02.03.2012, 07:26 PM | #1 |
expwy. to yr skull
Join Date: Aug 2010
Location: www.masonhq.com
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the music discussion is getting thin here and i rarely hear of anything that hasn't been discussed often. I miss finding new bands on here so whatever i wrote up 4 albums i listened to today that i think people on here won't have, although i don't have any idea if anyone will care about these at all.
Kenny dorham memorial album Hard Bop, you've probably heard all this stuff before but this obscure Dorham date is enjoyable nonetheless. Dorham's performance is agile and occaisonly showy, but not enough to be attention grabbing, simply skilled and tasteful playing from someone who knew bebop in and out. Butch Warren on bass is a treat with his rugged arco solo on "stage west" and it's nice to hear Charles Davis on baritone sax simply because it appears on less bop albums than other saxes. The liner notes help to make an understanding of this perpetual everyman performer, always 'as good as anyone' but never the best. reading about his childhood ambitions to become a cowboy or hobo, and about the jobs he kept while being a semi-pro jazzer makes this an appropriate "memorial". Frankly this album won't come as a shock to anybody unless it's their beginning of bebop exploration, and there's better places to do that. But if you like bop in general or Dorham specifically this is a well played album, actually in lieu of all the different stuff that happened in 60s jazz, this recording from jan. 10, 1960 is a good refresher on more or less where popular modern jazz was at starting the decade. brazil classics 2; o samba sort of one of those accessible 'world music' compilations yuppies ate up in the 80s. Frankly I usually enjoy these things, why not if there's good tracks on it.martinho da vila and clara nunes leave the biggest impression on the record, especially being 2 of the 3 artists with 2 songs on the lp version, but there's other good tracks, paulinho da viola has a pretty fresh track on here Malo- Dos trumpeter luis gasca has been replaced by forest butchel, who does great having plenty of dramatic or funky moments, though i still miss the unique, umm.....salsa of gasca. Luckily bassist pablo tellez is still on this album, like last time he has some really memorable basslines. 'i'm for real' is kinda a cheesy soul song, maybe a bit of philly influence, i only say it's cheesy mostly because of the vocals going there at moments, the propulsive bassline of pablo tellez and soulful horn charts really keep the song classy all the way until the long and sweet instrumental ending. this album has a really full and warm production, superior to the previous album. I'm sure they were worried about being considered a santana also ran, but they never were so they should have gone with it and let jorge santana loose more often like on the first lp, rather than making malo sound like santana, malo was always more in the direction of funk so i thought the rocking guitars on tracks like cafe made them more unique. the first 4 tracks of this record had precious little rockin, and jorge's coming out on the track 'hela' isn't all that memorable. In the end, the long closing track 'latin bugaloo' gets everybody in on an intense session so i can't complain. Very good second album by malo but the first is still better. mandrill- beast from the east. I only know their older stuff and this 1976 period is basically when the lineup was losing more members and the band was on it's way out original bass player bundie cenac is gone and is replaced by someone named brian allsop who isn't pictured. i assume he's a session guy, see i knew someone named that who was kind of a nerd. he was an ok pianist and trumpeter but not great, the bands he was in were always soft, academic minded wasp nerd type, nothing wrong with it but not funky enough to be in mandrill, too much maine and not enough 70s brooklyn. and that's basically what this new bass player is, competent. even a little funky but just in a music school book way. no match for the force of nature that was bundie cenac, neck snapping funkster and the goldmine continuosly milked by hiphop's finest producers. Also gone is the psychedelic hippie style of some older material, and i do think that stuff was hit or miss, but i miss it. The latin aspects of the music are less than on other albums, but there's more spanish on the record than usual for some reason. There is also some tough street talkin' and even the n word. A long departure from the hippy band that bemoaned people "cussing and swearing, and threatening the other side" What changed these men's temperment so much? Well band member Ric Wilson is now listed as Ric Wilson MD. I guess med school showed him the reality of the streets in a way that being a stoned brooklyn funkster never could. This album isn't mandrill's absolute best moments and is past their prime, however it's still solid and often more, and there are no really bad moments like some records had so it's almost as enjoyable as the classics. the wind instruments don't get as much action as some mandrill lps but much respect to carlos wilson for his sick flute solo on synthia song. |
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02.03.2012, 08:54 PM | #2 |
stalker
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 367
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Royal Trux - Twin Infinitives
Evangelista - Hello, Voyager Taj Mahal Travellers (anything I've been able to find by them) Boredoms - Vision Creation Newsun the new Grouper album Pissed Jeans - King of Jeans I've started getting into toru takemitsu, glenn branca, kenji siratori etc etc that's what I've been listening to recently. I try whenever I can.. I've been pretty busy so I don't have too much time to do things I want to. so yes... nothing "new" or even remotely interesting I guess. My apologies? yeah, my apologies... I'll check those out when I can |
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02.03.2012, 09:02 PM | #3 |
expwy. to yr skull
Join Date: Jan 2011
Location: Sweden
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Alright, 4 most worth mentioning albums(releases) I've listened today:
Yacöpsae/Active Minds - split 7" Ice Age - new Brigade LP Boschs With You - Defamiliarisation LP Atistic youth / Cola freaks - split 7" EP |
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02.04.2012, 05:27 AM | #4 |
invito al cielo
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02.04.2012, 12:38 PM | #5 | |
the end of the ugly
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Quote:
hey great idea!! |
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02.04.2012, 01:24 PM | #6 |
invito al cielo
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: fucking Los Angeles
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Lou Reed "American Poet: Live in New York 1976"
This is a great album from the Transformer tour, when Lou got back his second wind after the VU collapse and the Bowie stints, made it back to the states to bring back that good old New York art rock that he had helped to pioneer. The set is sharp, the lead guitar is smoking, the tempo is up beat and rock and roll you can dance too.. The set list was perfect blend of VU classics and those cuts from Transformer which were new, I do love that album Midnite Nezoniam Mystical, spiritual, hypnotizing, inspiring, these brothers Vaughn and Ron Benjamin of the roots reggae group Midnite tap into the same primal spirit which chanters from India to Istanbul have drawn upon, the ancient iration of positivity and the harmony sometimes called zen. This brother speaks the truth about social justice and human equality from a spiritualized perspective like King David and the Psalter. Such simple words in an almost mythical arrangement, and these brothers are prolific, upwards of FORTY albums put out since 1997!! The stage show is three hours without a single pause or dub moment.. Transcendental meditation, y'all should jump on it
__________________
Today Rap music is the Lakers |
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02.09.2012, 10:55 PM | #7 |
expwy. to yr skull
Join Date: Aug 2010
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U Brown: Train to zion
Another pretty awesome blood and fire reissue but not the best. U Brown is a fine deejay but not as engaging as....U-roy. He has an appealing stream of conscious style but often doesn't pull it together enough to make a cohesive statement of every track. Album is recorded at King Tubby's and produced by Bunny Lee and the instrumentals have the typical classic of their collaborations Harry Belafonte: Sings of the Carribean Nice 1957 album by Belafonte. The instruments sound great and Belafonte's pop friendly take on Calypso and other styles is thoroughly enjoyable. Some really class songs like 'Lead Man Holler' 'Love, Love Alone' and 'Cordelia Brown' make this a worthy thrift store acquisition this is what U Brown looks like |
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02.10.2012, 12:34 AM | #8 |
the end of the ugly
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: In the hearts of men
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Let's see.
I definitely played Turn it Up, Faggot. |
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02.10.2012, 03:25 AM | #9 |
expwy. to yr skull
Join Date: Feb 2010
Posts: 2,019
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Uzva: Tammikuinen Tammela
Nice Finnish prog-jazz, same feelings as in many seventies Finnish artists, but made in the nineties. |
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