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John Coltrane’s Giant Steps

October 12th, 2005 David Rosam No comments

While experimenting with Google Alerts, I set up an alert for “John Coltrane” – well, why not?

This morning I was alerted to Steve Bass’s blog/page at PC World, which led me to this gem by Michal Levy.

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John Coltrane’s My Favorite Things

September 29th, 2005 David Rosam No comments

If you love John Coltrane’s music (I’m tempted to add ‘Supremely’, but that’s probably too bad a pun even for me), there’s some good reading at John Coltrane: My Favorite Things.

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Saxophonist Michael Brecker is seriously ill

August 25th, 2005 David Rosam No comments
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Jarvis Cocker chooses Sailing By

April 29th, 2005 David Rosam No comments

For those of you who’ve been following The Great Sailing By Debate on this blog, you may like to know that this week Jarvis Cocker chose Sailing By as the disc he’d most like to take to his desert island – yeech!

Desert Island Discs, BBC Radio 4.

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The BBC upgrades its online feeds

January 27th, 2005 David Rosam No comments

I’m an addict of the BBC’s online audio output. And now they’ve made it even better.

The interface now works properly with Firefox, so I have another good reason not to fire up IE. But that’s not all – the navigation is much richer, the window resizable, and best of all, it gives you the option of continuing from where you left off.

It’s just so cool!

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Just in case you’re wondering about the post below…

August 25th, 2004 David Rosam 1 comment

For the last 12 months or so, I’ve been exploring some of the free music – Parker, himself, prefers creative music - coming out of New York.

It’s been confusing, to say the least. So many half-remembered names, and even more new ones.

I only wish I’d found this page earlier. I don’t agree with all the opinions, but they’re in the right ballpark for the CDs I’ve bought.

Base Fiddles and Nu Bop:
A Consumer Guide to William Parker, Matthew Shipp, et al.

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What a joyous racket!

August 25th, 2004 David Rosam No comments

Ever since being blasted by Coltrane’s Ascension for the first time when I was a student, I’ve been a little reticent of listening to free jazz big bands.

However, my current fixation with the work of New York bass player William Parker has led me inexorably towards his Little Huey Creative Orchestra, an aggregation of around 20 of his colleagues in what seems to be a fantastic flowering of talent in his hometown currently. Must get to New York to hear this lot in the flesh.

I just bought The Mayor of Punkville on Ebay, and I’m sitting here with a silly grin on my face as I plan two Web sites. This is the sort of fun I get listening to Thelonious Monk, it really is that good.

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BBC 4 has some great music

October 19th, 2003 David Rosam No comments

I’ve been fiddling about on the Net, repurposing a club at Ecademy, catching up on e-mail… and watching a great documentary on John Lee Hooker on BBC4.

Who says men can’t do more than one thing at the same time? :-)

Recently, there’s been some brilliant stuff from WOMAD this year – if you have a chance to see the Oumou Sangare set (they’ve shown it three times, that I’ve seen), do it! It’s one of the most stunning sets of African music I’ve seen.

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Robert Palmer has died

September 26th, 2003 David Rosam No comments

Singer Robert Palmer died of a heart attack in Paris earlier today.

He was only 54.

His latest album, Drive, was an astonishing return to form and his musical roots.

We wuz robbed.

BBC News

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So that’s where Prince and Vernon Reid got some of their stuff

August 17th, 2003 David Rosam No comments

I’m just listening to a track called Orbitron Attack, from Axiom Funk’s Funkronomicon. Never having been much of a Parliament/Funkadelic aficionado, I’d never heard of Eddie Hazell, their wild guitarist.

Suddenly, I know who Prince and Vernon Reid have been listening to. Absolutely amazing stuff – sustained funk metal invention of boggling proportions.

And Hazell died not long after recording the album in 1995, after a life partaking of (ahem) recreational substances.

What is it that links great musicians with hard drugs? Charlie Parker, Art Pepper, Miles Davis, John Coltrane and many others have all had a significant brush with them – and that’s just the jazz world.

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