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Live Concert Meriden 1969
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Live Concert Meriden 1969
Current price: $18.99
Barnes and Noble
Live Concert Meriden 1969
Current price: $18.99
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Betwixt and between his appearances at Virginia's Manassas Jazz Festival in 1968 and 1971, guitarist and traditional jazz bandleader
Eddie Condon
gigged only occasionally; playing the Shoreham Hotel in Washington D.C., entertaining at Richard Nixon's inaugural ball, and performing at a concert in Meriden, CT on December 5, 1969. Newly discovered tapes have magnified the Meriden episode from a one-title footnote in the
Condon
discography to a full-length live album representing one of the man's final offerings in a recording career that extended from 1928 to 1972. It's also among the last recordings anyone ever made with drummer
Gene Krupa
. During the '40s,
had pioneered the presentation of jazz in a concert setting, mostly at what he wryly referred to as New York's "Town Hole". By late 1969, his was a decidedly old-fashioned act in a culture dominated by the
Beach Boys
,
the Doors
the Beatles
the Rolling Stones
Jimi Hendrix
Janis Joplin
John Coltrane
Miles Davis
, and
Sly Stone
. Unperturbed and as comfortable as ever with a repertoire dating from the '20s and '30s,
co-led a staunchly traditional septet with his old friend, cornetist
Jimmy McPartland
. In addition to the leaders and
Krupa
, the
Condon/McPartland Chicagoans
, which seem to have materialized solely for this occasion, consisted of trombonist
Eddie Hubble
, clarinetist
Johnny Mince
, pianist
Dill Jones
, and bassist
Bill Pemberton
. One great aspect of late period
-- particularly in a live concert -- is the extended duration of the tracks. Given the fact that much of his career was spent squeezing freewheeling traditional jazz into three- and four-minute time constraints, the expanded breadth of each number, especially
"Tin Roof Blues,"
"Royal Garden Blues,"
and
"Basin Street Blues"
allows the players to stretch out and express themselves at length. Two days later, on December 7, 1969,
led his
Strolling Reunion Commodores
(an entirely different band) for a return engagement at the Manassas Festival. While those performances, which were released on the
Fat Cat Jazz
label, are a wee bit difficult to locate,
Live Concert Meriden 1969
is available from
Jazzology,
along with most of
's historic Town Hall recordings. ~ arwulf arwulf
Eddie Condon
gigged only occasionally; playing the Shoreham Hotel in Washington D.C., entertaining at Richard Nixon's inaugural ball, and performing at a concert in Meriden, CT on December 5, 1969. Newly discovered tapes have magnified the Meriden episode from a one-title footnote in the
Condon
discography to a full-length live album representing one of the man's final offerings in a recording career that extended from 1928 to 1972. It's also among the last recordings anyone ever made with drummer
Gene Krupa
. During the '40s,
had pioneered the presentation of jazz in a concert setting, mostly at what he wryly referred to as New York's "Town Hole". By late 1969, his was a decidedly old-fashioned act in a culture dominated by the
Beach Boys
,
the Doors
the Beatles
the Rolling Stones
Jimi Hendrix
Janis Joplin
John Coltrane
Miles Davis
, and
Sly Stone
. Unperturbed and as comfortable as ever with a repertoire dating from the '20s and '30s,
co-led a staunchly traditional septet with his old friend, cornetist
Jimmy McPartland
. In addition to the leaders and
Krupa
, the
Condon/McPartland Chicagoans
, which seem to have materialized solely for this occasion, consisted of trombonist
Eddie Hubble
, clarinetist
Johnny Mince
, pianist
Dill Jones
, and bassist
Bill Pemberton
. One great aspect of late period
-- particularly in a live concert -- is the extended duration of the tracks. Given the fact that much of his career was spent squeezing freewheeling traditional jazz into three- and four-minute time constraints, the expanded breadth of each number, especially
"Tin Roof Blues,"
"Royal Garden Blues,"
and
"Basin Street Blues"
allows the players to stretch out and express themselves at length. Two days later, on December 7, 1969,
led his
Strolling Reunion Commodores
(an entirely different band) for a return engagement at the Manassas Festival. While those performances, which were released on the
Fat Cat Jazz
label, are a wee bit difficult to locate,
Live Concert Meriden 1969
is available from
Jazzology,
along with most of
's historic Town Hall recordings. ~ arwulf arwulf