Thanks, Ken, for sharing your knowledge and your passion! ❤ Also, thanks for including the actual list of records in the video description! 🎉😂👍👍 P.S. I consider the background sound of the city to be “a feature, not a bug!” All the best! P.P.S. Jo Jones, The Drums -is- on CD, and also on KZbin Music, to stream! 🎉
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
Thanks for that info
@heribertovalentin15635 ай бұрын
I got the Tito Puente record also on the black Tico label, great record !!!! Got to check out the other records....
@Localbandography5 ай бұрын
That Billy is a good egg.
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
The most welcoming record store owner I’ve ever met
@jeffreysobczynski71135 ай бұрын
Love this video and also the “great drummers” episode - but how can Billy Higgins not be one of the greatest drummers ever? He was a machine and is on almost every Blue Note that I love best - well regardless love your channel … and enjoying and understanding jazz is a lifelong process
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
Part two and part three usually follow part one
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
Thank you
@JohnZolla-bp7tl5 ай бұрын
One of my favorites. The young lion, Mike Mitchell, Blaque Dynamite. 😎
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
I know him, but what Record would you recommend? Jmi?
@JohnZolla-bp7tl5 ай бұрын
Yes, Blaque Dynamite, on J.M.I. It's a two LP, solo album.
@wylieroth31454 ай бұрын
"...vinyls you've never heard." Don't underestimate your audience.
@luytondriman62365 ай бұрын
Hi Ken, I'm a huge jazz drumming fan and really enjoyed your deep dive to lesser-known albums ( at last) by drummers that I know. Just one comment, there were not a lot of European drummers, one of my all-time favourites is Charly Antolini (Swiss) and in the US, Steve Smith is doing some amazing stuff as is Clayton Cameron (tasteful brushwork).
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
Thanks for reminding me I do have a Antolini album that I like a lot. But I neither can nor want to mention every jazz drummer in the universe. There are some people I just don’t care for such a Steve Smith, who is great technician doesn’t really swing in my estimation. so, this is part one of part three thank you
@luytondriman62365 ай бұрын
@@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop6455 Thanks for the feedback, I was really getting into Alvin Queen yesterday, he has a very smooth style (live with George Coleman)
@Joe-yi8xj5 ай бұрын
I like Steve's jazz playing on The CTi milt Jackson record-Goodbye
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
Such a wonderful musician
@chrisfisher69545 ай бұрын
On the mountain is available directly from PM records, I think the found some boxes in Gene Perla's basement. Also . . . they have original copies of the promo posters with that picture of Elvin. Ken I hope to run into at JRC next week, I'm planning on stopping in on Friday, would love to meet you.
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
Wild! Thanks for the info. I only work at the store on Saturday.
@chrisfisher69545 ай бұрын
Bummer I’ll miss you then
@Vinylbop5 ай бұрын
Nice video! Very interesting what you told about Steve Gadd. Great drummer but without the subtle jazz swing swing.
@UFO_computers5 ай бұрын
I believe he also lacked the intensity the masters had.
@xentakis5 ай бұрын
@@UFO_computersLacked intensity? Maybe sort of on pure traditional swinging jazz only, but “lacked intensity” is really not a description I would ever use for Steve Gadd. Sure, Gadd’s swing doesn’t have that special something that Elvin Jones, Roy Haynes, Tony Williams, and those greats who specialized in jazz had - but don’t forget none of those guys had the breadth of ability to nail a session in EVERY style the way Gadd could. Not many drummers in history could hang with the absolute cream of the crop in pop, funk, R&B, fusion, and yes traditional jazz like Gadd.. And by the way, I quite enjoy Gadd’s jazz playing on Jim Hall’s Concierto.
@thomosburn87405 ай бұрын
Should have also included Horacee Arnold's 'Tale of an Exonerated Flea'
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
cant include everyone's favorite. Make your video! :)
@thomosburn87405 ай бұрын
@@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop6455 I guess I should have explained myself a little better, as Arnold plays circles around most players on your list, plus the stereo placement of the kit in the recording I mentioned is truly remarkable.
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
@@thomosburn8740 Thanks. I only have his album with the flowers on the cover?
@rayszymarek29205 ай бұрын
Thank you for creating this channel just one request please play the buddy rich record the monster I was told buddy played so so much on this record called the monster please play it for me dedicate it to boom thank you
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
I can't play it cause of copyright, which will deny me any proceeds @ Spotify
@brucevair-turnbull80825 ай бұрын
It took you 14 mins, but you got to (as you must) Philly Joe Jones, Ken. Have you got 'Blues for Dracula'? He had a sense of humour too.🤣
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
Need!
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
I don’t know that one as well as I should
@UFO_computers4 ай бұрын
Jim Gordon never played with Jethro Tull, but he did record two records with Traffic after Derek and the Dominos
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64554 ай бұрын
Did I say that? Don't think so. Gordon played on hundreds of records that's for sure
@UFO_computers4 ай бұрын
@@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop6455- sorry, you’re right. You said “Clive Bunker Jim Gordon from Jethro Tull and Derek and the Dominos respectively“. I missed that ‘respectively part’. I never listened to Jethro Tull and don’t really know that first drummer Clive. You da man.
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64554 ай бұрын
@@UFO_computers oh man, Clive bunker is on aqualung. Just a phenomenal player, right up there with another great British drummer, BJ Wilson, who worked with Procol Harum. Drummers, you have the sensitivity and expertise of jazz players, yet with the thunder of rock ‘n’ roll.
@SonicPVC5 ай бұрын
🎼🥁🪘🪇🎶
@Joe-yi8xj5 ай бұрын
I agree about Mel's playing which is kind of ironic that he had a massive ego in the best possible way.
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
He did have a massive ego? I didn’t know that.
@Joe-yi8xj5 ай бұрын
@@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop6455 check out the drum history retrospective episodes Loren Shoenberg recorded with him. Amazing info and Mel telling it like it is. I'm sure one of your drummer friends has a copy
@JohnZolla-bp7tl5 ай бұрын
I'm first!!!
@filipedasilva85125 ай бұрын
No Art Blakey? In neither videos? Sorry Ken, but I haven't heard better recorded drumming in my house
@filipedasilva85125 ай бұрын
You can make a video with only art blakey records... I'm listening right now to Bu'S delight and OMG and it's like honey
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
part three usually follows part two follows part one
@m.charron5 ай бұрын
"vinyls" 😐
@TheDonteventalktome5 ай бұрын
You’re telling me it’s not Paul “motion”?? Shit…
@jeffreysobczynski71135 ай бұрын
Seriously - I swear that I have looked into this multiple times and that he pronounced it “moe-shun” 🥴
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
I honestly don’t know. Should’ve asked the publisher when he was alive.
@cheezruff5 ай бұрын
Steve Gadd can play swing more than you are giving him credit for. Check out Chet Baker album 'She was too Good to Me' on CTI. Two vocal tunes along with 5 swing standards, with 1 of them played by Jack Dejohnette. Also want to mention an Elvin album called 'Mr. Jones' on Blue Note, with Jan Hammer on electric and acoustic piano, no synths.
@kenmicallefjazzvinylaudiop64555 ай бұрын
Compared to any of the great swing players from Higgins to Taylor to Jones, or younger cats like Bill Stewart, Jeff Hamilton or Kenny Washington, Gadd comes nowhere near their level of flow, freedom, drive and elasticity. His ride cymbal is dead weight.