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The Jazz Thread


maqroll

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Yes Raver - you are right re. Ted Heath's drummer - not Alan Ganley. We were support to some of the big bands when we had a residency in North Staffs so I watched 'em at close quarters - well the drummer anyway. Examples included:- Ray Mcvay, Sid Lawrence, Bob Miller and The Millermen and even Joe Loss. They were all brilliant and their drummers drove like mad - made me ashamed.

An anecdote was that we had to join the Musicians Union as they were all paid-up members - this was the 70's and early 80's though.

Wonder if this standard of musicianship still exists today.

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May have been posted on here before, but the new Dirty Loops album is absolutely fantastic, for anybody who likes their fusion and/or well written pop tunes. It's mainly original material with a couple of covers thrown in:

 

 

 

Fantastic cover of Avicii's 'Wake Me Up':

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Download 637 Gigabytes Of Jazz For Free

David W. Niven was a high school teacher from New Jersey. But his legacy will be the 650 cassette tapes of early jazz that he recorded throughout his lifetime. The set spans more than 1000 hours and gives a fantastic insight into the development of jazz through the years 1921-1991. Niven also wrote setlists and notes that come along with the collection on Archive.org, which you can download here.

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On 2/7/2016 at 13:28, useless said:

 

I used to play with/be taught by Chet Baker's girlfriend, Diane Vavra ~20 years ago.   Her hearing was starting to fail and she had no health insurance or money to do anything about it.   Quite sad.

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Travelling The Spaceways: The Cult of Sun Ra

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Jez Nelson explores the life of Sun Ra - the renowned jazz composer, bandleader and pianist born 100 years ago.
Sun Ra was the first black avant-garde musician, paving the way for Ornette Coleman, John Coltrane and Archie Shepp. He set up his own record label before independent labels existed, and was one of the first to use synthesizers in his music. He also commanded a unique and, some would say, unhealthy dedication from his band. They lived in his house and eschewed sex, drugs and even sleep in the pursuit of a higher cause - music.

Two decades after his death, Sun Ra continues to inspire a dedicated following. His original band, the Arkestra, regularly sell-out European concert halls, there are numerous tribute bands around the World and even an annual Italian music festival exclusively devoted to him. So why does he continue to hold this cult status? Revisiting an intriguing interview he gave shortly before he died, and with new interviews with band members and Sun Ra obsessives, Jez Nelson asks whether, a century on from his birth, we are any better placed to understand Sun Ra's message.

Contributors include Gilles Peterson, Marshall Allen, John Sinclair and Jerry Dammers.

Producer: Joby Waldman
A Somethin' Else production for BBC Radio 4.

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