please info musics in the album
I confess that the first one listened to me about 2 years ago I like it but I do not marvel, sometimes it happens that when we hear something again we wonder
Instrumental Ensemble P / U A. Tartakovsky
- Instrumental Ensemble P / U A. Tartakovsky
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmlWXF_C0J4JbDs7Wkcfuog
Label:
Melody - D — 034217; Melody — D — 034218
Format:
Vinyl, LP, Album, Mono
Country:
USSR
Released:
1973
Genre:
Jazz
Style:
Bossa Nova, Easy Listening, Jazz-Funk
Tracklist
Hide crits
A1 In New Apartment
Music By - A. Tartakovsky *
A2 Dreams
Music By - D. Brubeck *
A3 Rainy Autumn
Music By - A. Norchenko *
A4 Red Rose
Music By - J. Kern *
A5 Birthday
Music By - A. Tartakovsky *
A6 Waltz
Music By - V. Kuzmin (3)
A7 Traveler
Music By - A. Ilyin (2)
B1 Mushroom Rain
Music By - V. Kuzmin (3)
B2 Remembrance
Music By - Y. Rychkov *
B3 Tango
Music By - A. Tartakovsky *
B4 Mowgli
Music By - V. Kuzmin (3)
B5 Alabama
Music By - I. Berlin *
B6 Bossa Nova
Music By - A. K. Jobim *
Companies, etc.
Pressed By - Aprelevka Grampling Factory
Credits
Leader - Alexander Tartakovsky
We continue in another blog ( (if I find additional information I will remove it from this blog and upload it to the new blog) : https://enbuscadelamusicaperdidayotrosnuevo.blogspot.com/
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lunes, 25 de marzo de 2019
martes, 19 de marzo de 2019
Owen Marshall – Captain Puff In The Naked Truth ( 1975 ).One absolute favourite,cosmic jazz. Cheryl Marshall, Danny Whatley, Ernest Straughter...
Owen Marshall – Captain Puff In The Naked Truth
Label:
Aditi Records – none
Format:
Vinyl, LP, Album
Country:
Released:
Genre:
Style:
Tracklist Hide Credits
A1 | Electric FlowerSynthesizer, Alto Saxophone, Electric Piano, Vocals [Narration] – Owen Marshall |
4:47 |
A2 | Nana's SleepingElectric Piano, Alto Saxophone – Owen Marshall |
3:53 |
A3 | Peanut Butter Ice Cream ManBass Guitar [Fender Bass] – Danny WhatleyCongas – Shakur AbdullahDrums – Derrick RobertsElectric Piano – Ernest StraughterFlute – Owen MarshallPercussion – M'Cheza Blue |
3:39 |
A4 | Planet FunkBass Guitar [Fender Bass] – Danny WhatleyCongas – Shakur AbdullahDrums – Derrick RobertsElectric Piano, Flute – Owen MarshallPercussion – M'Cheza Blue |
2:46 |
B1 | Paper ManBass – Danny WhatleyPiano, Vibraphone [Tube-A-Phone], Steel Drums, Bongos, Drums – Owen Marshall |
4:04 |
B2 | Winter ButterflyBass Guitar [Fender Bass] – Danny WhatleyCongas – Shakur AbdullahDrums – Derrick RobertsFlute, Electric Piano – Owen MarshallPercussion – M'Cheza Blue |
5:46 |
B3 | Casa Del SoulBass – Danny WhatleyGuitar, Flute, Chimes [Toilet Chimes], Drums, Scraper [Bamboo], Vocals [Baja (Jungle) Bird Talk] – Owen Marshall |
3:39 |
B4 | Ancient AstronautsBacking Vocals – Bonita Versh, Cheryl MarshallElectric Piano, Flute, Vibraphone [Tube-A-Phone], Synthesizer, Backing Vocals – Owen Marshall |
3:05 |
Companies, etc.
- Produced For – Aditi Enterprises
- Recorded At – Devala Studios, Los Angeles
- Recorded At – Compton Community College, Los Angeles
- Recorded At – Los Angeles City College, Los Angeles
Credits
- Art Direction [Graphic Direction], Photography By – Bonita Versh
- Composed By, Arranged By, Producer – Owen Marshall
- Engineer – Ben Delain* (tracks: B2), Paul Lewinson (tracks: A3)
- Engineer [Devala Studios] – Owen Marshall (tracks: A1 to A2, A4 to B1, B3 to B4)
- Illustration [Airbrush] – Marilyn Shimokochi
- Typography – Prototype Typography
- Typography [Stylized Lettering] – Mamoru Shimokochi
Notes
Peanut Butter Ice Cream Man recorded live at Compton Community College, Los Angeles
Winter Butterfly recorded live at Los Angeles City College, Los Angeles
https://jazzmanholygrailseries.bandcamp.com/album/the-naked-truth
http://funk-o-logy.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2899
par Zou » 27 janv. 2012 10:37
Un peu d'histoire sur ce bonhomme :
"Wanda "Meekness" LeCato flew in from Phoenix the other day in search of her father's legacy. She went through files at the Free Library of Philadelphia main branch, interviewed about 30 people - old friends and cohorts - scrutinized photographs and publicity fliers. What she learned in her five-day stay was that her father, Owen Marshall, was an extraordinary jazz musician and composer.
"He had said in his last days that he really didn't have much to give us," said LeCato, 45. "But what he had was his music. In his music was his legacy, his wealth to us." Owen Eugene Marshall, trumpet player, composer, bandleader, craftsman and creator of the "plucktar," an oversized guitar, died of cancer four years ago in Los Angeles. He was 68.
LeCato is a Philadelphia native and had known her dad. Her trip east had several purposes, including validating his work and gathering research for a college paper she plans to write about him. Eventually, she and her older sister, Cheryl Marshall, want to create a scholarship in their father's name for young jazz composers.
"People need to know what he contributed," LeCato said. "He just never got the recognition." She remembers "a loving father" who played with her when she was a little girl growing up in the family's house in West Philadelphia. Marshall and his wife, Ida, separated when LeCato was around 3. She would join her father 11 years later in California and live with him there.
But while Marshall was in Philadelphia - before nonpayment of child support sent him fleeing to the West Coast in 1963 - the eccentric musician made a name for himself with his original compositions, unwavering musical principles and talented bands.
Musicians who passed through his groups included John Coltrane, McCoy Tyner, Ted Curson, Jimmy Heath, Earl and Carl Grubbs and Jimmy Garrison. Marshall's songs were picked up by Lee Morgan and Chet Baker, among others. He has 119 songs registered with BMI, LeCato said.
Marshall "was eccentric, yet balanced," said Abdul Malik Muhammad, 70, who managed the musician's big band in the late '50s and early '60s. He was smart, witty, able to see the nonsensical side of things so readily accepted as fact. "He was George Carlin, twice over," Muhammad said. Marshall's works "were very modern," said Raymond A. King, 71, a friend who played piano. "He was very progressive."
"You could hear things in the tune," Muhammad added. "There was a story in the listening."
"He was a genius," said Dave Jackson, 64, a drummer in Marshall's quintet from roughly 1955 to 1959. "This man knew music in and out."
Early in his childhood, Owen lived in Hawaii with a woman named Claribel Marshall, said his daughter. Claribel worked for a naval officer and raised Owen when his mother gave him and his brother, Thomas Cole, away.
Owen and Claribel were in Hawaii when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941. Claribel's boss was transferred to Philadelphia, and she and Owen went as well.
Marshall eventually became interested in art. As a teen, he lied about his age and got into the Army. After his discharge, he attended the Landis School of Music, and later the Ornstein School of Music in Chestnut Hill.
Marshall's wife-to-be lived across the street from him at 24th and Catharine streets. Their marriage would soon deteriorate.
"My mother and he were like opposite ends of the pole," LeCato said. "My mother was very religious and played classical music. Everything had to be A-B-C-D-E-F-G. If it was out of line, she couldn't deal with it."
Marshall seemed to stay out of line. Where Ida wanted to go to church to praise the Lord, Owen wanted to write music.
The two separated in 1958, and Marshall went to live with two brothers, Raymond and Edward Grant, at 33rd and Spring Garden streets. LeCato, her sister and mother moved to Fitzwater Street in South Philadelphia.
LeCato said her parents officially divorced in 1979 and her mother now lives in California. Marshall's brother, Thomas, was also in Philadelphia. He was a drummer and the two reconnected.
Dave Jackson played in Marshall's group, which featured Raymond Grant on piano, Lew Weldon on sax, Jimmy Garrison on bass and Marshall on trumpet. The group was formed around 1956 and stayed together three years, he said.
"We would rehearse every day in the evening from 6 to 10 p.m.," Jackson recalled. "We'd go home, and he'd still be in the cellar all night long writing music."
Looking for a break, they went to New York City, but found few gigs. "We were working for the Board of Education, scrubbing walls," Jackson said. The cleaning chemicals bothered their hands, but the job allowed them to pay their share of the rent. A frustrated Garrison "got vexed with us . . . the next thing I know, he's working with John Coltrane," Jackson said. The remaining members returned to Philadelphia.
Marshall was multi-faceted. He had strong Afrocentric leanings. He flirted with the Nation of Islam, liking its call for black empowerment, but couldn't fully accept the religion because it frowned on music. He was a craftsman who made instruments. He painted and cooked. "He took cornmeal and made it taste like tapioca pudding," Jackson said.
Marshall, described as a perfectionist when it came to his writing, briefly ran the house band in a club called Soulville USA at 39th Street and Haverford Avenue, Muhammad said. But it was shut down months later, he said, because the authorities didn't want African-Americans to get too prominent and because of reports of pot-smoking nearby. "Joint was as bad as heroin at that time," Muhammad said. And yes, Marshall did smoke weed, said LeCato.
Marshall's big band in the late '50s performed under the banner of the Guild of Contemporary Culture and played mostly at the 3-6-6 club at 51st and Market streets, Muhammad said.
The authorities once snatched Marshall right off the bandstand because of back child support he owed, his daughter said.
Tired of ducking support orders and jail, he fled to Los Angeles in 1963. When LeCato was 14, she went to live with him. "I felt I was better off with my father," LeCato said. She was joined by her sister six months later.
Although the jazz scene wasn't as hot as on the East Coast, Marshall still scraped out a living, going on the road while paying a woman to watch his daughters. He did copywriting and arranging for Grants Music Center in Los Angeles. One client was rock 'n' roller Little Richard. "He used to do music for him all the time," LeCato said.
LeCato, who took the name "Meekness" a few years ago for spiritual reasons, now lectures on African culture, leads motivational seminars and is a senior at Arizona State University. Her husband, John LeCato, a nondenominational minister, is from South Philadelphia.
She eventually wants to write a book based on her findings about her father. The mother of three (Chris, 25; Lovell, 20; and Richard, 18, who plays basketball for Arizona State) said she plans to return to Philadelphia in February and start planning for a scholarship benefit.
"He was a composer and had such a love for music that he wanted everyone to understand it," she said. If you have any information about Owen Marshall, LeCato would like to hear from you. She can be reached through e-mail at JLeCato@aol.com."
par Zou » 27 janv. 2012 12:31
Voilà ce qu'on peut trouver comme "appréciation" de vendeurs :
This excellent and EXTREMELY rare original private pressing from 1975 is difficult to comfortably categorize. I guess you could get away with calling it a soul jazz or jazz funk LP (yes, there are funky cuts and, yes, there is a dope drum break), but that wouldn’t do this fantastic album justice as it also has strong elements of spiritual jazz, Sun Ra style space psychedelia, brooding atmospheric electronica and even one grooving calypso-like jam.
"Owen Marshall was a very interesting and creative musician (note all the instruments that he plays on this album). He’s played with truly great musicians such as Max Roach, Jackie McLean, and even Chet Baker. He received composer and arranger credits on Lee Morgan’s first two Blue Note albums and appears on both of Calvin Keys’ Black Jazz label releases. I recall the great percussionist Big Black speaking to me (in fond terms) about Owen Marshall; he played trumpet with Black back in the day.
This is a real gem of an L.A. album. It features Ernest Straughter of Horace Tapscott’s Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra on electric piano on the excellent tune “Peanut Butter Ice Cream Man” (which was recorded live at Compton Community College. Also, “Winter Butterfly” was recorded live at L.A.C.C."
Winter Butterfly recorded live at Los Angeles City College, Los Angeles
https://jazzmanholygrailseries.bandcamp.com/album/the-naked-truth
The Naked Truth
by Owen Marshall
1.
|
Electric Flower
04:47
|
|
||
2.
|
Nana's Sleeping
03:53
|
|
||
3.
|
|
|||
4.
|
Planet Funk
02:46
|
|
||
5.
|
Paper Man
04:02
|
|
||
6.
|
Winter Butterfly
05:41
|
|
||
7.
|
Casa Del Soul
03:41
|
|
||
8.
|
Ancient Astronauts
03:05
|
|
||
9.
|
Grunt (Uh-Uh-Uh)
03:09
|
|
||
10.
|
Evolove
04:24
|
|
http://funk-o-logy.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=2899
par Zou » 27 janv. 2012 10:37
Un peu d'histoire sur ce bonhomme :
"Wanda "Meekness" LeCato flew in from Phoenix the other day in search of her father's legacy. She went through files at the Free Library of Philadelphia main branch, interviewed about 30 people - old friends and cohorts - scrutinized photographs and publicity fliers. What she learned in her five-day stay was that her father, Owen Marshall, was an extraordinary jazz musician and composer.
"He had said in his last days that he really didn't have much to give us," said LeCato, 45. "But what he had was his music. In his music was his legacy, his wealth to us." Owen Eugene Marshall, trumpet player, composer, bandleader, craftsman and creator of the "plucktar," an oversized guitar, died of cancer four years ago in Los Angeles. He was 68.
LeCato is a Philadelphia native and had known her dad. Her trip east had several purposes, including validating his work and gathering research for a college paper she plans to write about him. Eventually, she and her older sister, Cheryl Marshall, want to create a scholarship in their father's name for young jazz composers.
"People need to know what he contributed," LeCato said. "He just never got the recognition." She remembers "a loving father" who played with her when she was a little girl growing up in the family's house in West Philadelphia. Marshall and his wife, Ida, separated when LeCato was around 3. She would join her father 11 years later in California and live with him there.
But while Marshall was in Philadelphia - before nonpayment of child support sent him fleeing to the West Coast in 1963 - the eccentric musician made a name for himself with his original compositions, unwavering musical principles and talented bands.
Musicians who passed through his groups included John Coltrane, McCoy Tyner, Ted Curson, Jimmy Heath, Earl and Carl Grubbs and Jimmy Garrison. Marshall's songs were picked up by Lee Morgan and Chet Baker, among others. He has 119 songs registered with BMI, LeCato said.
Marshall "was eccentric, yet balanced," said Abdul Malik Muhammad, 70, who managed the musician's big band in the late '50s and early '60s. He was smart, witty, able to see the nonsensical side of things so readily accepted as fact. "He was George Carlin, twice over," Muhammad said. Marshall's works "were very modern," said Raymond A. King, 71, a friend who played piano. "He was very progressive."
"You could hear things in the tune," Muhammad added. "There was a story in the listening."
"He was a genius," said Dave Jackson, 64, a drummer in Marshall's quintet from roughly 1955 to 1959. "This man knew music in and out."
Early in his childhood, Owen lived in Hawaii with a woman named Claribel Marshall, said his daughter. Claribel worked for a naval officer and raised Owen when his mother gave him and his brother, Thomas Cole, away.
Owen and Claribel were in Hawaii when Japan bombed Pearl Harbor in 1941. Claribel's boss was transferred to Philadelphia, and she and Owen went as well.
Marshall eventually became interested in art. As a teen, he lied about his age and got into the Army. After his discharge, he attended the Landis School of Music, and later the Ornstein School of Music in Chestnut Hill.
Marshall's wife-to-be lived across the street from him at 24th and Catharine streets. Their marriage would soon deteriorate.
"My mother and he were like opposite ends of the pole," LeCato said. "My mother was very religious and played classical music. Everything had to be A-B-C-D-E-F-G. If it was out of line, she couldn't deal with it."
Marshall seemed to stay out of line. Where Ida wanted to go to church to praise the Lord, Owen wanted to write music.
The two separated in 1958, and Marshall went to live with two brothers, Raymond and Edward Grant, at 33rd and Spring Garden streets. LeCato, her sister and mother moved to Fitzwater Street in South Philadelphia.
LeCato said her parents officially divorced in 1979 and her mother now lives in California. Marshall's brother, Thomas, was also in Philadelphia. He was a drummer and the two reconnected.
Dave Jackson played in Marshall's group, which featured Raymond Grant on piano, Lew Weldon on sax, Jimmy Garrison on bass and Marshall on trumpet. The group was formed around 1956 and stayed together three years, he said.
"We would rehearse every day in the evening from 6 to 10 p.m.," Jackson recalled. "We'd go home, and he'd still be in the cellar all night long writing music."
Looking for a break, they went to New York City, but found few gigs. "We were working for the Board of Education, scrubbing walls," Jackson said. The cleaning chemicals bothered their hands, but the job allowed them to pay their share of the rent. A frustrated Garrison "got vexed with us . . . the next thing I know, he's working with John Coltrane," Jackson said. The remaining members returned to Philadelphia.
Marshall was multi-faceted. He had strong Afrocentric leanings. He flirted with the Nation of Islam, liking its call for black empowerment, but couldn't fully accept the religion because it frowned on music. He was a craftsman who made instruments. He painted and cooked. "He took cornmeal and made it taste like tapioca pudding," Jackson said.
Marshall, described as a perfectionist when it came to his writing, briefly ran the house band in a club called Soulville USA at 39th Street and Haverford Avenue, Muhammad said. But it was shut down months later, he said, because the authorities didn't want African-Americans to get too prominent and because of reports of pot-smoking nearby. "Joint was as bad as heroin at that time," Muhammad said. And yes, Marshall did smoke weed, said LeCato.
Marshall's big band in the late '50s performed under the banner of the Guild of Contemporary Culture and played mostly at the 3-6-6 club at 51st and Market streets, Muhammad said.
The authorities once snatched Marshall right off the bandstand because of back child support he owed, his daughter said.
Tired of ducking support orders and jail, he fled to Los Angeles in 1963. When LeCato was 14, she went to live with him. "I felt I was better off with my father," LeCato said. She was joined by her sister six months later.
Although the jazz scene wasn't as hot as on the East Coast, Marshall still scraped out a living, going on the road while paying a woman to watch his daughters. He did copywriting and arranging for Grants Music Center in Los Angeles. One client was rock 'n' roller Little Richard. "He used to do music for him all the time," LeCato said.
LeCato, who took the name "Meekness" a few years ago for spiritual reasons, now lectures on African culture, leads motivational seminars and is a senior at Arizona State University. Her husband, John LeCato, a nondenominational minister, is from South Philadelphia.
She eventually wants to write a book based on her findings about her father. The mother of three (Chris, 25; Lovell, 20; and Richard, 18, who plays basketball for Arizona State) said she plans to return to Philadelphia in February and start planning for a scholarship benefit.
"He was a composer and had such a love for music that he wanted everyone to understand it," she said. If you have any information about Owen Marshall, LeCato would like to hear from you. She can be reached through e-mail at JLeCato@aol.com."
par Zou » 27 janv. 2012 12:31
Voilà ce qu'on peut trouver comme "appréciation" de vendeurs :
This excellent and EXTREMELY rare original private pressing from 1975 is difficult to comfortably categorize. I guess you could get away with calling it a soul jazz or jazz funk LP (yes, there are funky cuts and, yes, there is a dope drum break), but that wouldn’t do this fantastic album justice as it also has strong elements of spiritual jazz, Sun Ra style space psychedelia, brooding atmospheric electronica and even one grooving calypso-like jam.
"Owen Marshall was a very interesting and creative musician (note all the instruments that he plays on this album). He’s played with truly great musicians such as Max Roach, Jackie McLean, and even Chet Baker. He received composer and arranger credits on Lee Morgan’s first two Blue Note albums and appears on both of Calvin Keys’ Black Jazz label releases. I recall the great percussionist Big Black speaking to me (in fond terms) about Owen Marshall; he played trumpet with Black back in the day.
This is a real gem of an L.A. album. It features Ernest Straughter of Horace Tapscott’s Pan Afrikan Peoples Arkestra on electric piano on the excellent tune “Peanut Butter Ice Cream Man” (which was recorded live at Compton Community College. Also, “Winter Butterfly” was recorded live at L.A.C.C."
lunes, 18 de marzo de 2019
Piero Umiliani – To-Day's Sound ( 1971 ) one of the best psychedelic jazz albums.Antonello Vannucchi, Carlo Zoffoli, Ciro Cicco, Franco D'Andrea, Gegè Munari, Giovanni Tommaso, Marcello Boschi, Maurizio Majorana, OSCAR VALDAMBRINI, PIERO UMILIANI, Sergio Coppotelli, Vincenzo Restuccia
Piero Umiliani – To-Day's Sound
Sello:
Easy Tempo – ET 906 DLP
Formato:
2 ×
Vinyl, LP, Album, Reissue
País:
Fecha:
Género:
Estilo:
Pistas
A1 | Open Space | 4:19 |
A2 | Green Valley | 3:06 |
A3 | Caretera Panamericana | 3:01 |
A4 | Goodmorning Sun | 4:44 |
A5 | To-Day's Sound | 2:29 |
A6 | Free Dimension | 2:22 |
B1 | Truck Driver | 4:38 |
B2 | Blue Lagoon | 3:42 |
B3 | Wanderer | 3:56 |
B4 | Lady Magnolia | 3:26 |
B5 | Pretty | 3:12 |
C1 | Railroad | 4:17 |
C2 | Country Town | 3:33 |
C3 | Bus Stop | 2:49 |
C4 | Cotton Road | 3:46 |
C5 | Nocturne | 3:29 |
D1 | Exploration | 2:10 |
D2 | Tropical River | 4:24 |
D3 | Coast To Coast | 3:27 |
D4 | Safari Club | 5:11 |
D5 | Music On The Road | 4:26 |
Créditos
- Bass – Maurizio Majorana
- Composed By, Conductor, Arranged By – Piero Umiliani
- Double Bass – Giovanni Tommaso
- Drums, Percussion – Gegé Munari*, Enzo Restuccia*
- Electric Piano [Fender Rhodes], Organ [Moog] – Piero Umiliani
- Engineer – Claudio Badussi
- Flute – Marcello Boschi
- Guitar – Sergio Cappotelli*
- Marimba, Vibraphone – Carlo Zoffoli
- Mastered By – Francesco Melloni
- Mastered By [Remastering] – Aldo Borrelli
- Organ [Hammond] – Antonello Vannucchi
- Organ [Lowrey] – Sergio Carnini
- Percussion – Ciro Cicco
- Piano, Piano [Clavichord] – Franco D'Andrea
- Reissue Producer – Flavio Bonandrini, Rocco Pandiani
- Trombone – Biagio Marullo, Dino Piana, Mario Midana
- Trumpet – Al Corvin*, Marino Di Fulvio, Oscar Valdambrini
Notas
Originally released in 1971 (LRS 0053-0054, Liuto Edizioni Musicali - Roma)
sábado, 16 de marzo de 2019
miércoles, 13 de marzo de 2019
The Aquarians – Jungle Grass ( 1969 ).One favourite album.Vladimir Vassilieff,Al McKibbon, Bobby Hutcherson, Carl Lot, Dave MacKay, Francisco Aquabella, Joe Pass, Joe Roccisano, Lynn Blessing, Stan Gilbert, Vicki Hamilton.
Full abum:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLC6EEC4E657B45161
https://www.discogs.com/es/The-Aquarians-Jungle-Grass/release/8417036
- Arranged By – Vladimir Vassilieff
- Producer – Bill Rinehart, Mark Slotkin
http://www.musicweb-international.com/jazz/Hutcherson/BobbyHutchersonDiscography.pdf ( The Complete Bobby Hutcherson Discography ):
Vladimir Vassilieff (p);
Bobby Hutcherson, Lynn Blessing (vib);
Carl Lot (d);
Stan Gilbert, Al McKibbon (b);
Joe Roccisano (fl, al-fl, sax);
Joe Pass (g);
Francisco Aquabella (congas, perc);
Dave MacKay, Vicki Hamilton (vo)
http://fidelseyeglasses.blogspot.com/2008/07/vladimir-vassilieff-belgian-latin-jazz.html
Sunday, July 20, 2008
Vladimir Vassilieff Belgian latin jazz pianist 1966 LP
'Vladimir Vassilieff' was born in Belgium, of Russian parents.
He had 2 or 3 LP's, one of them becoming a highly sought after "Latin jazz" LP called "Vladimir and His Orchestra-New Sound In Latin Jazz". On the Alegre label.
The LP was reissued on CD in 1995 and incorrectly lists the original recording year as 1971, when in fact the LP was originally released in 1966.
There was a Japanese limited edition vinyl reissue in the early ’90s that retailed for about $50.00 / This LP was also a big deal in the U.K.
After listening to two or three songs recently, I had to take it off as it just sounds too "dated" to me now.
If I remember correctly.... I think there was a second Lp called "Vladimir and the New Aquarians", but I'm not positive.
He had a third LP done in Hollywood, California in 1969 called "The Aquarians-Jungle Grass", produced by 'Mark Slotkin' & 'Bill Rinehart' which had more of the L.A.-California "funky latin jazz" sound than the previous Lp recorded in N.Y.C.
'Vladimir' Born in Belgium, he moved with his family to Canada in 1958, later he went to Boston, New York City and Los Angeles, before winding up in New Orleans in the mid 1970's.
I was a member of his band in New Orleans in 1976, he died 1986 in Indianapolis of a heart attack at age 52.
The other members that are in the above photo but not credited are: 'Tex Liuzza' electric bass, 'Herlin Riley' drum set and 'Wendel Brunious' trumpet. The Bongocero is 'Hector Gallardo'... an incredible Cuban player, his style of playing was similar to that of "Yeyito" Iglesias'.
(the Congas I'm playing were made by 'Junior Tirado' in the early 70's)
*I have a recording of the above 1976 Jazz festival gig on cassette, I'll post a few tunes here as soon as I transfer them. (the above photo is from the book "A guide to Jazz in New Orleans" by "Rhodes Spedale Jr."-ISBN 0-940594-08-0)
He had 2 or 3 LP's, one of them becoming a highly sought after "Latin jazz" LP called "Vladimir and His Orchestra-New Sound In Latin Jazz". On the Alegre label.
The LP was reissued on CD in 1995 and incorrectly lists the original recording year as 1971, when in fact the LP was originally released in 1966.
There was a Japanese limited edition vinyl reissue in the early ’90s that retailed for about $50.00 / This LP was also a big deal in the U.K.
After listening to two or three songs recently, I had to take it off as it just sounds too "dated" to me now.
If I remember correctly.... I think there was a second Lp called "Vladimir and the New Aquarians", but I'm not positive.
He had a third LP done in Hollywood, California in 1969 called "The Aquarians-Jungle Grass", produced by 'Mark Slotkin' & 'Bill Rinehart' which had more of the L.A.-California "funky latin jazz" sound than the previous Lp recorded in N.Y.C.
Bobby Hutcherson (vibes)
Lynn Blessing (vibes)
Carl Lott (d.)
Stan Gilbert (b.)
Al MacKibbon (b.)
Joe Roccisano (fl., sax)
Joe Pass (g.)
Francisco Aquabella (perc.)
The Gemini Twins (voc.)
David MacKay (voc.)
Vicki Hamilton (voc.)
Lynn Blessing (vibes)
Carl Lott (d.)
Stan Gilbert (b.)
Al MacKibbon (b.)
Joe Roccisano (fl., sax)
Joe Pass (g.)
Francisco Aquabella (perc.)
The Gemini Twins (voc.)
David MacKay (voc.)
Vicki Hamilton (voc.)
'Vladimir' Born in Belgium, he moved with his family to Canada in 1958, later he went to Boston, New York City and Los Angeles, before winding up in New Orleans in the mid 1970's.
I was a member of his band in New Orleans in 1976, he died 1986 in Indianapolis of a heart attack at age 52.
The other members that are in the above photo but not credited are: 'Tex Liuzza' electric bass, 'Herlin Riley' drum set and 'Wendel Brunious' trumpet. The Bongocero is 'Hector Gallardo'... an incredible Cuban player, his style of playing was similar to that of "Yeyito" Iglesias'.
(the Congas I'm playing were made by 'Junior Tirado' in the early 70's)
*I have a recording of the above 1976 Jazz festival gig on cassette, I'll post a few tunes here as soon as I transfer them. (the above photo is from the book "A guide to Jazz in New Orleans" by "Rhodes Spedale Jr."-ISBN 0-940594-08-0)
5 comments:
- abbey123 said...
- I was the producer of the Aquarians with Vladimir Vassilieff composing,
conducting and playing the piano. He was brilliant. The entire album
done in one day with one rehersal.
All the songs were original, charted and VV knew exactly what he wanted in terms of sound, blend, and the finished product came out all VV.
MARK SLOTKIN
JAN, 2009 - January 17, 2009 at 1:31 AM
- deanosounds said...
- Mark, I'm trying to get in contact with Vladimir Vassilieff to reissue
some of his boogaloo songs with Ray Medina. I run a label called
Cultures of Soul.
Thanks,
Jeff - August 26, 2010 at 4:42 PM
- Fidels Eyeglasses said...
- Jeff... Vladimir Vassilieff died 24 years
ago.
Mark - September 5, 2010 at 3:46 AM
- rpinero said...
- I will differ just a bit..the boogaloo sounds very dated, but then, as
far as i'm concerned, boogaloo sounded dated when almost as soon as it
was recorded. I am one of those people alive when the so-called craze
came about, and was very happy when it passed...the rest of the album
is, in my opinion, still very good listening..
- August 30, 2014 at 4:42 PM
- Fidels Eyeglasses said...
- Sr. 'rpinero', there's only one song on that LP that is done in the so
called 'Boogaloo' genré, the LP is not a 'Boogaloo' album per se.
During the 60's at least one Latin 'Boogaloo' was commonly included on LP's.
Some bands were better at it then others.
I was a member of Vladimir's band for several years during the mid '70's and we never played a 'Boogaloo' derived number once.
lunes, 11 de marzo de 2019
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jueves, 7 de marzo de 2019
YOSHIO KUNIYASU QUARTET – THERMAL ( 1982 ).TERRIFIC SPIRITUAL JAZZ ALBUM.TAKEHARU HAYAKAWA,NOBUO FUJII,YOSHIO KUNIYASU.
Yoshio Kuniyasu Quartet = 国安良夫 4* – Thermal
Sello:
TakeYa Records – TY8209
Formato:
Vinyl, LP, Album
País:
Fecha:
Género:
Estilo:
Pistas Ocultar Créditos
A1 | SaitoWritten By – Yoshio Kuniyasu |
11:33 |
A2 | Up AgainstWritten By – Yoshio Kuniyasu |
6:26 |
B1 | Gunga DinWritten By – Junior Spencer, Tommy Turrentine |
10:20 |
B2 | My One And Only LoveWritten By – Guy B. Wood*, Robert Mellin |
5:43 |
B3 | Little ZazieWritten By – Yoshio Kuniyasu |
5:43 |
Compañías, etc.
- Manufactured By – King Record Co. Ltd – NAS-1237
Créditos
- Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Producer – Yoshio Kuniyasu
- Bass – Takehalu Hayakawa*
- Drums – Nobuo Fujii
- Photography By, Design [Cover], Engineer – Kazutoshi Inada
- Piano – Kurumi Kuniyasu
- Producer – Kazutoshi Inada
Notas
Recorded September 1982 at Keyaki Hall, Futyu Tokyo.
Digitally recorded on the SONY PCM-F1.
Digitally recorded on the SONY PCM-F1.