Zeeba Neighba
Staff member
Wow! 35 submissions for this iteration of the MG Album Club - fantastic streak. It's been great. Let's keep it going.
I was tasked with the year 1963 and will choose:
Charles Mingus - Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus (1963)
Apologies to The Beatles Please Please Me and to The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, two seminal rock albums, but when I got 1963, I knew it had to be a jazz album. Quite a year for jazz (John Coltrane alone had FOUR releases on Impulse that year, all wonderful). Many albums that I play often that year including Jimmy Smith's funky organ jazz album Back at the Chicken Shack and Kenny Burrell's great guitar album Midnight Blue.
Still it was going to be down to two of my favorite jazz albums - both of which might be on my top ten jazz faves (not "best" or "most influential" mind you, but two I turn to most). One is Dexter Gordon's wonderful Our Man in Paris, which I just got on vinyl in April - such a great jazz tenor sax album; love Gordon's sound.
But really was there any other way I could go but Mingus x 5? Surely many here have heard me tout this one before - in fact, after lurking at the ol' MG 10+ years ago, decided to finally post to the forum and wanted to play an album not only that I loved but also that might give me some opening clout that I belonged among you giants of the MG forum. So my first post was this album (it also was my first album posted on the new forum and my choice for 1963 in our yearly album series 2 yrs ago - so yeah I love this one). It was either my first or second Mingus album bought ages ago - why I picked it I still don't know as I certainly didn't know much about Mingus (and if I did I probably would have shied away with the jazz I was listening to at the time). Loved it at first listen as the familiar burst of "II B.S." came barreling out of my speakers.
Many who might not know this album (and I know many here know the album well) will recognize the opener "II B.S." from a 2001 VW Jetta commerical. Those knowledgeable about Mingus will know it's a variation of his "Haitian Fight Song". In fact, several songs here are retreads of Mingus standards: "Better Get Hit in Yo' Soul" appeared on Mingus Ah Um as "Better Git It in Your Soul"; "Theme for Lester Young" is a version of "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat" (also on Ah Um); "Hora Decubitus" is a reworking of "E's Flat Ah's Flat Too".
So Zeeba is essentially giving us an album of retreads - fear not. The originals are classic but these versions are unique and stand alone (some better than the originals) as fantastic reimaginings. Mingus was a brilliant jazz experimenter always pushing the boundaries of jazz. Truly no one at the time was doing what he was doing with big bands/larger combos. But for those who might be turned off by avant garde jazz, never fear (I could have given you Black Saint and the Sinner Lady also from 1963 and considered on of avant garde jazz's greatest statements). Mingus, while always pushing the envelope never veered too much away from his historical influences of Duke Ellington and Charlie Parker to be inaccessible; amidst the cacophony here, Mingus never veers too far away from the melody.
If you're unfamiliar with this one (or haven't played it in awhile), hopefully you'll find something in it to love.
I was tasked with the year 1963 and will choose:
Charles Mingus - Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus Mingus (1963)
Apologies to The Beatles Please Please Me and to The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan, two seminal rock albums, but when I got 1963, I knew it had to be a jazz album. Quite a year for jazz (John Coltrane alone had FOUR releases on Impulse that year, all wonderful). Many albums that I play often that year including Jimmy Smith's funky organ jazz album Back at the Chicken Shack and Kenny Burrell's great guitar album Midnight Blue.
Still it was going to be down to two of my favorite jazz albums - both of which might be on my top ten jazz faves (not "best" or "most influential" mind you, but two I turn to most). One is Dexter Gordon's wonderful Our Man in Paris, which I just got on vinyl in April - such a great jazz tenor sax album; love Gordon's sound.
But really was there any other way I could go but Mingus x 5? Surely many here have heard me tout this one before - in fact, after lurking at the ol' MG 10+ years ago, decided to finally post to the forum and wanted to play an album not only that I loved but also that might give me some opening clout that I belonged among you giants of the MG forum. So my first post was this album (it also was my first album posted on the new forum and my choice for 1963 in our yearly album series 2 yrs ago - so yeah I love this one). It was either my first or second Mingus album bought ages ago - why I picked it I still don't know as I certainly didn't know much about Mingus (and if I did I probably would have shied away with the jazz I was listening to at the time). Loved it at first listen as the familiar burst of "II B.S." came barreling out of my speakers.
Many who might not know this album (and I know many here know the album well) will recognize the opener "II B.S." from a 2001 VW Jetta commerical. Those knowledgeable about Mingus will know it's a variation of his "Haitian Fight Song". In fact, several songs here are retreads of Mingus standards: "Better Get Hit in Yo' Soul" appeared on Mingus Ah Um as "Better Git It in Your Soul"; "Theme for Lester Young" is a version of "Goodbye Pork Pie Hat" (also on Ah Um); "Hora Decubitus" is a reworking of "E's Flat Ah's Flat Too".
So Zeeba is essentially giving us an album of retreads - fear not. The originals are classic but these versions are unique and stand alone (some better than the originals) as fantastic reimaginings. Mingus was a brilliant jazz experimenter always pushing the boundaries of jazz. Truly no one at the time was doing what he was doing with big bands/larger combos. But for those who might be turned off by avant garde jazz, never fear (I could have given you Black Saint and the Sinner Lady also from 1963 and considered on of avant garde jazz's greatest statements). Mingus, while always pushing the envelope never veered too much away from his historical influences of Duke Ellington and Charlie Parker to be inaccessible; amidst the cacophony here, Mingus never veers too far away from the melody.
If you're unfamiliar with this one (or haven't played it in awhile), hopefully you'll find something in it to love.
on the Sam-O-Meter.


stars.