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2020. szeptember 28., hétfő

"Goddess Of The Hunt" ALTER.NATION.MiX #102 - weekly favtraX 08-09-2020

ALTER.NATION #102
Artemis,The Heliocentrics, Public Enemy, Idles,Jehnny Beth,Bob Mould,Marilyn Manson,Deftones, Mastodon,The Flaming Lips, Blitzen Trapper, Frankie & the Witch Fingers, Ronnie Earl

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"Goddess Of The Hunt"




Named after the Greek goddess of hunting, Artemis is an all-female jazz collective known for their deeply sophisticated and adroit post-bop jazz. The group debuted in 2020 with their eponymous full-length.

Artemis - ArtemisGoddess Of The Hunt
The eponymous debut album from the all-star female jazz collective, 2020's Artemis showcases the group's immense compositional and improvisational depth. Named after the Greek goddess of hunting, Artemis is led by pianist Renee Rosnes and features the equally adept talents of tenor saxophonist Melissa Aldana, clarinetist Anat Cohen, trumpeter Ingrid Jensen, bassist Noriko Ueda, and drummer Allison Miller. Also on board is Grammy-winning vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant. Rosnes brought the group together in 2017 with an eye to building upon each of the member's combined skills. Consequently, while we get distinctive contributions from each player, while the album plays as a unified artistic vision. It opens with Miller's intensely kinetic "Goddess of the Hunt," her roiling groove and the song's tense melody offering a rich jumping-off point for each soloist. Jensen in particular leaps into the fray, offering frentic note clusters and wide octave leaps that further reinforce her status as one of the main heirs to Kenny Wheeler's legacy. 

Eclectic U.K.-based ensemble blending influences such as hip-hop, jazz, soundtracks, Ethiopian funk, outré electronics, and more.
The Heliocentrics - Telemetric Sounds / Telemetric Sounds
Long-running cosmic soul-jazz collective the Heliocentrics signed on with new label Madlib Invasion for their adventurous and dreamlike album Infinity of Now, released in February of 2020. Just about six months later, his fully realized follow-up Telemetric Sounds offers an ominous and decidedly more intense counterpart to the casual psychedelic drifting of its predecessor. The London-based group is known for their hallucinatory sounds and tendency to transform traditional jazz, funk, and soul elements into new alien forms. These deconstructions generally translate into friendly, curious explorations, but Telemetric Sounds is anxious, menacing, and a little bit depraved in comparison to the majority of the band's catalog. The album begins with the slow-burning title track, a tune that wanders in aimless frustration for over 13 minutes through passages of cranky synthesizer noise and tense rhythms. The players sound like they're working out uncomfortable feelings as they push through the lengthy performance, landing in a space somewhere between Sun Ra's most out there mid-'70s recordings and the fever-pitched peaks of more jam-oriented Krautrock bands like Cosmic Jokers, Guru Guru, or Agitation Free...


Influential and controversial New York rap act who gained massive cultural significance, led by the duo of Chuck D and Flavor Flav.
Let's face it: If any year needed a new album from Public Enemy, it was 2020. Faced with disease and unrest at every turn, PE returned to their original home, Def Jam, for What You Gonna Do When the Grid Goes Down?, a record that consciously reconnects with their past while addressing the present with a clear eye. At first, it's hard to avoid the chaos of the modern world, with Public Enemy pushing their "State of the Union (STFU)" and the existential digital quandary of the title track, but the record subtly shifts gears with "Public Enemy Number Won." Its title is a nod to "Public Enemy No. 1," a pivotal track from their 1987 debut, and it doesn't hide from the fact that neither Public Enemy nor their guests Mike D, Ad-Rock, and Run-DMC have been at this since the '90s. The vibe isn't necessarily nostalgic. Rather, it's an acknowledgment that the years have piled up, that PE and their peers are now not only the old guard, they're survivors. That's an undercurrent that runs through What You Gonna Do When the Grid Goes Down?: It finds room for additional cameos by Cypress Hill, Nas, Questlove, and Ice-T, fellow hip-hop veterans who have turned lifers...


A self-proclaimed "angry band" from Bristol in Southwest England, Idles take the fury of punk rock and wed it to a muscular but moody instrumental attack that matches the literate, purposeful menace of their lyrics. Idles were formed in 2010 by vocalist Joe Talbot, lead guitarist Mark Bowen, rhythm guitarist Andy S, bassist Adam Devonshire, and drummer Jon Beavis.
Idles feat.  Jehnny Beth - Ultra Mono / Ne Touche Pas Moi
On their third record in almost as many years, Idles are at their most anarchic, dialing up their comedic edge -- often including cringe-inducing, Police Academy-style sound effects -- and their manic energy. To call Ultra Mono terrible would be disingenuous, as it is still some of the most vital music being made; however, it does include the first notable misfires from a group who could seemingly do no wrong. Lyrical content aside, the band themselves are either over-committed, as with bassist Adam Devonshire's increasingly unhinged backing snarls, or underwhelming. Guitarists Mark Bowen and Lee Kiernan have few standout moments between them, demoted to creating dissonance or raising the volume, which they admittedly pull off admirably... It is hard to fault drummer Jon Beavis, whose consistent thumping has managed to stay fresh over three records. Taken at face value, the elements that make Idles great are present, including the social commentary, the sense of humor, and the cathartic justified rage... 


Acclaimed lead singer and guitarist of Hüsker Dü and later Sugar, he has also dabbled in singer/songwriter styles and electronic music.
Bob Mould - Blue HeartsLeather Dreams
A lot can happen in a year and a half. In February 2019, Bob Mould released Sunshine Rock, which in addition to reminding us that in the 2010s he was in the midst of an unexpected renaissance and making some of the strongest rock music of his life, saw him embracing a cautious optimism, celebrating the joys of life and focusing on the hard work of being a better man. September 2020 has brought another album from Mould, Blue Hearts, and his mood has taken a sharp turn into rage and frustration. Between life in a divided nation, the ongoing threat of climate change, and a global health crisis that is being ignored by the powers that be, Mould has stopped ignoring the multiple elephants in our rooms, and Blue Hearts is a fast, furious, passionate broadside, messages written as the world burns around him (in some cases literally)...


Controversial metal act that gained notoriety in the late '90s and early 2000s with shock antics and goth-glam flair.
Marilyn Manson - WE ARE CHAOS / INFINITE DARKNESS
Extending a late-era artistic renaissance with his 11th album We Are Chaos, Marilyn Manson goes three-for-three with his Loma Vista output, delivering yet another taut set of catchy earworms that retains enough of his peak-era trademarks while continuing his unexpected late-stage evolution. This time around, the elder goth statesman parts ways with creative partner Tyler Bates -- the man who assisted Manson's late-2010s comeback efforts The Pale Emperor and Heaven Upside Down -- and connects with outlaw country musician Shooter Jennings. For those expecting this to be a boots-and-beer makeover, rest assured that Jennings doesn't change the formula too much, sprinkling just the right amount of Nashville dust into the mix to color Manson's usual corrosive, ghoulish sound... That track, "Red Black and Blue," hits a raging sweet spot, joining "Perfume" and "Infinite Darkness" as the album's most classic-sounding moments...


Alternative metal quintet who evolved beyond the nu-metal era with a dynamic blend of beauty and brutality.
Deftones - OhmsPompeji
At the dawn of their fourth decade together as a band, alt-metal stalwarts Deftones crafted one of the best albums in their catalog, Ohms. Reuniting with producer Terry Date, the man behind their first four efforts (five, counting the unreleased Eros), the band attacks with full power, reinvigorated, hungry, and at a creative apex. Their most accessible work since 2000's White Pony, Ohms offers listeners plenty of substance to grab on to: for the first time in a while, tightly executed songs take precedence over heady ideas, resulting in a deeply effective and satisfying experience that balances their eras. Playing upon the concepts of resistance and polarity implied by the album's title, Deftones take their signature beauty-meets-brutality assault, searching for balance across a tightly focused ten tracks. As a unit, they haven't sounded this refreshed in years. Chino Moreno's vocals stun, careening from fevered hush to unhinged shriek without notice, while Stephen Carpenter returns to center stage armed with a bounty of riffs and a nine-string guitar. Bassist Sergio Vega and drummer Abe Cunningham bounce and bash, marking a return to groove that is rarely heard in their late-era output...



One of the most acclaimed metal bands of the new millennium, with an innovative, lyrically astute blend of progressive metal, grindcore, and hardcore.
Mastodon - Medium RaritiesAsleep in the Deep
For two decades, Atlanta's Mastodon have stubbornly followed their own path, whether it led to chart success or derision by closed-minded purists spewing across social media. Over seven studio albums, a handful of singles, splits, and EPs, this quartet hasn't released a "proper" compilation until now. Medium Rarities assembles instrumentals, live tracks, soundtrack cuts, and covers, without separating them categorically.... 



Ever-evolving band led by Wayne Coyne who became critical darlings for their lush, emotionally resonant psychedelic rock.
The Flaming Lips - American HeadFlowers Of Neptune 6
On American Head, the Flaming Lips use their storytelling skills to their fullest, combining some of their purest moods and most beautiful melodies with some of their most overtly autobiographical songwriting. Drawn from Wayne Coyne's memories of growing up in early '70s Oklahoma with his freewheeling brothers and their biker friends -- as well as his imagined version of Mudcrutch, the precursor to Tom Petty & the Heartbreakers that honed their chops in Tulsa around that time -- the album's concept is one of the band's richest in some time. At the time of American Head's release, the band compared it to Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots and The Soft Bulletin, and it's true that the album's scope and depth of feeling put it on that level. However, American Head still bears the scars of albums like The Terror, which brought a weight to the Flaming Lips' music that works especially well on these meditations on the loss of innocence...  "Flowers of Neptune 6" sets a moment of pure epiphany to a lush swath of trumpets, tympani, strings, and the sugared twang of Kacey Musgraves' backing vocals (one of several appearances the country star makes on the album) that calls to mind early '70s AM pop...



Oregon indie rockers with an eclectic style that combines elements of country, folk, indie rock, and progressive Americana.
...Inspired by George Saunders’ 2017 experimental tome, Lincoln in the Bardo and the Tibetan Book of the Dead, Earley’s lyrics take the listener on a wild and dramatic journey through rivers of waist-high water in the aftermath of a tragic car wreck and the hazy morning before a murderous moment, and from getting blitzed to the point of extinction inside a masonic temple to a stop for chips and dip before the apocalypse. Along the way, there’s also an occasion to smoke dope with Abe Lincoln and play bones with Brian Jones, slide through the ether in a dream, and confront the Intermediate States while bathed in the glow of the bardo’s light - that transitional state between death and rebirth.




Los Angeles-by-way-of-Indiana foursome whose music takes tough garage punk and runs it through a heavy psychedelic filter.
"Frankie and the Witch Fingers are a swift kick in the ass for garage psych. Their hooks are sharper, the production isn’t vintage for the sake of vintage, and the recorded material captures the energy of the band’s eccentric live performances perfectly. That’s exactly what they do once again on their new album, Heavy Roller..." - Consequence of Sound


Long-standing blues guitarist, successful both as a solo artist and as a member of Roomful of Blues. One of the finest blues guitarists to emerge during the '80s, the award-winning Ronnie Earl often straddled the line between blues and jazz, throwing in touches of soul and rock as well.
Ronnie Earl - Rise Up / Blues For J
Rise Up is Ronnie Earle's 27th album and his 13th for Canada's venerable Stony Plain label. The blues master's playing style has long been celebrated for its iconic tone and deep well of emotion. None of that changes here, but this set is topically contemporary, a reaction to the history-making year 2020. Earl offers tributes to the recently lost, and solace for those continuing to struggle on the front lines for racial and economic justice... a swinging version of Jimmy Smith's "Blues for J,"...

Artemis,The Heliocentrics, Public Enemy, Idles,Jehnny Beth,Bob Mould,Marilyn Manson,Deftones, Mastodon,The Flaming Lips, Blitzen Trapper, Frankie & the Witch Fingers, Ronnie Earl

2020. szeptember 20., vasárnap

"Night Time" #101 ALTER.NATION.MiX - weekly favtraX 20-09-2020

ALTER.NATION #101
Luther Dickinson, Alvin Youngblood Hart, Jimbo Mathus
New Moon Jelly Roll Freedom Rockers, Grant-Lee Phillips, Annie Taylor,All Them Witches,Naked Roommate, Tricky,Throwing Muses,The Pineapple Thief, Hurts, Yelle, Josiah Johnson, Renegade Connection

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"Night Time"




A makeshift blues supergroup comprised of Jim, Luther, and Cody Dickinson, Charlie Musselwhite, Alvin Youngblood Hart, and Jimbo Mathus.

New Moon Jelly Roll Freedom Rockers - New Moon Jelly Roll Freedom Rockers - Volume 1Night Time (feat. Jimbo Mathus)
In 2007, while rolling through the American night in a ramshackle retirement home vehicle badly disguised as a tour bus, blues legend Charlie Musselwhite and North Mississippi Allstars' guitarist Luther Dickinson engaged in conversation. The younger man related Alvin Youngblood Hart's philosophical desire to live as a "freedom rocker." The wily elder bluesman listened to his words, then looked out the window and knowingly pointed at the rising moon. He replied: "New Moon Freedom Rockers." Back in Mississippi at the Zebra Ranch studio, Musselwhite and Cody and Luther Dickinson joined forces with their dad, roots rock legend Jim Dickinson (who promptly added the words "Jelly Roll" to the band's name), Alvin Hart, and Jimbo Mathus, with NMA bassist Chris Chew and Paul Taylor as guests. They circled chairs, placed mikes, and hit "record." Afterwards, the session tapes were archived. They sat in the vault until Jim Dickinson passed in 2009, and they became apocryphal. Stony Plain's Holger Peterson contacted Luther and Cody about releasing them...

Deep-voiced singer purveyed doe-eyed country with a whiskeyed, melancholy tinge, recording with Grant Lee Buffalo and as a solo act.
2018's Widdershins presented a Grant-Lee Phillips who was willing to mount a soapbox and speak his mind about life in Trump-era America. Two years later, on 2020's Lightning Show Us Your Stuff, Phillips is feeling a bit quieter and more introspective, still a man of principles but less inclined to speak so loudly about them. This music isn't the work of someone who has resigned himself to unfortunate changes in America; instead, he takes his time training a keen eye on the world around him, and has plenty to say about the larger issues of a culture in chaos as well as the stuff that complicates the heart and soul of nearly all of us...



Swiss band whose sound meets at the confluence of grunge, psych-rock, and garage pop.
Annie Taylor - Sweet Mortality / The Fool
Sweet Mortality is not a posthumous solo album from the first woman to survive a trip down Niagara Falls, but it is at times nearly as fun as freefalling inside a barrel. Taking their name from an unlikely early 20th century American adventuring legend, Annie Taylor are a rock band from Zurich, Switzerland with a pleasantly crunchy grunge-meets-psych-pop feel. Formed in 2017 by singer/guitarist Gini Jungi and bassist Michael Mutter, the group issued a pair of fuzzed-out singles before recruiting guitarist Tobias Arn and drummer Jan Winkler for their 2019 EP Not Yours! Now signed to Zurich indie Taxi Gauche Records, they offer up their first full-length album. Produced by David Langhard of fellow Swiss explorers Klaus Johann Grobe, Sweet Mortality is a still-wily though better-formed encapsulation of Annie Taylor's reigning grunge aesthetic with detours into dark pop, garage, and psychedelic textures...

A mercurial, neo-psychedelic, dark blues- and classic rock-influenced quartet based out of Nashville, Tennessee.
All Them Witches - Nothing as the IdealEnemy of My Enemy
The sixth studio effort from the mercurial Nashville psych-rockers, Nothing as the Ideal sees All Them Witches reunite with Dying Surfer Meets His Maker producer Mikey Allred for a bold and bracing collection of songs that plays to all of their strengths. Paired down to a trio after the departure of keyboard player Jonathan Draper, the band have crystallized their signature amalgam of improvisation and songcraft into an exclamation point where every soaring lead, snare crack, and mechanical whirr feels essential. Recorded at Abbey Road in London, the eight-track set makes good use of the legendary studio's analog infrastructure, peppering the proceedings with fragmented loops and rewinding reels, all the while maintaining a radiant classic rock core. It's also the group's heaviest outing to date... 



Ex-members of Oakland post-punkers the World reborn as a sleek no wave quartet with electro leanings.
Oakland musicians Amber Sermeńo and Andy Jordan were still mainly active with their funk-friendly post-punk band the World when they hatched the concept for Naked Roommate, a project that would reshape the organic, dancey energy of the World into something far more synthetic, cinematic, and shadowy. Naked Roommate had been in the works for a while when the World disbanded in January of 2020, making the time between that chapter closing and the arrival of Naked Roommate's full-length debut, Do the Duvet, a matter of months. Though the songs are fleshed out by contributions from bandmates Michael Zamora and Alejandra Alcala, much of Do the Duvet builds off the character of Sermeńo's disaffected vocals and Jordan's minimal electronic drum programming...



Trip-hop pioneer with a raspy voice and hypnotic production who is associated with fellow Bristol icons Massive Attack.
Tricky - Fall To PiecesFall Please
A year and a half after the death of his daughter Mazy, English electronic pioneer Tricky delivered his appropriately dark and dirgeful 14th album, Fall to Pieces. The first full-length since 2017's ununiform, the set closely followed the first stage of Tricky's sonic catharsis, the 20,20 EP, continuing the mourning process across a taut 11 tracks that brim with angst and sadness. As the digitized production drones, anxiety and melancholy build to uncomfortable levels like the most unnerving and depressed Portishead or Massive Attack tracks...
Tricky and Marta Złakowska

Acclaimed alternative band with a swirling, guitar-based rush of sound matched to Kristin Hersh's cryptic, metaphoric lyrics and highly emotive voice.
...Of course, her music is a force of nature no matter which project she's working with, and Sun Racket shows that the Muses still have plenty of noisy catharsis to offer as well. Where Purgatory/Paradise was huge in size, consisting of a sprawling mosaic of songs and a book, the band's first album in seven years is huge in sound, with a rolling, crashing heft that owes more than a little to Hersh's work with 50 Foot Wave. It may be named Sun Racket, but water imagery abounds in its ebb and flow of surging rockers and ballads that draw in listeners like an undertow, and in how it channels the sudden ways life can change (it's probably not a coincidence that Hersh's 25-year marriage was ending as she made this album). The standout "Dark Blue" opens the album's floodgates with a reminder of how Hersh, Bernard Georges, and David Narcizo can submerge their listeners in big sonics and bigger emotions...



Prolific British prog rock band who incorporate the sounds of Porcupine Tree, Radiohead, and Muse into a sprawling, experimental experience.
With a catalog of excellent recordings dating back to 1999's Abducting the Unicorn, Pineapple Thief began realizing their almost peerless musical potential after 2008's Tightly Unwound. Since then, their music found an exploratory space between the expansive pop of Radiohead and Elbow, and 21st century prog. When King Crimson drummer Gavin Harrison joined the ranks on 2016's Your Wilderness, frontman/songwriter/guitarist Bruce Soord welcomed his rich, polyrhythmic approach; it added considerable drama to the band's older songs. The drummer settled in more on 2018's Dissolution, contributing intuitive charts to Soord's poignant lyrics and melodies. Harrison is fully integrated on Versions of the Truth. He serves in his established role as well as being a songwriting partner for Soord, who began writing the album at his home studio in Glastonbury, deeply troubled by global politicians who no longer bothered disguising their lies. Not content to write a political album, Soord sought to explore this phenomenon in interpersonal relationships. He requisitioned Harrison to provide insight, charts, new rhythms, textures, and structured harmonies that communicated the duality in his lyrics.... "Break It All" emerges with heavy, riff-laden swagger. The hard rock vamp and reverbed vocals are accentuated by punchy snare and kick drums, Soord's distorted open-tuned chords, and a knotty synth run...



Manchester electronic duo plays an inspired mix of '80s-influenced synth pop and contemporary R&B.
Hurts - Faith / Fractured
The fifth studio album by British duo Hurts, 2020's Faith is a dusky, slow-burn album that finds singer Theo Hutchcraft and instrumentalist Adam Anderson in a sanguine mood, taking their time to craft measured anthems, rife with an early-'90-inspired goth and industrial production. Having started their career evoking the monochrome intensity of groups like Depeche Mode and New Order, Hurts quickly expanded their approach, embracing an ever more pop-oriented sound, dipping into contemporary R&B, '70s-style disco, and dance music. Produced by Hurts along with Martin Forslund and Joe Janiak, Faith is less upbeat than 2017's Desire and feels closer to their 2010 debut, albeit with a more organic, less claustrophobic aesthetic...

Irrepressible, fun and very French dance pop, featuring the cool and sassy vocals of Julie Budet.
Yelle - L' Ère du Verseau / Emancipense
After jumping headfirst into the pop mainstream with the Dr. Luke-produced album Complètement Fou in 2014, the French duo Yelle survived the plunge mostly unscathed. They didn't manage to break through to the masses, but a string of singles subsequently released between 2016 and 2018 showed that their grasp of bubbly dance pop remained strong and the songs benefited from the gentle scrubbing away of some of the shinier upgrades the pop machine affixed to their sound. L'Ère du Verseau completes the process and then some, with the result being the most streamlined, deepest-sounding, and most powerful album they've made yet...



Thoughtful folk-pop singer/songwriter and former member of the Head and the Heart.
Josiah Johnson - Every Feeling on a Loop  / Woman In A Man's Life
Just prior to the release of their Warner Bros. debut, the Head and the Heart co-founder Josiah Johnson took a leave of absence from his longtime band. Struggling with addiction and fighting to face his demons, the singer/songwriter watched from the sidelines as Signs of Light hit number five on the pop charts and his bandmates toured the world without him. Johnson did eventually get sober, though he did not resume his role in the Head and the Heart, opting instead to document his soul journey with Every Feeling on a Loop, his first solo album. As any songwriter well knows, periods of tumult and personal upheaval lead to reflection that when nurtured begets material of a particularly authentic nature. Working with Lucius member Peter Lalish, who brought his own stable of musicians into the project, Johnson turned his reflections into a dramatic 12-song set that shares some of the indie folk exuberance of his previous band, but chases new muses as well...



Slow-burning minimal dub duo made up of members of Renegade Soundwave and Lee Curtis Connection.
Renegade Connection - Politicians, Protesters & ThievesCastle of Dread
Renegade Connection is the collaborative duo of Renegade Soundwave's Gary Asquith and electronic producer Lee Curtis, who released records throughout the '90s as Lee Curtis Connection. Their earliest track, 2014's "I'll Surrender," was built on a backbone of traditional roots reggae that almost sounded like early-'60s ska, with Asquith's detached vocals floating over understated synth flourishes and electronic additions via Curtis. Politicians, Protesters & Thieves is Renegade Connection's first work since that nascent single, and finds Asquith and Curtis exploring moody minimal dub and dark trip-hop production across its brief seven tracks...
New Moon Jelly Roll Freedom Rockers, Grant-Lee Phillips, Annie Taylor,All Them Witches,Naked Roommate, Tricky,Throwing Muses,The Pineapple Thief, Hurts, Yelle, Josiah Johnson, Renegade Connection

2020. szeptember 19., szombat

19-09-2020 - PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds / before 1959

Charlie Parker & Dizzy Gillespie

19-09-2020 - PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds / before 1959 
  >>Charlie Parker & Dizzy GillespieThe Dominos, Elmore James, Tony Bennett, Bull Moose Jackson,Charlie Parker,Lowell Fulson,T-Bone Walker,Frank Sinatra,Hazel Scott, Art Tatum,Django Reinhardt<<

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before 1959


One of a handful of musicians who can be said to have permanently changed jazz, Charlie Parker was arguably the greatest saxophonist of all time. He could play remarkably fast lines that, if slowed down to half speed, would reveal that every note made sense. "Bird," along with his contemporaries Dizzy Gillespie and Bud Powell, is considered a founder of bebop; in reality he was an intuitive player who simply was expressing himself. 
Dizzy Gillespie's contributions to jazz were huge. One of the greatest jazz trumpeters of all time (some would say the best), Gillespie was such a complex player that his contemporaries ended up copying Miles Davis and Fats Navarro instead, and it was not until Jon Faddis' emergence in the 1970s that Dizzy's style was successfully recreated.
My Melancholy Baby (Ernie Burnett / George Norton)
Mohawk (Charlie Parker)
Bloomdido (Charlie Parker)
Relaxin' with Lee (Charlie Parker)
from Bird and Diz / Rec. June 6, 1950
This collection of 78 rpm singles, all recorded on June 6, 1950, was released in 1956. Several things distinguish this from numerous other quintet recordings featuring these two bebop pioneers. It was recorded during the period that Parker was working under the aegis of producer Norman Granz, whose preference for large and unusual ensembles was notorious. The end result in this case is a date that sounds very much like those that Parker and Gillespie recorded for Savoy and Dial, except with top-of-the-line production quality. Even more interesting, though, is Parker's choice of Thelonious Monk as pianist. Unfortunately, Monk is buried in the mix and gets very little solo space, so his highly idiosyncratic genius doesn't get much exposure here...


The Dominos - Sixty Minute Man
Elmore James - Dust My Broom
Tony Bennett - Cold, Cold Heart
1950S MUSIC
The decade of the Fifties gave birth to Rock and Roll. When Bill Haley’s Rock Around the Clock became popular in 1955, the nation learned to swing to a whole new sound. Prior to that the Big Band Era from the 40’s was still the the driving force in music.

A talented American saxophonist who was also responsible for some of the hottest, most suggestive R&B ever recorded.
We Can Talk Some Trash (Henry Glover / Lucky Millinder)
Sometimes I Wonder (Terry Thomas)
While touring through Texas in 1945 with the Lucky Millinder Orchestra, Benjamin Clarence Jackson, Jr. was dubbed Bull Moose Jackson by drummer Panama Francis, who apparently exclaimed: "You look like a moose coming over the hill." Tall and powerful with a friendly expressive face, the bespectacled saxophonist was riding a tide of popular success by the time these recordings were cut for the King label between September 1947 and September 1950 in New York, NY; Linden, NJ; St. Louis, MO; and Cincinnati, OH. Bull Moose Jackson & His Buffalo Bearcats (the "Buffalo" was dropped beginning in 1950) were an all-purpose R&B jump band balancing upbeat novelty cookers with remarkably handsome ballads. The Bull Moose discography glistens occasionally with the names of jazz heroes like Count Basie's flute and saxman Frank Wess and Ellington trumpeter Harold "Money" Johnson. It's obvious why these records were popular in their day...