What are you listening to? May 2023

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The Isley Brothers - The Brothers: Isley (1969)

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Ben Webster - See You at the Fair (1964)

Ben Webster - See You at the Fair - album cover

I saw this post and thought to myself, "Now there's one I haven't heard yet." So, I went to Allmusic to see it rated highly.

Then, I went to Discogs and ordered and purchased the CD.

About an hour later, there is a knock at my door. It is Maria Campagnolo, the widow of John, who asked if I know anyone who would be interested in taking some old 78s. I said that I knew some collectors, and I would be happy to take them, and turn them in for her. Of course, I was thinking they were old shellac 78s.

It turns out they are LPs, and not 78s at all. Two boxes with about 25-30 albums in each. Full of Jazz. Bop. Post-Bop. Eric Dolphy, Charlie Parker, Lester Young, Dexter Gordon, Miles and Coltrane, Coleman Hawkins, Pepper Adams, Thelonious Monk, Donald Byrd.

And, there it was. Ben Webster's "See You at the Fair." I have never ordered a CD and received the LP within the hour.

Mind you, some of these are in very good shape and some not so good. There are broken spines a-plenty.

Record jacket spines, that is. Don't worry; I was able to carry them over without any mishaps.

I will need to give these a good cleaning before I listen. When I post them, I will likely designate them as from the John Campagnolo Memorial Jazz Collection, Vinyl Section.
 
I saw this post and thought to myself, "Now there's one I haven't heard yet." So, I went to Allmusic to see it rated highly.

Then, I went to Discogs and ordered and purchased the CD.

About an hour later, there is a knock at my door. It is Maria Campagnolo, the widow of John, who asked if I know anyone who would be interested in taking some old 78s. I said that I knew some collectors, and I would be happy to take them, and turn them in for her. Of course, I was thinking they were old shellac 78s.

It turns out they are LPs, and not 78s at all. Two boxes with about 25-30 albums in each. Full of Jazz. Bop. Post-Bop. Eric Dolphy, Charlie Parker, Lester Young, Dexter Gordon, Miles and Coltrane, Coleman Hawkins, Pepper Adams, Thelonious Monk, Donald Byrd.

And, there it was. Ben Webster's "See You at the Fair." I have never ordered a CD and received the LP within the hour.

Mind you, some of these are in very good shape and some not so good. There are broken spines a-plenty.

Record jacket spines, that is. Don't worry; I was able to carry them over without any mishaps.

I will need to give these a good cleaning before I listen. When I post them, I will likely designate them as from the John Campagnolo Memorial Jazz Collection, Vinyl Section.
That is a pretty cool story :thumbsup:
 
Esmerine ~ Aurora (2005)



Chamber Music, Instrumental

But Don't Be Calling It Post-Rock

rainshine87: that's because this isn't post-rock.
due to the weird fact that every release where a godspeed member has been on is tagged as post-rock, people think it MUST be post rock. this is chamber music.
listen to Steve Reich or so, and you'll see where they got their influence for "Histories Repeating" from. I am glad their members are doing new stuff, and clowns who think it must sound like godspeed, mono, explosions in the sky or other "post-rock", ruin it.

this is a very good album of natural feeling chamber-music instrumentals. but if you are a fan of super-fancy post-rock, this isn't an album for you.
 
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