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#51 2021-10-27 01:10:30

A Fine Sadness
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Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

I'm becoming Latin-curious.  I expect a beginner's level CD is to be had somewhere.

 

#52 2021-10-27 01:17:42

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Just thinking about my old Dad: his excitement when 'Twisted' was reissued in about 1971.  His trips to Birmingham, London and eventually NYC and New Orleans in search of his music.  The packages from Japan or Pete Russell's that would turn up on our back doorstep and which I would bring in after coming home from school.  The  fuss he made over his hi-fi. 
Round the corner, in a similarly gloomy little house, some guy who worked probably at the railway had a massive opera collection.

 

#53 2021-10-27 01:22:29

A Fine Sadness
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Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

I like to think the old feller and Johnny Simons would have dug each other: that instinctive love of melody.  A complex music, jazz. 
Just returning to soul, though, does anyone focus on what's going on behind the vocalizations?  I mean, how were those Motown and Stax sounds conceived?

 

#54 2021-10-27 02:19:37

Runninggeez
Member
Posts: 688

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Yuca: Great track Congalegre, Sandalia Dela is my favourite, partial to a bit of Flora Purim. First heard her around 1980 on George Dukes Brazilian Love Affair album, she sings on the my favourite track Brazilian Sugar.
All the tracks on Blue Bossa 1 bar Carmen McCrae  are on a Summer Jazz compilation I have on my phone.

 

#55 2021-10-27 02:28:07

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Yuca is definitely the man for all this.  I wonder if there's a book he can recommend.  I always like to do some reading up around any subject.

 

#56 2021-10-27 09:20:53

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

I'll be happy to recommend a book, some comps and a few documentaries on YT. But right now I have to hit the mean streets of Puebla, Mexico.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#57 2021-10-27 21:48:08

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

So . . . Latin jazz . . .

Documentaries:

A recent 12 minute mini doc on Poncho Sanchez - he's done some wonderful music and this is brilliant:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P3TNMMDozqw

Machito: a Latin Jazz Legacy (1987). Machito and his arranger Mario Bauzá were the creators of Latin jazz back in early 1940s NY (although Bauzá is on record as saying that he preferred to call it Afro-Cuban jazz), this doc was shot in the early 1980s and has some wonderful footage and info. Dexter Gordon makes a great appearance at one point incidentally. It's very hard to find, so the audio and video quality are a bit wack, but it's the only copy available:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A_XmrtrXi30

Latin Jazz A New York (1991). The narration is in French, interviews are in Spanish, English and Portuguese and the music is phenomenal:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HRYqS8z2fGk

For reading matter, Latin Jazz: the Perfect Combination by Raul Fernández is great and last time I looked it was easily available. A concise but comprehensive history of the music plus loads of photos, many of which will be of interest to typical TI types.

Compilations:

Latin Jazz Essentials (Beechwood) is a 4CD box set and it's a UK issue so probably easily available for many of you. The selections are superb and the scope is quite wide i.e. it includes mambo and son as well as more purist Latin jazz.

Machito and his Afro-Cubans Relax and Mambo (Living Era): some of his greatest cuts from the 40s and 50s, with the likes of Bird and Flip Phillips guesting.

Latin Jazz Dance Classics Vols 1 and 2 (Ubiquity) are pretty good (but maybe harder to find).

Cal Tjader Los Ritmos Calientes (Fantasy): 2 of his best 50s albums on 1 CD.

A gozar!

Last edited by Yuca (2021-10-27 22:23:00)


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#58 2021-10-28 02:16:02

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Many thanks, Yuca.  Your recommendations are usually sound so I've invested a few quid in a compilation.

 

#59 2021-10-28 07:56:20

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Hope it brings you lots of pleasure.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#60 2021-10-28 11:31:14

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

I'm sure it will.  After those depressing early years of musical tribalism (something Elms talks about that I can relate to) I keep an open mind about music.  I also ordered a replacement copy of 'Sketches Of Spain', which I remember listening to (alternating with Harold Melvin) over and over during that melancholy, exciting spring and summer of 2012 when an infatuation overwhelmed me entirely.

 

#61 2021-10-28 12:04:21

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

The documentaries I've listed above may well excite and educate you too. Poncho Sanchez was in the Cal Tjader band for many years, so of course Cal gets a mention in the Poncho mini doc.

Last edited by Yuca (2021-10-28 12:06:14)


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#62 2021-10-28 12:08:45

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

I was quite tribal about music in my early mod days, refusing to listen to any soul or jazz from after 67. Becoming a DJ to a young audience soon cured me of such afflictions. I even ended up listening to a lot of rap music for a number of years.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#63 2021-10-28 12:10:09

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Quite an admission!

 

#64 2021-10-28 12:11:33

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

I've even met a couple of pioneers of the movement. (Separately and very briefly: Kool Herc and Bambaataa. This was before the latter was exposed as a paedo.)

Last edited by Yuca (2021-10-28 12:13:03)


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#65 2021-10-28 12:14:58

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

To this day, I would class Kurtis Blow The Breaks as one of the ultimate party tunes. Most of my rap tunes I did sell though.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#66 2021-10-30 01:05:37

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Just as a matter of interest, I've read the books by authors like Paul Oliver (more years ago than I care to remember), but does anyone know of a couple of good books charting the progression of black music from its pre-recording studio/recorded in the field beginnings to, say, the best days of Stax/Motown/Atlantic/Philly etc.?  It probably sounds like a lot to ask in a single volume, but I'd be grateful for any info.

 

#67 2021-10-30 04:10:47

Runninggeez
Member
Posts: 688

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Rhythm & the Blues by Jerry Wexler, have it stashed in the loft room, I'll try and dig out the ISBN #.

 

#68 2021-10-30 11:23:39

slimmm67
Member
Posts: 112

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Leroi Jones "Black Music", a great book. Ivy connection (?) in the form of a chapter devoted to a review of Don Pullen/Milton Graves "Live At Yale University" 1966.

Here's an interesting passage from another chapter:

'Does anyone really think it's weird that all these English "Pop" groups are making loads of loot? It's pretty simple, actually. They take the style (energy construct, general form, etc) of black blues, country or city, and combine it with the visual image of white American non conformity, i.e. the beatnik, and score very heavily. Plus the fact that these English boys are literally "hipper" than their white counterparts in the U.S., hipper because as it is readily seen, they have actually made a contemporary form, unlike most white U.S. "folk singers", who are content to imitate "ancient" blues forms and older singers, arriving at a kind of popular song (at its most hideous in groups like Peter, Paul, and Mary, etc) which has little to do with black reality, which would have been its strength anyway---that reference to a deeper emotional experience. As one young poet said, "at least the Rolling Stones come on like English crooks."

I say this as one way to get into another thing: namely, that even the avant-garde American music suffers when it moves too far from the blues experience. All the young players now should make sure they are listening to the Supremes, Dionne Warwick, Martha and the Vandellas, the Impressions, Mary Wells, James Brown, Major Lance, Marvin Gaye, Four Tops, Bobby Bland, etc, just to see where contemporary blues is; all the really nasty ideas are right there, and these young players are still connected with that reality, whether they understand why or not. Otherwise, jazz, no matter the intellectual bias, moved too far away from its most meaningful sources and resources and becomes, little by little, just the music of another emerging middle class.'

 

#69 2021-10-31 01:05:39

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Many thanks.  Both Jones and Wexler look fascinating.  I'm very interested in the marketing side of things, especially how 'race records' became acceptable to a white audience, hip at first I suppose then finally mainstream.  I wonder if Sam Phillips and Elvis Presley played a bigger part in this than people suspect.

 

#70 2021-10-31 01:49:56

Hard Bop Hank
Ivy Soul Brother
From: land of a 1000 dances
Posts: 4923

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

My story won‘t be different from most of your stories. Got into blues and soul also via Stones, Them, Animals etc.

Today I listen to nothing but the classical music channel, WDR3. They got a good jazz program, too, each Saturday from one to three o‘clock.

Last edited by Hard Bop Hank (2021-10-31 01:51:02)


“No Room For Squares”
”All political art is bad – all good art is political.”
"Would there be any freedom of press or speech if one must reduce his vocabulary to vapid innocuous euphemisms?"

 

#71 2021-10-31 01:51:58

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Hank, the quote function is kaput - for now.  But there are ways of getting round it.  Anyway, you're here and that's the important thing.

 

#72 2021-11-01 07:26:55

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Just listening to some Latin jazz.  Tito Puente.  Reminds me of something but can't think what.  Undeniably lovely sound.

 

#73 2021-11-01 08:03:14

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Joe Bataan's version of 'The Bottle'.  That was the coolest thing around circa 1975.  We sat and listened to it on a cheap record player in a chilly front room, clouds of Players cigarette smoke doubtless wafting around. 
Enjoyed CD 1 very much indeed.

 

#74 2021-11-01 09:11:02

Yuca
Member
Posts: 8568

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

Glad to hear it. The TP track on that comp is Caravan so it probably reminds you of one or more of the myriad versions of that tune. I think the original was by Duke Ellington, and was written by one of his band members, Juan Tizol. Who happened to be Puerto Rican, hence the tune is technically perfect for playing in a more authentic Latin jazz arrangement.

It was even done in ska in the 1960s (Skaravan).

Re. Baataan: he's another one with no Latin blood who made a big contribution to Latin music. Ordinary Guy by him is another 70s classic (although more on the soul side). There's a very well made documentary about boogaloo in 1960s NY that used to be available free to view online. Maybe it still is. I Like it Like That is the title and in it Baataan talks about his early days, going from criminal gang member to band leader. Recommended.


some sort of banal legitimacy

 

#75 2021-11-01 10:10:17

A Fine Sadness
Member
Posts: 3009

Re: A Dedicated Black Music Thread

If it was Ellington it makes perfect sense - I might well have heard my Dad playing it at some point.  The Duke was one of his major favourites. 
'Tequila' also sounded very familiar - I think from the strip club scene in 'Our Friends In The North' when the club is busted.

 

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