Schubert's Ninth Symphony Cecilia Bartoli - Gluck Dreams and Fables Doug Dillard and Gene Clark - Through the morning, through the night The Essential Steve Goodman Mingus - Black Saint and the Sinner Lady Django Reinhardt on Everest Records - Vol. II Gal Costa - Gal Tropical Clarence White and the Kentucky Colonels - Living in the Past - Intro by Jerry Garcia, November 1964. First song - Fire on the Mountain (no, not THAT one).
Spun this fine slab last night. Max Roach: We Insist! Freedom Now Suite Max Roach – drums Abbey Lincoln – vocals Booker Little – trumpet Julian Priester – trombone Walter Benton – tenor saxophone " Coleman Hawkins – tenor saxophone James Schenk – bass Michael Olatunji – congas, vocals on side two Raymond Mantilla – percussion on side two Tomas du Vall – percussion on side two Recorded August 31 and September 6, 1960 at Nola Penthouse Sound Studio in NYC. This album is incredibly powerful, especially as presented on this Pure Pleasure edition. Much better than the original Candid CD issue from 89/90 which was a needle-drop, and not a very good one at that. It robbed this music of it's thrust and emotional engagement. A landmark for 1960.... Un-Grateful Trivia Puzzle: Connect this album to the GoGD.
I've come to love those first few Judas Priest albums, just as I have the first few Scorpions albums, more than their later releases.
When I was younger (and perhaps even dumber), I thought the '70's albums of both those bands wasn't heavy enough. Little did I know that real heaviness didn't necessarily have to mean most BPM or densest sludginess ratio. Luckily I saw the error of my ways.
Wow, I need a copy of this! EP with Hamid Discogs sez it's not on any label. Insanely cool to get a copy from the 'Man'. Peter Evans plays so well with EP from the other performances I have heard. Always a welcome addition.
When those albums came out I was heavy into the Prog thing so I heard the best of both worlds in some of those albums. And that JP album had Simon Phillips on drums!
It comes in a fancy large digipak. If I can make you a bit more envious Hamid sent me a whole slew of fairly recent to brandy new recordings he played on at the same time. When he offered to send me something the first one I asked about was the above. He told me it was/is great to play with Evan as he likes to get him playing to the ‘groove’ which he certainly does here. After the set Hamid’s bigger than life laugh is heard clearly as the audience cheers fade to black....
The drumming here is just insane. The things he did here with the double bass drums would change the course of metal forever. Somewhat ironic that an 'outside' musician could do that but then again perhaps not.
OK, you have succeeded is making me even more envious. I'm changing my to a . That's incredibly cool, and yet sounds just like him. I was thinking immediately about him giving EP a groove to ride on at times and how that worked out. Smiling Forehead indeed.
Yeah man, good call on that. It does seem an odd pairing in ways but it certainly worked out. I was sitting at my desk one day and got a call, picked it up, and it was Simon. He was looking for assistance/consult in building some stuff for his home studio in CA. Of course I, being a drummer, was knocked out and am sure he could hear me buzzing on the other end. Incredibly cool and grounded guy who talked with me directly instead of having some assistant do his dirty woirk.
Yeah, I have only heard good things about him from people I know who have met or dealt with him thru work. There can never be too many guys like that in this biz. And there never will either