What are you listening to? April 2025

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Nat King Cole - Live At The Blue Note Chicago (rec. 1953, Iconic 2024)

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Artists like Louis Armstrong and Nat King Cole who move past jazz to the greener pastures of pop stardom always draw criticism from purists. In his autumnal years, Satchmo released a lot of jazz albums with his All Stars. But apart from one trio reunion in the mid-fifties, Nat's recorded output for Capitol never strayed from the lush sound that brought him mainstream success. That's why this new release from recently uncovered tapes is such a revelation. Cole spent a week at Chicago's Blue Note jazz club in late August 1953, four years after songs like "Mona Lisa" and "Unforgettable" began topping the charts. In 1951, Nat built a road combo consisting of John Collins on guitar and bassist Charlie Harris which traveled with him the rest of his career. For this jazz booking, he added drummer Lee Young, making the music more propulsive than usual.

The producers culled 27 songs with Cole's spoken comments from the over 200 that were captured on reel-to-reel tape by the proprietor of the Blue Note club. Pop hits like "Nature Boy" rub shoulders comfortably with the seminal trio material like "Route 66" and "Straighten Up And Fly Right" that, as Nat says here, "got the ball rolling" for him. His many years in the wilderness of smoky lounges gave Nat the experience to establish a deep rapport with the appreciative audience here. Sound quality is excellent.

:5.0 on the Sam-I-Meter.
 
Dave Brubeck - Jazz At The College of the Pacific (1954)

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One of our favorite people here in Ojai was the late Alan Rains, proprietor of Rains Department Store. According to his obituary in the Ojai Valley News:

"Alan was a jazz aficionado, having been a music major at College of the Pacific (later renamed the University of the Pacific), where he started the “Rains Ratty Ragtimers.”

Perhaps Alan was in the audience in Stockton on December 14, 1953 when this set was recorded.

:clap:

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^Pete's dad?
Half brother, in a very interesting family, as Wiki tells us:

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Mike Seeger was born in New York and grew up in Maryland and Washington D.C.

His father, Charles Louis Seeger Jr., was a composer and pioneering ethnomusicologist, investigating both American folk and non-Western music.

His mother, Ruth Crawford Seeger, was a composer.

His eldest half-brother, Charles Seeger III, was a radio astronomer

His next older half-brother, John Seeger, taught for years at the Dalton School in Manhattan.

His next older half brother was Pete Seeger.

His uncle, Alan Seeger, the poet who wrote "I have a rendezvous with Death", was killed during the First World War.
 
The Banjo Barons - It's A Folk, Folk, Folk, Folk World (1962)

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Vinyl Spin of the Day.

If you had bought this album expecting The New Lost City Ramblers, or even The New Christy Minstrels, you would have been disappointed in this sheep-in-wolf's-clothing. The lead banjo player here, Carmen Mastren, went all the way back to Tommy Dorsey and Glenn Miller. As the liner notes penned by Burton Bernstein (yes, Leonard's brother) breathlessly proclaim, "what contemporary folk-song devotee wouldn't trade his 'Ban The Bomb' button for the privilege of owning such an album as this!"

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Carmen Mastren (1913-1981)
 
McCoy Tyner & Joe Henderson - Forces Of Nature: LIve At Slugs' (rec. 1966, Blue Note 2024)

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Another of those miraculous tapes that keep popping up in the vault. This one features two stellar musicians both on the rebound from the implosion of their last musical relationships. Tyner had just parted ways with John Coltrane and Henderson, Horace Silver. No strangers to each other, they blew the roof off Slugs' Saloon, the legendary jazz venue on the lower East Side where Lee Morgan would later be shot to death by his wife. Henry Grimes and Jack DeJohnette keep the proceedings live and lively with their relentless rhythm attack.

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