by Oliver Nelson - who I dig the most, but it's the haunting Trio-only closer on side 2 (and Scott original) "We're Goin' Home" that I can't get out of my head

Phil Woods - "Greek Cooking" [Impulse! mono LP '67]

Monty Alexander - "Taste Of Freedom" [MGM LP '71]

Oliver Nelson - "Images" [Prestige 2LP comp. '76, rec. '60-'61] Repackage of two albums originally released on New Jazz featuring Eric Dolphy in quintet and sextet settings, with characteristically explosive playing from both reed men