What Are You Listening to? September, 2021

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The Monkees - Live: the Mike & Micky Show (2020)

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The recent death of Charlie Watts has inspired a lot of discussion about the ethics of continuing a band after the death of key members. The Beatles set the standard by refusing to use the name after John's murder. However, legalities aside, I'm open to survivor bands on the theory that the perfect shouldn't be the enemy of the very good.

This disc offers a rare example of a survivor band that is better on stage than its original incarnation. I've been listening to a lot of The Monkees in recent months, working through various Super Deluxe Editions and rarities compilations. Rhino Handmade even released a box set of soundboard recordings from The Prefab Four's 1967 tour. Not bad, but the group encountered the same basic challenge on stage that The Beatles did: how do you maintain quality in the face of a thousand screaming fans? Fifty years later, the two remaining Monkees are greeted by a self-selecting crowd of baby boomers who buy the concept and want to enjoy their teenage heroes one last time.

Another factor here may seem heartless to articulate, but Mike and Micky were much stronger musically than, rest their souls, Davy and Peter. We learn from the liner notes that they always had a special chemistry born out of their shared enjoyment of music, especially vocal harmony. This chemistry shows clearly in this superb live set. The duo skillfully mix the old Monkees' hits with obscurities and even a bit of new material. The 9 piece road band, featuring Micky's sister, Coco Dolenz and Mike's son, Christian Nesmith, really rocks, harder than the originals but true to their feel and spirit.

Mike and Micky have embarked on their farewell tour which will end at the Greek Theater here in L.A. Based on this superb live set, I would love to see it. Unless you suffer from terminal pithecophobia, The Monkees Live makes a very persuasive case that the group deserved far more respect than it got back in the day.

:5.0: on the Sam-O-Meter. I'm a believer.
 
Chicago Symphony Orchestra (Fritz Reiner, cond.) - Strauss: Also Sprach Zarathustra (1954)

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Elvis Costello - Live At Hollywood High (rec. 1978, rel. 2010)

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Long ago, artists like Costello used live recordings as throw in bonus material. Three songs from this show first appeared as an EP with the initial release of Armed Forces. Decades later, Hip-O released the complete show as a standalone CD. Elvis and the Attractions pull out all the stops for the raucous kids in attendance.
 
Juan Carlos Quintero ~ Medellin (2003)



Still easily one of my favorite Latin Jazz albums. I heard Juan Carlos Quintero with his band at the San Juan Capistrano Library back in about 1992, I think.

Medellin is simply his first, eponymous album, remastered 13 years after the fact, with a song or two of different material.

Quintero has such a fluid touch on his guitar. I remember stating in an earlier incarnation that I felt JCQ had much of the Jazz soul and chops of Carlos Santana, but with fewer ego emissions per minute, or something to that effect.


Some may get a feel of Chuck Mangione in the brass of "Barcelona."

 
Thelonious Monk Quartet with John Coltrane ~ at Carnegie Hall (2005, 1957)



I was bemused to find that this generated only 3.25 stars among listeners of whom I know; my so-called Friends.

Of course, Zeeba gives it the :4.5: it rightly deserves.

Ah, EvilGnome6, and his peculiar, seemingly random, and unarticulated rating system gave it :2.0: . I should have guessed that one.
 
Geza Anda, Berlin Radio Symphony Orchestra (Ferenc Fricsay, cond.) - Bartok: Piano Concertos (1960,1961)

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What better artists to take on the challenging Bartok Piano Concertos than fellow Hungarians Geza Anda and Ferenc Fricsay? Both died in their 50's and are largely forgotten today. Anda possesses just the right combination of warmth and angularity for these works which offer some hair raising changes of mood and direction. Hold on tight!

This seems to be the first release in DG's long running "The Originals" series. It combines two LP's, leaving another Bartok piece, "Rhapsodie", on the cutting room floor. :meh:
 
Maze - Joy Pain (1980)


The great re-ripping hits the M's. Although I remain in the M-A's, the letter M has already delivered JazzyHome favorites like Maktub, Madonna, Mahanthappa, Shelly Manne, Tenna Marie, Mancini, the Marleys, brothers Marsalis, Mars Volta, Dave Matthews Band, Mayfield and Maxwell. Whew, what else can M do for me?

Yesterday, I enjoyed a Ziggy album and a Wynton album, along with a bunch of random songs from the above-mentioned artists. It looks like M will take me at least through mid next week, but I'm looking forward to the Mc's (McBride, McCaslin and McLean) today.
 
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The Clash - Sandinista! (1980)

The Clash - Sandinista! - album cover


Review from RYM :)
The problem with Sandinista! is that lurking within this triple album, lays an ambitious sextuple album that would have been truly remarkable. However, the Clash wimped-out and only gave us these thirty-six songs..
What could have the Clash put on Sandanista! sides 7-12? How 'bout some barbershop harmonies, a bit of doo-wop, a charity single (heck, why not two?), arm pit fart noises, a cover of Stiff Little Fingers' "Nobody's Hero" LP, a sequel to "West Side Story", one of those duo - 'Michael Row Your Boat Ashore' deals, a xylophone solo(s), some spoken word poetry by Topper Headon about his love affair with needle drugs, some Latino disco, a how-to-win-at-blackjack self-hypnosis track, a couple of knock-knock jokes, a mini- rock opera about a Nicaraguan boy who grows up to be President, and re-recorded the second side to Give 'Em Enough Rope.

I mean seriously, you're the freakin' Clash! Get creative, fellas! These three-dozen songs are alright, but would it have killed them to even try and be a little more prolific? Instead, of greatness, we are left to live with the missed potential of Sandinista!. A short teaser and a mere faded whiff, to what could have been a Homeric-sized epic of an album.
 
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