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    One more Saturday night at Winterland! Yes, we're back to home base for DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 42, the complete show from Winterland, San Francisco, 2/23/74. The one that featured the earliest amalgamation of what would soon become the Wall of Sound, the one that is so "loud, clear, and defined," it's been ripe for release for quite some time and we're glad it's finally getting its due.

    First set or second, there are no wrong answers here. From the unique show opener of Chuck Berry's "Around And Around" and an incredible "Here Comes Sunshine" that would then disappear for 18 years, to a medley of WAKE OF THE FLOOD tracks - "Row Jimmy," "Weather Report Suite," and "Stella Blue" - cementing their status in the canon and an unstoppable hour through the classic 1973-1974 Dead that is “He’s Gone”>“Truckin’”>“Drums”>“The Other One”>“Eyes Of The World,” it's all exceptionally hot.

    Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 42: WINTERLAND, SAN FRANCISCO, 2/23/74 was recorded by Kidd Candelario and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Grab a copy while you can.

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  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    Grundy

    Huh huh

    Thats what we called wedgies in my youthful youth

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Right on Bluecrow

    Check your PM

  • bluecrow
    Joined:
    Eric Nesterenko

    that's a name I haven't heard for ages and instantly recognized. Nesterenko was a core player with the Blackhawks when I was a kid. Bobby Hull, Stan Mikita, Pit Martin, Tony Esposito and others. Legends. Born in Flin Flon, Manitoba (Flin Flon - what a cool name). Parents were Ukranian immigrants.

  • daverock
    Joined:
    Johnny Rotten wasn't so hard

    I met him once. Sort of. It was at the Electric Circus in Manchester in December 1976 a few days after the interview with Bill Grundy had been broadcast on television. There were 4 bands on that night, and the Sex Pistols were last on. I went on my own.
    Between bands I went to the bar upstairs for a pint and a breather. It was virtually empty - but the Pistols were there, talking to some girls at the bar. I got my drink and slumped down..and then got the feeling someone was looking at me. I looked at the next table, and it was Johnny Rotten , also sitting on his own. I mumbled a greeting, and he mumbled one back. Then he re joined the band and they went on. Not exactly great meetings of our time.

    Despite the fact that he had short hair and...well he was a punk....and I had very long hair and looked like - well I don't know what I looked like - but I sensed that we were cut from the same cloth at that time. Both about 19, skinny, mad..
    I'm glad Sid Vicious wasn't there, though.

  • Oroborous
    Joined:
    Mr Smith, and Hockey of course ; )

    Wow, beyond cool Jeff! Those windows and that story was awesome! I can relate to egos, rich folk, and crazy deadlines. Fortunately I don’t have to deal with those so much anymore. Like y’all didn’t have enough to deal with without some DB mucking up the works. Shoulda dosed him lol. Seems like you’ve found the hard to get niche of art and commerce that’s cool and invigorating and not the soul crushing constantly compromised for cash scenario, kudos!

    Many celebrity brush ups but since it’s hockey season I’ll just share a related one. Mikes telling of the real great one, Gordy Howe, made me remember my time with the great but perhaps unknown by all except the most dedicated and perhaps “mature” hockey nuts. Almost 25 years ago when we first moved in the area we live in, my first job was at a golf club. I’d dropped outta grad school and for various reasons just wanted something less stressful and to be outside in the mountains etc. after a few years I became the outside staff manager.
    The director of golf had hired this old, literally crooked sort of old bent guy who had a been an NHL warrior back in the bad ole daze of Eddie Shore, Gordie Howe etc named Eric Nesterenko.
    He played over twenty years which is kind of amazing if you understand what hockey was like back then. So here’s this beat up old supposed legend working for me as a starter/ranger at an off the path club in the middle of nowhere.
    Well Eric was quite a guy but not much of an employee.
    He had two problems: as a starter he was never at the first tee box. Usually I could find him at the driving range which was no bueno because although we had liberal privileges at the club, we were not to use the facilities on the clock or in uniform. Well there’d be Eric 8 outta 10 times at the range. Now if that wasn’t enough, he was a machine and would not just hit a few balls, he go through ever damn ball on the range lol. I mean these were Titleist den caddies: (hollow mini golf bags full of about 300 balls), times about 15 stations on the range, that’s A LOT of balls and would wipe out most folks. But Nester would routinely go through ever ball out there.
    The other habit he had, as a ranger, people can be aholes when the ranger needs to repeatedly get on them. But hey, that’s their job and the offender was mucking things up for everyone else. I’m sure anyone who’s golfed regularly knows what it’s like being stuck behind rich ahole arm chair Tiger Woods, not fun!
    So Nesters problem was when some of these folks would get uppity with him, he’d be ready to drop the gloves!
    Now we thought that was hilarious, and some of these nutnics probably deserved a couple elbows in the corner, but of course professionally we had to act shocked, liked we cared when these dipshits complained about him.
    I never got to no him that well, but he was always a respectful gentleman to me and the staff, and we loved working with him.
    The amazing thing was, even years later, he continued to be a ski instructor in vail, even after all his body had been through! About 10-15 years after I worked with him, we had a gig at a tiny little place in vail. So small we were only allowed to use like one powered monitor with acoustic instruments. Nester, and his son, along with several others were regulars there for apre’ ski. We did the gig mostly because of the fun atmosphere, it was an early gig, and you didn’t need to schlep Amps/PA etc It was mostly for fun, which it was. In fact it got too big so they cancelled us. Imagine that: we’re making too much money and it’s too popular so you can’t play here anymore lol. Well not only was it fun, but Nester and all the regulars took really good care of us too. Some nights we’d actually make ok money!
    I haven’t seen Nester in years, but I think he might still be up the hill giving lessons if at all possible.

    So speaking of hockey, wow, wild games last night! Not a big Rangers fan (no offense) so loved that outcome, and holy crap I hope the whole Battle for Alberta series is like last night! Wow! Tonight…
    GO AVS!

  • proudfoot
    Joined:
    If i saw Johnny Rotten in person up close

    I would run away.

    I love NMTB and PIL's first two albums, but...he seems to be someone to avoid contact with.

  • That Mike
    Joined:
    Chuck Berry

    Jeff - Great guy to meet in Chuck Berry, that is gold! Great story, and your art work is amazing. What was Chuck Berry's reaction to seeing the work?

    I would say my meetings with celebrities has been great, overall. I worked a boat show in the 90s, and in the booth next to us was Desmond Llewelyn, infamous as "Q" in the James Bond series. It was a super dead night in January, and he was so nice. He was there for some company, and they were featuring that silly "Alligator Sub" from one of the cheesy Roger Moore movies (I was glad when they dumped Moore). I lost the poster he signed in one of many moves, regretably.

    Of the folks I met, Sir Edmund Hillary was top of my list for sheer respect, and he and Gordie Howe both had hands like dinner plates. Big dinner plates. Chris Hillman (pictured) was terrific, as was Herb Pedersen, and Gene Clark. Dan Akroyd was a hoot, and I still have the wine bottle he signed (sans the wine!). Rod Serling's daughter (Anne) and Byron Berline (fiddle master) both signed books for me, but the one that moved me the most was Kim Phuc, known infamously as "The Girl In The Picture", running naked as a little child from an errant napalm bombing in South Vietnam. She lives in the next town over, and she is the most spiritual person I have ever met, not at all defined by the atrocities done to her, or that she had seen.

    I'd love to have met Jerry Garcia, I understand he was about the most centred guy you could meet. I'm still holding out to meet Dylan, but I always get the feeling he may be somewhat jaded about that kind of an encounter.

  • Nick1234
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    Meeting celebrities

    I worked at an Executive Jet Centre a few years ago for a while, rich people and celebrities, singers on tour etc. Rich people generally were great, polite and respectful, celebrities less so.

    I've literally bumped into Roy Orbison and Johnny Rotten. Roy smiled and ruffled my hair, I was about 8 at the time, and Johnny said nothing but the gorilla of a minder behind him (it was in the pub next to the Rainbow Theatre, London, before the Ramones New Year's Eve gig 1977ish) wasn't too polite.

  • JeffSmith
    Joined:
    Europe 72' Limited Edition Hoodies

    Scott McDougall's Europe '72 artwork is some of the most memorable and among my favorite GD cover art. In case it hasn't been mentioned, Europe '72 hoodies are on sale for $58 at Section119 dot com. Looks like "Munich" is sold out.

  • JeffSmith
    Joined:
    Getting in tune with Chuck

    I was surprised to find an unsuspecting Phil Lesh at a table at the Bar at Terrapin Crossroads one night a few years ago – wasn’t as quick on my feet at Keithfan was with Chris Squire. Sort of mumbled “Hi!” and “Thanks!” and dumb stuff.

    What I’ll never forget is the time I met Chuck Berry. He was the featured guest at the Grand Opening Night Gala for Dallas’s Hard Rock Cafe in 1986. I was lead artist/coordinator for the making of the Hard Rock's Elvis, Chuck Berry and Jerry Lee Lewis stained glass windows, which earned me a coveted invite to the HRC’s VIP “Cheese Club” upstairs for a seated dinner. In fact I sat next to Chuck’s gorgeous daughter. After the meal, everyone exited back into the crush of revelers. All of us were partying hardy. During the transformation of this old church into the HRC, I’d discovered a hidden “nook” where I escaped for some calm.

    The next thing I knew club owner and visionary, Isaac Tigrett, opened the secret door to “my” nook, and told Chuck Berry he could tune and warm up there. Nobody asked me to leave, so I spent 20 or 30 minutes listening to Chuck play. We chatted a little about growing up in Missouri and Arkansas. Chuck was still kinda pissed at the way he’d been treated by the taxman, the law and the record companies. Then, before I knew it, a manager stuck his head in and led Chuck to where he waited until being introduced by Dan Ackroyd and proceeding to blow the top off the place. The Paul Schafer Band played most of the rest of the time.

    For more about the Chuck Berry and other two HRC windows (remove the "dot"s and "spaces" first):

    Slideshow:
    archstglassinc dot com / project/hard-rock-cafe-dallas / ?view=slideshow

    Tedious Story:
    archstglassinc dot com / project/hard-rock-cafe-dallas / ?view=text

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One more Saturday night at Winterland! Yes, we're back to home base for DAVE'S PICKS VOLUME 42, the complete show from Winterland, San Francisco, 2/23/74. The one that featured the earliest amalgamation of what would soon become the Wall of Sound, the one that is so "loud, clear, and defined," it's been ripe for release for quite some time and we're glad it's finally getting its due.

First set or second, there are no wrong answers here. From the unique show opener of Chuck Berry's "Around And Around" and an incredible "Here Comes Sunshine" that would then disappear for 18 years, to a medley of WAKE OF THE FLOOD tracks - "Row Jimmy," "Weather Report Suite," and "Stella Blue" - cementing their status in the canon and an unstoppable hour through the classic 1973-1974 Dead that is “He’s Gone”>“Truckin’”>“Drums”>“The Other One”>“Eyes Of The World,” it's all exceptionally hot.

Limited to 25,000 numbered copies, DAVE’S PICKS VOLUME 42: WINTERLAND, SAN FRANCISCO, 2/23/74 was recorded by Kidd Candelario and has been mastered to HDCD specs by Jeffrey Norman at Mockingbird Mastering. Grab a copy while you can.

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by nappyrags

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Gimme their studio stuff
And that live DVD set from way back when
The side-long Dazed and Confused stuff does get a bit tedious
I read Bonham's drumming described as "subtle as a freight train" (not that there's anything wrong with that...)
LZ is cool, no matter what, though.

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In reply to by proudfoot

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Hockey season is over.
Get back to work and make those seaside chats for DaP43 and the 2022 Box that is overdue to be announced.

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In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Congrats Oro. Well deserved. I'm get melancholy when the Cup is hoisted, bringing an end to two great months of hockey.

Zep. As a teenager growing up on nothing but AM radio, I was hooked hearing the first few notes of Good Times Bad Times. Still love that song. Kashmir would be next on my list. I grew weary of Stairway to Heaven. That and Free Bird are two of the most overhyped songs of all time IMHO.

I'll take Low Spark, Nantucket Sleighride and Green Grass and High Tides over those any day.

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17 years 6 months

In reply to by Angry Jack Straw

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Boom boom cha, boom boom cha…

Remember the old ABC Wide World of Sports intro: “the thrill of victory, the agony of defeat”
Well for once we got the former, yes folks, for today we are winners, got NO chance of losing THIS time! : )
Yep, been 21 years since one of my teams won, feels kinda nice!
More importantly, what a great series regardless of outcome!
And to the rest, thanks for your patience, please return to your regularly scheduled merry go round broke down tuning session!

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13 years 6 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Agree, hockey season is over.. let's get moving on that next box set. Put down your fly rod, brew some very strong coffee and don't get distracted by eagles, egrets, sea lions, hawks, wandering Sasquatch, Russian subs off trolling the coasts of Vancouver, log rolling competitions, alien invasions or remote controls.

Get to work. I heard the shows and sound in the upcoming box are real and they are spectacular.

Again, strong coffee/box set. strong coffee/box set. strong coffee/box set. Focus Dave, focus.

----------------------------------
Edit: Of course we know Dave doesn't read this.. which should only serve to encourage us to poke fun in his general direction (so long as it's tasteful, of course, and makes us feel better regarding release withdrawal)

Edit2: thinking this through, too much strong coffee might get a day job centric box set. Perhaps I am overthinking this. Strong coffee/box set. Dave, knock knock..

Did someone say 1968?

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RT vol.4 no.5 rolling and as usual with this era I am intrigued by the Travis Bean's tone. For the guitarists out there, what would draw one to this guitar besides the tone/sound? I think I heard it has an aluminum neck. What would the designer be searching for with that choice? Lighter weight? Does it stay in tune better? I know Jerry was always concerned (and Bob usually somewhat miffed) with his tuning. To me it sounds jazzy if that's a thing.
Cheers

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4 years 4 months

In reply to by JimInMD

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A box of '88 first sets only.

That's a nightmare and a half...

1968 YES
1968 YES
1968 YES

a big ol' bunch of 68 Dave
Or 69

This just in...SCROTUS just announced that GD box sets and Davez releases promote happiness and high times, which are detrimental to the fabric of US society. "Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" were auto-correct typos, cited Clarence Thomas. "Jefferson actually wrote, "Toe the line, bitches, and suck DT's diq for your freedom."

But a 1969 box...yeah. I love when you talk psychedelia.

The aluminum neck is for better sustain.
Supposedly JG started using them because not being custom made, they were easier to fix on the road.
The custom Erwin’s had to be sent back for repairs, which was a hassle, especially if something happened on the road.
My buddy had a TB bass. I played the thing for a while and while overall it was a decent instrument, it was ridiculously heavy, not balanced very well, and a pain if it got too cold. It was a long scale, so maybe the guitars balanced better?

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3 years 1 month
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These 2 shows would make for a great one off release, or part of a bigger 1969 box set. I think the box set is going to be from 90, 91, 92 all three, or one of the 3 years. I hope its going to be a 1969/1970 collection, with 9/20 /70 included.

Having just put in an order for the Lyceum L.P.s box, the idea of a box of 1988 first sets quite appeals to me.

Thinking of Led Zep live-long guitar solos were a bit of a cliche by 1973. Black Sabbath at that time used to be going like the clappers for about 40 minutes, then one by one they would start skulking off stage, leaving Tony Iommi on his own playing his guitar. He diddled along for ages, then he would sidle off and Bill Ward would take over with a drum solo. You could feel the energy level dropping as all this went on. They had to start building up the momentum again from scratch when they eventually reconvened.

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Do we know for CERTAIN that the Lyceum vinyl box isn't the ACTUAL 2022 box set??
Not trying to be a downer, but I just never want to assume something.

Now back to 1968, venue of your choice. I had a cool partial '68 show from over 20 years ago. It actually began with an encore from The Ark('69), and then had a handful of songs from Jan. '68. Maybe the 9th, maybe Oregon??

Anybody know this??

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10 years 9 months

In reply to by Mr. Ones

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And swing it, in a nice way of course! Where is Bolo and his impenetrable "clues"??

What is the fate of the newly discovered June '68 tape at OSF? Wouldn't Dave like to create a little excitement in Dead World by releasing it or allowing OSF to release it? Like, this summer?

And, no, the E72 vinyl box is NOT the year's "boxed set." I am unanimous on that point.

Saw some talk about jazz a few pages back...over the past 6 months, maybe more, I've been putting on jazz in the background on many days, as I work from home. Mostly just ask Alexa to play it via Amazon music, which runs through the Sonos....and the entire homestead.
I try to listen intently when I can, and I really love the off-kilter beats and dissonance that it sometimes embraces. I listen to a lot of piano jazz; if anyone has any recommendations, please do share. I also like the funky stuff and again love being surprised. I've delved into Beegie Adair, Dr. Lonnie Smith, McCoy Tyner, Herbie Hancock, and also revisiting MMW here and there in crossovers. The freestyle, freewheeling nature of the music is cool and its always been a bit of an interesting enigma for me way back since I was a kid.

Be Well People
Sixtus

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In reply to by Sixtus_

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I really dug Led Zeppelin growing up in High School; I recall for my HS Graduation, I got the LZ CD Box Set that was pretty new - it had like every song ever, it seemed. I really dove into it. I found I gravitated most to those more acoustic-y kind of songs, but then as time moved on I did begin to appreciate some of the stuff with a harder edge. There are some all-time great songs from anywhere, in their repertoire. I often forget how many of these are legit, as I deftly perform a quick brain dump:

Your Time Is Gonna Come
Traveling Riverside Blues
Hey Hey What Can I do
Going to California
White Summer/Black Mountain Side
Bron-Yr-Aur
Kashmir
Immigrant Song
Ten Years Gone
That’s The Way
When the Levee Breaks
Ramble On
Over the Hills and Far Away
Tangerine
D’yer Mak’er
Gallows Pole
Battle of Evermore*

* the very first time I ever smoked pot, this was the first thing I 'heard' while in "the state".
I remember walking into the room; it was complete silence....but then the fade-in of the mandolin began and from that moment to present day I have been HOOKED on music in "the state".
It absolutely opened my eyes like nothing ever before that moment in time. Just the sound of music itself; the separation of instruments, catching me completely unaware and off guard; the richness of the instruments playing together but separately; the reverb, the vocals, all of it tied itself into a new form of literal amazement. That Door - it opened - on this day; in that moment.
I'll never forget it.

Sixtus

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In reply to by Sixtus_

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Sixtus, I just got turned onto Bill Evans this past winter and I can’t get enough. So I bought a bunch lol.
Now he can be pretty mellow depending on what kind of jazz you like.
I used to dig mostly hard bop and fusion stuff, but find I like more mellow stuff now, what I call Heroin jazz.
Pull a couple tubes, sit back and it melts all the stress away!

I too could use some help from the real Jazznics out there: THATSMIKE, I think Nitcat and some others regularly post on good jazz. I’m looking for more stuff like Bill Evans, AND, I’m really into vibraphones. I have one with Lionel Hampton and Stan Getz which I love, but really want more. Problem is there is way more of it than you’d think. I figured there be just a few must have/ go tos but seems there’s a lot to choose from.

So I’m looking for more mellow stuff. The soundtrack from the film Around Midnight is a great example of what I’m looking for! Good movie and awesome soundtrack if you’ve never heard it!
Oh, I’m not looking for jazz with vocals! Have some but not into the vocals much.

So mellow, piano,, and some top shelf vibraphone music por favor!
Thanks!

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In reply to by Sixtus_

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Oh yeah, are you familiar with Pat Metheny at all?
He has some great mellow stuff too, especially with Lyle Mays on piano!

EDIT: oh yeah, anyone else ever think Stan Getz plays a lot of lines like Jerry?
His runs and phrasing sound like Jerry to me?

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16 years 10 months

In reply to by Oroborous

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Try Blues and Ballads by Brad Mehldau Trio. One of my favs! So good...Oscar Peterson Night Train is always fun too!

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In reply to by Oroborous

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Oro-"Idle Moments" by Grant Green is good jazz album featuring a guy called Bobby Hutcherson on vibes. I haven't played it for a few years, to be honest, but it was one I rated highly when I was listening to more jazz a while back

Which puts me in my mind of other jazz guitarists I like. Wes Montgomery, who I don't think I have ever seen referred to on here, is the one I have listened most to. Beautiful mellow tone-he played with the meat of his thumb apparently-and it sounds like it. Two really good ones are "The Incredible Jazz Guitar of..." from 1960 and the live "Full House" from 1962. No vibes on 'em though.

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In reply to by Oroborous

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if you are looking for a good vibraphonist, look no further than Milt Jackson.

I took a History of Jazz class one year at UVM (it turned out to be one of THE MOST DIFFICULT CLASSES I ever took....ever...we had to literally memorize content of like 10 cassettes, and the Prof would play like a 30 second snippet of one of the 100+ songs and we'd have to name the song, and every person playing every instrument on the final...it was bad...but I learned.....STUFF!)
...anyway....one of said learnings was: Milt Jackson. I also really enjoyed that sound. That monstrous class also turned me on to Thelonious Monk, and away I went with my 'pie-aner Jazz' inphatuation.

Thanks to you and to those so far who have chimed in.
It's been noted before, but this here web-locale is a stewpot of killer knowledge and input.

Sixtus

Brief story: My friends and I were 16, maybe 17, and we hear that Oscar is playing Charlie Browns Steakhouse in NYC, so we go. (Common that jazz greats would play the lounge while the dining room was elsewhere.) So the maitre de stops us at the door; he's seating patrons one at a time. But others come in and he seats them first. We're waiting, wondering what the deal is. Okay, we were long hairs in very casual clothes... Oscar Peterson walks in and we stand back in awe. He says to the maitre de, "What are these young people doing standing here?" The maitre de stammers something unconvincing (maybe we didn't grease him?). Mr. Peterson says, "Seat them at my table, at once!" So we get a small bar table right by his bench, closer than anyone in the joint. And we say thanks, he says thanks for coming to see me, and we hang for his one-hour set. We spot several well-known jazzers in the bar, like Frank Wess, flutist. We were in hog heaven and Oscar was on our side. Never forgot that night. One of jazz's greatest pianists, check him out. I've got another tale about the Village Vanguard and the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis band ya gotta hear sometime.....

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Some good recommendations so far here. I’ll add Keith Jarrett - solo or with his trio - to the mix. Since his days with Charles Lloyd, through Miles, and on his own, he is a prime player. At least try his solo “Koln Concert” album to get a feel for his work. His “Blue Note” box set (with his trio - Gary Peacock and the great jazz drummer Jack DeJohnette) is another favourite. He has an extensive library, and to me, one of the best on the piano.
Also, a trio I really like is the Christian McBride Trio, with a really great pianist named Christian Sands (he also has solo albums that are great). See an album called “Out Here”, or the Trio “Live At The Village Vanguard”.
Also - Chick Corea. Go back to “Now He Sings, Now He Sobs” (1968). It all gets better from there.

Oro - If you like vibes, Christian McBride (above) also has a band called Inside Straight (he also has a big band, too!), that recorded a live album “Insight Straight at the Village Gate” the same period he recorded his “Trio” album there. His Inside Straight band has a vibes player I was not familiar with, Warren Wolf, and I’m not really much of a vibe fan, but this guy dominates on this album, and it is an excellent release (McBride is an excellent musician, and pretty well anything he has released is first rate, including the work he did with Chick Corea). You like vibes? Check this release out. Gary Burton is another renowned vibraphonist, and he has worked and recorded with dozens of artists.

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11 years 11 months

In reply to by icecrmcnkd

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Yes i missed it...the one I really really really am mad at myself for is missing the '70 Derek & The Dominos show at the Civic...my pals and I had tix for both shows that day...at an afternoon BBQ show day I met an exquisite "older" woman who was a theatre arts major...I told my buddies to go ahead and leave without me...of course about an hour later I realized the lady in question had left with friends and didn't even bother to find me and say goodbye...boo hoo

Yeah...

No D&theD because yer D dominated your domain?

Prooooobably worth it

Bowie at SM Civic...was that recorded/filmed? I will go answer that question myself

2 minutes later...

Oh. It was recorded and released. David mofo Bowie...he cool

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Thelonious Monk. Lots of cool stuff. If somebody mentioned Thelonious already, I missed it. I started with Monk's Dream and dug it.

Nice to see the shoutout about Stan Getz, he is a favorite of mine. When my first son was born I tried to avoid too much discordant music when he was a baby and spent a bunch of time listening to Jazz Samba Encore, dig that album from start to finish, like it even more than the original Jazz Samba album. I tried to avoid the too much discordant music with my other two kids as well when they were babies, with some consistency for the second son, but by the time my daughter arrived a few years later, the consistency dropped off a bit. Stan has lots of great stuff, and a really great, distinctive sound and style. And that version of the Girl From Ipanema by Stan, Antonio Carlos Jobim, Joao Gilberto and Astrid Gilberto from Getz / Gilberto is just sublime. Never thought about comparisons to Jerry before, but maybe next time I listen.

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17 years 6 months
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Check out John Zorn - In Search of the Miraculous. Mello, piano, vibraphone. Little out of left field. A modern take on piano jazz.

If you like that give a listen to O'o by the Dreamers, another Zorn project - a bit less mellow than ISOTM but really grooving.

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11 years 11 months

In reply to by proudfoot

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yes the Ziggy Stardust show was recorded, broadcast on FM and filmed

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11 years 11 months

In reply to by nappyrags

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Check your messages!

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17 years 4 months
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Check out Ahmad Jamal and don’t forget about Dave Brubeck.

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11 years 10 months

In reply to by daverock

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A personal fave of mine is the Complete Lionel Hampton & Oscar Peterson Sessions '53 - '54 from Verve Records...it features Ray Brown on Bass, Buddy Rich Drums, Buddy DeFranco Clarinet & Herb Ellis Guitar...great smooth swinging stuff...

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17 years 6 months
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Liberace. 🎹 😧

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3 years 1 month
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Otis Spann.

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10 years 3 months

In reply to by simonrob

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"I'm playing all the right notes - but not necessarily in the right order."

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Y’all are seriously having a jazz piano conversation and NOT mentioning Art Tatum??
Really?? C’mon man!!

Playoffs?? Playoffs??

Add Henry Butler to the list. Henry fled the Ninth Ward, his home and piano destroyed, after Katrina and landed in...
Denver! I caught him many times the year he lived here and even got him a few gigs. Really cool guy. He told me anyone could do what he does -- if they practice four hours each day for 15 years. That's what he said.

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I'll go with the old school: Albert Ammons, Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Willie "the Lion" Smith, Fats Waller.

Amazing piano solo on David Bowie's "Alladdin Sane". Decades ago, a mate of mine wrote to Mike Garson, asking for a transcription of the solo. Incredibly he got a reply. Not a transcription, though. If I remember rightly, Garson said he couldn't transcribe it if he tried. Hats off to him for replying though.

Practising 4 hours a day for 15 years on any instrument is cheating. As the man said, we could all be good if we did that.

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Professor Longhair

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Only gone for 4 days I come back to 17 pages of "stuff"! (ok, once I stripped away hockey it was only a half page :-) )

Too much to cover or comment on,,,,, but I try a little.

That Mike - Chuck Lloyd, thanks for the heads up. Chuckie will be on back burner for now. 600 bucks for the 24 albums and a box set yet to come?!?! My wife's wallet does have limits!

Springsteen,,,, ok I'm from Jersey, past that, Bruce appeared in my life at the right time I guess. His songs always speak to me of hope and the struggles of the working stiff.

Disco - I was big on the disco ball. Back in the late seventies with Frankie Crocker on WBLS,,,, stereo in black. I believe you'd find a lot of recording technics came out of the that disco vein.

Couple of unmentioned disco headphone songs,,,, Peter Brown - Do You Want to Get Funky with Me. CJ & Co - The Devil's Gun, or Santa Esmeralda - Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood. GREAT, GREAT album of day and GREAT GREAT headphone album,,,, Dr Buzzard's Original Savannah Band!!!!

Zappa,,, I keep buying his "stuff", I like a chunk, a chunk can be tedious. Sometimes GREAT ability does not translate to enjoyable. If you're a musician maybe you can be awed by technical, but if you're an idiot like me you can't tell he just played an augmented Major G in a diminished F. Also the twice I caught Frank he seemed to think he was doing you a favor by playing and you should be thankful he did!

Jazz piano,,,, you read the list people posted and you like, oh yeah, him. I like when some said don't forget tatum and liberace. On the Oscar front, my buddy is a huge fan. Caught him whenever he played. He had an album called something like "for my friends". He had this one cut where he was playing song "a". Right hand carried the melody and left belting out rhythm. All of sudden left hand started playing a different song , "B". So now he's playing two songs at the same time. Notes from song "A" start walking down to the bass end, while song "B" starts walking to high end. The two hands cross each other while jamming out and poof, back to one song "A". I was wowed to say the least! :-)

Charlie 3 - Ipanema (great tune). I used to go to this restaurant/coffee house/bar. They would have bands, small venue 20-30 people listening to this group. They started playing Ipanema and out of this crowd comes this woman steps up to the mike and starts sing the lyrics in Portuguese and she sounds exactly like the origial! Song ended and she went back and sat down. Blew the room away and I think the band!

Mr Ones,,,, I pretty sure I have the motown hippo stuff

Finally an incredible flash-back moment. Sorting thru the latest treasure trove of music I've recently received I stumbled across Miriam Makeba,,, name meant nothing to me. Wiki said she was the voice of Africa (or something like that). Sorted and filed all. I always listened to pieces of what I add to my collection so I have some idea of what's what. So it looked like a cut "pata pata" was her big hit. I put it on and my head exploded. I knew the song, but had not thought about it since it came out. I mean I had not THOUGHT at all about it, which is odd for me since I have almost every tune I know running thought my head at all time. Even the childhood ones I learned in 1st grade!! I don't think a month goes by when I don't find myself singing the Erie Canal! Trust me I've never navigated on it, but sing about once a month. :-) Commerical jingles always run though me,,,,, remember this one,,,, My beer is Reingold the dry beer, think of Reingold whenever you buy beer. It's refreshing, not sweet, it's the extra dry drink. Would try extra dry Reingold beer?

Like Monk,,, it's a blessing,,,,,,,, and a curse! (mostly for the people that have to listen to me sing them :-) )

Sorry for the ramble, but you did leave me 17 pages to comment on! (but no hockey comments thankfully)

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We have the same blessing/curse of remembering esoteric things like jingles. Every cigarette, beer, cereal, appliance, and car ad had a jingle. Now they just steal a song we all liked and now can't stand as they've ruined it for us. Really, "Everybody Damp Rid"? Or "All Right Now" for a drug I don't need? One of the favorite games my wife and I play is to jam together songs and jingles that have nothing to do with each other. You start with Red Red Robin and end up at the Woody Woodpecker theme then Diamonds Are a Girl's Best Friend or the Dick Van Dyke show. Likely because we can't remember the whole thing anyway. I think the advertisers in the 60's had evil intentions for our little spongy brains. I'm the youngest of three and the back seat of the car was where I might subject my sisters to hours long renditions of This Old Man. "Mom, make him stop!" Unfortunately an earworm can really screw up my day even now. So the cure is to just have music on all the time. Music is the best.
Cheers

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Can't talk piano players without mentioning Keith Godchaux, at one time one of the greatest piano players 9n Earth.

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Don't forget Jeff Chimenti,,, who I think is better than Keith.

Some mentioned Bill Evans piano player.

I just got in my vinyl copy of Miles Davis Live - What it Is - Montreal 7/7/83. Reading the back cover and there is Bill Evans, only he's playing saxes and flutes. So I looked it up,,, it said this.....

This double LP release features one of Miles Davis' final great bands: John Scofield on guitar, Bill “The Other Bill Evans” Evans on saxophones, flute and electric piano, Darryl Jones on bass, Al Foster on drums, and percussionist Mino Cinelu.

So there are two Bills. I think one must have a goatee and be from the evil universe!

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In reply to by 1stshow70878

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I have an LP of Winston cigarette ads that were played on the radio. My father got this from somewhere, I was maybe 16. Still have.

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First off, welcome back Dennis! I totally understand on the Charles Lloyd set. I did pick
up the first “trio” CD (the one with Frisell), but haven’t had a chance to play it yet. Expectations are high. I don’t think the vinyl box set is limited issue (I don’t think), so no rush to get it yet. I didn’t realize until yesterday that Lloyd & Frisell played the Ottawa Jazz Festival this past weekend, which is only a 4 hour car hike from here, and would have been a great weekend trip for the wife and I. Like the Toronto Maple Leafs - next time(sorry for the hockey talk Dennis). PS - I have some albums by the “other” Bill Evans, the sax player (he has played with Hornsby) - he is a decent player. Tell me your impressions of the Miles album when you can.

Sixtus/Oro - I was thinking another way to approach this “Which Artists” to listen to for piano jazz, since the lists everyone provided were really great, but perhaps overwhelming, is to approach it more organically, ie - the kneebone is connected to the shinbone etc. Start with a jazz artist you perhaps know, and see what side players he or she plays with. Who contributes to their sound? Or labels. Blue Note, a great jazz label for generations is a great one to start with. A great many recordings in the 50s & 60s on that label were produced by Rudy Van Gelder. Like all Producers, he had “go to” musicians he would call into the studio to back an artist. Tony Williams, drummer, is making a solo album, Van Gelder may call on a young Herbie Hancock, or Wayne Shorter, Joe Henderson etc. Next, Shorter is making an album, who backs him up? How about all the truly remarkable musicians Miles Davis worked with? Four of them became star keyboard players in their own right: Jarrett, Corea, Hancock, and Zawinul (who had a budding career with Cannonball Adderley).
I always found in music in general, and jazz in particular, the kneebone is connected to the shinbone; you like “this”, you’ll definitely like “that”.

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In reply to by That Mike

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Wow, what an awesome outpouring of good vibes and great tunes!
We’ve hit some major references for Motown to Soul, to Soul Jazz to Jazz.
My pea brain is gonna explode lol.

But wouldn’t cha know, I really need to get some work done before “I take a short break” , so Murphy’s Law: so much to digest and discuss here but I don’t have time. But I will go through asap and reply to all the kind folks who made such great suggestions. Thanks to all, I don’t care what anyone says you guys are awright!

Good to see Dennis, thought maybe he traded some of his collection for Stanley cup tix and was still on the road somewhere ; ) Please apologize to the wife for us as I’m sure the following pages will equal her CC getting hot thanks to us lol.

HF: great story! Keep ‘em coming!

MIKE: yeah lol, I am I a little overwhelmed, but in a good way!
Not to sound ungrateful but I knew OF many of these folks, but was hoping perhaps folks could suggest the best or their favorite albums from some of these artists? Narrow down the focus for me. I recognize some of the fine suggestions from research I’ve done, like “the top 50 greatest must have albums” etc, but it’s always nice getting first hand reports from good folks in the know!

It’ll probably take me a couple days to have proper time, but I’ll go through and make a list and poke around, and come back with some more specific questions.
But “I gotta get down, to the miiiiiinnnnneeeee” hup, hup, nothing too it but to do it!
Thanks all, great stuff lately!

Hoping Mr Jimmies absence is due to just being busy doing more productive and enjoyable things and not hung up on too much “adult” BS! We miss you, your silence is deafening.

My very first album, which I had forgotten about till this discussion on piano players, was "The World of Winifred Atwell", which my parents bought for me when I was about 10. Who she was, I know not. I think my parents had a 78 with her on which I liked. Solo rag time from what I can remember. I have just had a shufty in the attic to see if it's hidden away up there - but no luck so far. "James Last Goes Pop" - yes - but so far - no Winnie.

am so far behind responding to content, blocked by some kind of captcha issue, will try to add something worthwhile after reviewing almost three weeks of posts, distill as much as possible...

First unfinished business, HF, my most sincere condolences on your recent loss. That is about where i fell off the bus.

Love all the recent input on various music, where to start, many great players already noted.

Am a big fan of Bobby Hutcherson on vibes.

Very fortunate to see/hear in person: Keith Jarrett, Chick Corea, McCoy Tyner, Brad Mehldau, Otis Spahn. Will add a few slightly under the radar others soon. Piano is among the most difficult instruments to reproduce in full glory, even the best recordings, so its worth it to make the effort to hear a virtuoso play a great instrument. If you enjoy barrel house, check out Champion Jack Dupree.

Zappa is an acquired taste for some, quirky, brilliant. Back in the day, typically found the MoI too goofy, but Hots Rats hooked me into checking everything else out since. I particularly enjoy the first cut on his 1988 Guitar release, a great blues/rock riff oddly titled, "Sexual Harassment in the Workplace". It just burns so hot.

Have a part time summer job, where I recently came to know a Jamaican guy who is up just for the summer to earn money for family. We are discussing Reggae music, some of the less well known artists. Yet another influence for our favorite band. Made me dig out stuff not heard forever, brother worked for a Reggae music company, ample stuff here. There's a jam guy known as the Mad Professor, music only, no lyrics. Burning Spear is on a farewell tour and will be playing in Boston at the HoB August 5th. For a vague attempt at relating any content to sports, the HoB is located just the other side of the Green Monster, that's right, next to Fenway.

cheers

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In reply to by dmcvt

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others that might not have already been noted:

Kenny Barron, Paul Bley, Bill Charlap, Red Garland, Errol Garner, Fred Hersch, Steve Kuhn, Mulgrew Miller, Marcus Roberts

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