Charles Mingus Sextet: "So Long, Eric"
Teo Macero and His Orchestra: "Neally"
Jeanne Lee and Ran Blake: "Vanguard"
Chico Hamilton Quintet: "The Wind"
Bob Prince and His Orchestra: "Ground Base"
The Modern Jazz Quartet and Laurindo Almeida: "Fugue in A Minor"
David Amram and Paquito D'Rivera et al.: "Waltz from After the Fall"
Quavaria: "Cendrillon et la moine: A Fugue on a Theme from Thelonious Monk's 'Round 'Midnight'"
Teo Macero and His Orchestra: "Neally"
Jeanne Lee and Ran Blake: "Vanguard"
Chico Hamilton Quintet: "The Wind"
Bob Prince and His Orchestra: "Ground Base"
The Modern Jazz Quartet and Laurindo Almeida: "Fugue in A Minor"
David Amram and Paquito D'Rivera et al.: "Waltz from After the Fall"
Quavaria: "Cendrillon et la moine: A Fugue on a Theme from Thelonious Monk's 'Round 'Midnight'"
I had the privilege of hearing this particular Mingus quintet (Mingus, Eric Dolphy, Clifford Jordan, Jaki Byard, and Dannie Richmond, with the addition of Johnny Coles on trumpet, a couple of times at the Five Spot, NYC, circa 1963. Giants walked the earth in those days.
ReplyDeleteGood to hear from you again, Jim! A very good deal, to catch them when one could. Sadly for them, and for the world, Dolphy was long gone and Mingus about to be by the time I was aware of their work. There usually are giants...it's too often true that we aren't willing to recognize them among us sufficiently, or let the crowd (or the crowd-handlers) decide which (or which moderately large, or no-, talent) we should be attending to instead. (Of course, what jazz I encountered in 1963 was all vibrations of my component parts as gametes and not too much further along than zygote stages-my parents were jazz and other sorts of music fans, and newlyweds in the nightclub scene in Fairbanks, Alaska. Which somehow reminds me to sing a Happy Birthday to my younger brother Eric, as this is his.)
ReplyDeleteLove the Teo Macero (never heard it before) and MJQ especially - thanks Todd.
ReplyDeleteOrlando DiGirolamo's performance on "Neally" is one of the best examples of the jazz accordion I'm aware of. Glad you liked it, Sergio!
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