New Jazz vinyl arrivals + the most underrated jazz album according to GenAI?
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- Опубликовано: 31 июл 2024
- Self explanatory title, I wanted to highlight a dozen or so new vinyl arrivals plus some jazz books, and one of these albums I got solely because I asked GenAI to name the most underrated jazz albums and I decided to pick their recommendation up!
/ what_can_brown
00:00 - Introduction
00:56 - Art Taylor's Taylor's Wailers
02:24 - Doug Watkins' Soulnik
05:12 - Gary McFarland Orchestra's w/ Bill Evans
09:00 - Albert Dailey's The Day After The Dawn
11:59 - Perigeo's Geneologia
13:47 - Richard Groove Holmes' Soul Power
15:46 - Jimmy Heath's The Quota
17:26 - Julian Priester's Keep Swingin
18:48 - Randy Weston's Jazz a la Bohemia
20:01 - Kenny Burrell's Soul Call
22:20 - Mal Waldron's Spanish Bitch
24:32 - Takehiro Honda's Salaam Salaam
25:59 - Akira Miyazawa's The Four Units
28:04 - Terumasa Hino's Live!
28:42 - Fumio Karashima's Gathering
29:35 - Francis Wolff and Burt Goldblatt books
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If you're new to my channel, what you can expect from me is a vinyl collector's approach to the jazz genre. For years, I've only collected vintage pressings and prioritized originals of Blue Note, Prestige, Savoy, Bethlehem, Riverside, New Jazz, and more classic labels. Lately, with the resurgence of the medium and more collectors coming to the space, the music industry has taken notice and prioritized putting out high quality reissues of some of the best albums ever recorded. Subscribe to my channel to watch me navigate how to rationalize how I used to buy vs. how I buy vinyl records today.
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Awesome Art Taylor and Doug Watkins score Chris I never see those records while I’m digging.
Funny, I share the same feeling about Gary McFarland music vs singing/humming. Thanks for sharing your jazz experience about all these albums, you provide one of the most valuable knowledge about jazz. I’m interested in the TBM package you’re getting, like you, I collect their releases and the ones made by Impex.
The Albert Daley Stan getz duet album is really fantastic
I guess I'll take the Julian Priester Keep Swingin' album on Riverside from 1960. Thanks.
I personally have a soft spot for those “do da da” samba-ish records from McFarland. But if we’re talking real quality you can’t forget about The October Suite with Steve Kuhn. A true gem!! Also his stuff with Gabor Szabo is great
McFarland, Dailey & Soul Call were new to me so thanks. The Quota has always been a favorite. Spanish Bitch is not on Amazon Unlimited, bummed. Always luved the syncopation of Just A Riff but wish the Jazz a la Bohemia recording quality was better, a missed opportunity, I wonder how an original LP vs my OJC CD compares? Cheers!
Hey bud! Could you have put up a list of the albums covered? That would be super helpful. Thanks and keep up the awesome work.
Updated the description to include chapter stops for each title so you can see what’s covered
Congrats. That’s an interesting haul! What GenAI application do you use?
This was just what is embedded in Bing’s search engine which they call simply Copilot
I’m interested to know more about your experiences as a DJ. I have an opportunity to spin some Jazz records once a month at a local coffee shop but I’m reluctant to do so because I’d be using a single turntable. No mixing, blending, fading in and out etc. Not that I posses any of those skills, I’m just concerned that without anything to enhance the experience for the audience, I’m just a guy up there playing single tracks off of records. Anything you could share about your approach would be greatly appreciated.
I’ve only ever done a dual turntable setup with mixing board, but I’ve definitely never done any real mixing or blending or beat matching. The most I do is fade one up and one down to maintain the constant music. It may be that a coffee shop audience wouldn’t notice as much if it’s during the day and you had to switch records out. Otherwise, you’d be surprised how often the tracks I want to play are the first one on the side, which makes switching out that much faster since you don’t need to worry about dropping the needle too carefully to cue something up
@@jazzvinylcollector Greatly appreciate the insight - Thanks!