Originally posted by grippie
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Album For Today
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grippie
I was once introduced to Shelly Manne and shook his hand. he had a very soft limp handshake, I thought perhaps some sort of preservation his arm extremities. A really nice person.
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Can't understand how Shelly Manne has become such a forgotten figure. I know that the West Coast jazz movement is a bit discredited these days (rather unfairly) but Manne was always on the money. I think he was an essential incredient of Shorty Roger's "Giants" sessions and was always intrigued by this session althoguh this is not the most interesting track from recollection:-
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Thanks to Ian - and all - for their appreciations of Shelly.
I was at the closing night of the original ManneHole, off Hollywood Blvd. (for Teddy Edwards). Site was then relocated on Wilshire Blvd. into a high-rise office building with an adjoining kitchen...but didn't take.
He was always at the forefront in promoting jazz...I remember his sponsoring an afternoon at The Libby Bowl in Ojai with a group which included Gunther Schuller - performing the music of Scott Joplin!
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Calum
These Shorty Roger's albums are great! It's strange that they were considered "Modern" in their time as they do't necessarily take the music much further forward that Basie. Makes you appreciate justhow ahea ofthe game Basie actually was. (For me, hugely significant and perhaps representing one of the most significant developments in music before Charlie Parker - from a rhythmic point of view, I would suggest as important) However, they are hugely enjoyable and represent the apogee of West Coast jazz for me.
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grippie
BBC4 tonight three items
22:45 - 00:20
Arena
Dave Brubeck - In His Own Sweet Way
00:20 - 01:20
1959: The Year that Changed Jazz
01:20 - 02:20
Omnibus
Ronnie Scott and All That Jazz
02:20 - 03:35
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The overlooked altoist Eric Kloss & tenorist Booker Ervin playing 'Summertime' with a superb rhythm section of Jaki Byard, Richard Davis & Alan Dawson:
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Last edited by aka Calum Da Jazbo; 08-03-13, 10:45.According to the best estimates of astronomers there are at least one hundred billion galaxies in the observable universe.
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I've been listening to blues since the early '60s but have only recently discovered Jimmy Witherspoon's wonderful 1958 album 'Singin' the Blues'(JAZZBEAT 539) featuring Harry "Sweets" Edison, Teddy Edwards & Hampton Hawes. I think it's a classic which deserves to be better known.
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