Billy Bang - Valve No. 10 (Soul Note, 1988)I was very excited when the Black Saint/Soul Note catalog became available on eMusic, many of the highly recommended albums in the The Penguin Guide to Jazz
Valve No. 10 - amazon.com
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General thoughts of fun stuff, like music, books and the like. Thanks for reading.
Billy Bang - Valve No. 10 (Soul Note, 1988)
Danny Caron - How Sweet It Is (Self Released, 2008)
Jonas Kullhammar - Salut (Moserobie, 2004)
Sonny Terry & Brownie McGhee - Blues Masters, Vol. 5 (Storyville, 1992)
Sun Ra - Horizon (Art Yard, 2008)
John Escreet - Consequences (Posi-Tone, 2008)
Raoul Bjorkenheim, William Parker & Hamid Drake - dmg @ The Stone, Vol. 2 (DMG/ARC, 2008)
The Princeton Record Exchange's blog gives another slap to the mainstream jazz press with their latest post: "This is the time of year when we look back, take stock of what was, both the highs and lows, and look forward to what the new year brings. Let’s start with the Top 5 Worst Jazz magazine Cover Stories of the Year, shall we?"
Pi-Recordings has posted part one of an extensive interview with pianist and composer Vijay Iyer: "So it’s really about the individuals involved - what they have to offer, what their comfort zones are, what their strengths are, and what they are going to teach me, and how I can build around them to empower them to set forth all of that. It’s also about orchestration - exploring the full range of the sound of a given ensemble. Those are related, really, because the individuals are represented in the music by the sounds they make."
Best of 2008, Part Two: New Releases
Best of 2008, part one - Historical and Reissues
Doug MacLeod - The Utrecht Sessions (Black & Tan, 2008)
There was a very nice post on the Princeton Record Exchange's blog about a concert by the trumpeter Ron Horton, honoring the music of Andrew Hill: "The musicians at Friday’s concert were something of an all-star group on the current scene: Ron Horton, trumpet/flugelhorn, Scott Robinson, tenor saxophone, Ben Allison, double-bass, Frank Kimbrough, piano, and, Tim Horner, drums. Tony Malaby on sax was originally scheduled to perform, but the audience was told that he had a “medicial emergency” and could not appear."
Mance Lipscomb - Texas Songster (Arhoolie, 1960)
Atomic - Feet Music (Jazzland, 2002)
Paul Motian Trio 2000 + Two - Live at the Village Vanguard, Vol. 2 (Winter and Winter, 2008)
Angelica Sanchez - Life Between (Clean Feed, 2008)
Bonnie Raitt - (self titled) (Warner Bros., 1971)
The Princeton Record Exchange continues to call mainstream jazz journalism to task with a post entitled "Throwdown: Downbeat vs. JT, Dec '08 - Jan. '09":
Steven Bernstein's Millennial Territory Orchestra - We Are MTO (MOWO, 2008)
Mary Halvorson Trio - Dragon's Head (Firehouse 12, 2008)
Mostly Other People Do The Killing - This Is Our Moosic (Hot Cup, 2008)
Big Road Blues has an essay about Blind Boy Fuller and his contemporaries: "Unlike blues artists like Big Bill or Memphis Minnie who recorded extensively over three or four decades, Blind Boy Fuller recorded his substantial body of work over a short, six-year span. Nevertheless, he was one of the most recorded artists of his time and by far the most popular and influential Piedmont blues player of all time. Fuller could play in multiple styles: slide, ragtime, pop, and blues were all enhanced by his National steel guitar."