Guide to Blue Note Records (Jazz Label Guide No. 4; Episode 342)

แชร์
ฝัง
  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 17 มิ.ย. 2023
  • The series of videos focusing on individual jazz record labels continues with a fourth instalment. In this Father's Day episode Allan discusses the label most would pick as the "daddy" of them all, the legendary Blue Note Records. With plenty of opinion and tips for new jazz vinyl collectors.
    00:00:43 Part 1: Blue Note, A Jazz Institution
    00:08:52 Part 2: Blue Note Beginnings
    00:12:16 Part 3: Blue Note Takes Bebop On Board
    00:15:03 Part 4: When Alfred Met Rudy
    00:18:20 Part 5: Hard Bop Arrives
    00:19:40 Part 6: The Reid Miles Covers
    00:21:41 Part 7: The Blue Note "House Band"
    00:28:20 Part 8: Blue Note Evolves
    00:31:38 Part 9: 1966 And All That
    00:39:08 Part 10: Blue Note "Truths"
    00:43:54 Part 11: We Need To Talk About Kevin (And Rudy)
    00:49:58 Part 12: Blue Note Label Lore
    00:54:37 Part 13: Catalogue Numbers
    00:59:05 Part 14: Concluding Thoughts
  • เพลง

ความคิดเห็น • 53

  • @johng.4711
    @johng.4711 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    You’ve produced another important resource for collectors and musicians! Thanks!

  • @Raypirri
    @Raypirri ปีที่แล้ว +3

    What a brilliant, informative and quality presentation! Man, you nail this -every time!. Fantastic backstories which helps to appreciate Jazz even more. Please keep these rolling. Dig Jazz

  • @vinylarchaeologist
    @vinylarchaeologist ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I agree with you on the sound of original Blue Note pressings. They are certainly hit-and-miss, and nowhere near as amazing as collectors who have spent thousand on them will tell you. But they do have a lot of character. Ultimately, Blue Notes will sound good on any format that gets you excited about the music.

  • @philippackermann3751
    @philippackermann3751 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thanks for the comprehensive video, good to have you back! When I started to dive deeper into jazz after years of listening casually to albums from a few artists I knew, I was turned off by Miles and Trane and quickly drawn into the lure of Blue Note. I'm still wading through their catalogue, taking my time, and while I have started to dig into those "Rolls Royce" artists and other labels, a lot of BN artists and albums remain my favorites. I once read that jazz did not only consist of innovators, but also of consolidators who based their styles on innovations of others and consolidated these ideas. Players like Hank Mobley, Cannonball Adderley or Art Farmer could carefully work out their styles because they didn't have that urge to innovate like Miles or Trane did. I think I'm really drawn to that more relaxed approach to finding unique voice in jazz, whereas that restless urge to do something new or different.

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Great insight. I think we all have our own paths into this music. Including the musicians!

  • @peoplelikeus123
    @peoplelikeus123 3 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Brilliant. Thanks for all the info

  • @mortofon
    @mortofon ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great to have you back, Allan, and with a real banger too! ... ('Saving this one for later in the week, when I can watch in one sitting ;-)

  • @vinylarchaeologist
    @vinylarchaeologist ปีที่แล้ว +4

    19:50 Small note: that‘s not a photo of Reid Miles, that‘s Woody Allen. His Discogs page has the right photo, a guy with shades and big ‘stache 😊

    • @johng.4711
      @johng.4711 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      Yes that’s absolutely Woody Allen by photographer Timothy White. Prints from that session are still for sale in galleries.

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      You know, I thought that looked like Woody Allen. But it was the only photo that popped up on the whole Internet when you search for Reid Miles and it looked slightly more manly than Woody Allen. So I second guessed myself and put it in. Gah.

    • @vinylarchaeologist
      @vinylarchaeologist ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@TenMinuteRecordReviews Yep, it does come up as first result. Never trust the internet when it comes to images, especially for rarely-photographed personalities. But even then, as a random example: still to this day a picture of Donald Byrd‘s girlfriend from the late 1950s spooks around the internet as being “Billie Holiday”, when it‘s clearly not her.

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว

      Here's how I was deceived: jazzineurope.mfmmedia.nl/2022/09/reid-miles-the-guy-who-designed-blue-note/. A lesson for you kids out there... double check your work!

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว

      Indeed. The last time I made this error was mislabelling Nellie Monk as Naima Coltrane. That's what I get for editing late at night!

  • @7and12inchvinyl
    @7and12inchvinyl ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Please don't go away again at least not for a long time you'll really missed you are so informed and generally project that in your videos that I can't think of anyone else I'd rather watch on TH-cam keep up the great work and like everyone else will probably say we missed you

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว

      You’re very kind! One of the complications of life is occasionally having to bring extra focus to my real job (while not forgetting about family life). I love working on the channel but every now and then I have to postpone indulging myself.

    • @7and12inchvinyl
      @7and12inchvinyl ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@TenMinuteRecordReviews I get it very much so but you do a great job and every time you post a new video. I'm there whether I'm into the music that you're doing or not? But iat 77 years old. I'm pretty much in the role of a great jazz fan and I enjoy all that you do

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@7and12inchvinyl Thank you sir!

  • @matts9064
    @matts9064 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great notes! As a life long fan of Blue Note I know the stories and have soaked up the label’s history intensely over the last 30 plus years. Your notes hit all the right spots! A great primer all around. Cheers!

  • @ergloo6660
    @ergloo6660 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    So glad you're back, hope you're refreshed after "break" I'm not a jazz newbie but still find your videos very informative and they fill gaps in my knowledge

  • @dunkkusaarinen
    @dunkkusaarinen ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Everyone watch the rest of the videos, all great❤

  • @marksheargold5536
    @marksheargold5536 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Great stuff Alan. Really enjoyable. And well researched. Thank you.

  • @bacarandii
    @bacarandii ปีที่แล้ว +1

    This is an invaluable overview -- and a joy to watch, so thank you! (I see you have a video on Curtis Counce, and I can't wait to catch that one. "You Get More Bounce..." is about to be reissued.) I'm no audiophile (although I do have a nice collection of vintage amplifiers and receivers from the '60s and '70s that I love listening to, probably because they deliver the rich, vivid, textured sound I grew up with) but, as much as I love (and fetishize) great old records and their memorable labels, it's the music that matters most to me. I could afford to be something of a "completist" with my favorite pop artists in the '70s or '80s (Joni Mitchell, Stevie Wonder...) when artists put out new LPs every year or two, but I could never have kept up with the mid-century musicians on Blue Note, Contemporary, Prestige, or Impulse! Thanks again for all your terrific work here. I'm off to explore more of your videos..

  • @edwardevans652
    @edwardevans652 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Welcome back, Allan! Thank you for returning with a fantastic history lesson from my favorite Jazz Label, Blue Note Records.
    I love the Groove and Grease of a Alfred and Frank Hammond B3 album and suggest you revisit Jimmy Smith’s “Cool Blues,” “Prayer Meetin” and Grant Green’s “First Stand.” Those albums won’t make you an organ Jazz convert, but it may change your mind and opinion on how much Soul and back to the church spirit that emanates from so many of those records.

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Noted - and will explore!

    • @edwardevans652
      @edwardevans652 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @TenMinuteRecordReviews Excellent, sir. And if those selections grab ya, I will also suggest you revisit Smith’s “Back at the Chicken Shack” and “Midnight Special.” I believe those selections along with “Prayer Meetin” are the best entry points for the great J.O.S.

  • @chesnut72
    @chesnut72 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thank you so much for creating this video!

  • @Drforrester31
    @Drforrester31 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    That was an hour well-spent, thank you so much for your hard work sir. I do think one ommission from the video was not name-dropping Grant Green as a Blue Note workhorse, dude was all over their discography. But that doesn't detract from the great information you shared with us, I like the characterization of BN as a label that was just releasing good music played by incredible musicians and not solely preoccupied with landing the biggest names in the scene

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Thank you, and yes there are a few omissions when it comes to famous Blue Note names. In addition to Grant Green, Freddie Hubbard and Blue Mitchell probably deserved a shout-out as well. And yes, their consistency was amazing and no doubt due to Alfred’s focus on the music above all else.

  • @Permitmon
    @Permitmon ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Exceptional. Thank you!

  • @Valleyplant
    @Valleyplant ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thanks for the video! Personally, I don’t discriminate between any of the series or eras in my collection. Found a Vg+ Kenny Burrell “Midnight Blue” OG mono Deepgroove for $35 last weekend!

  • @gigsfunk
    @gigsfunk ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Impossible but fun question that I ask a lot, what in your opinion is the most Blue Note of Blue Note albums ? Mines Messengers Big Beat btw.

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Great question. I guess my nomination would be Blue Note 1540, Hank Mobley with Donald Byrd and Lee Morgan:
      - Silver, Byrd, Morgan and Chambers all present
      - horns to the forefront
      - Miles design, Wolff photo
      - absolutely typical Rudy piano sound
      - 1500 series release
      - track list is four lengthy, up-tempo blowers, all originals

  • @D.E.E.P.Y.
    @D.E.E.P.Y. ปีที่แล้ว +2

    That's a good one!
    Regarding Japanese pressings: that's a really nice way a get a minty copy of an album that also sounds great. King Records (GXK, GXF) are very consistently good sounding. Choice of Toshiba EMI only if you found an album that you were looking for a really long time.
    Otherwise, Blue Note Classic and Note Poet for sure rock it for all the rest. Music Matters, Analog Productions are just too overprised now on secondary market for the value they bring.
    p.s: Can't wait to see Herbie Hancock play in Montreal is 2 weeks.

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Thank you. Good point about the Kings. I had a lot more to say about pressings for good and ill but left my half formed thoughts on the cutting room floor. I’m generally a fan of Japanese vinyl.

    • @JazzVinylSurfer
      @JazzVinylSurfer ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@TenMinuteRecordReviews Maybe an idea for a upcoming video. The difference between Japanese pressings done by KING, Victor Music Industries, Toshiba-EMI and so on. These three did a lot of work when it comes to quality Blue Note, Prestige, Mercury, Impulse releases.

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว

      @@JazzVinylSurfer Would be a great video -- I'd watch it! -- but would probably require more knowledge about these companies than I will ever have.🙂

  • @dgmono
    @dgmono ปีที่แล้ว

    I enjoyed your talk! I'd add to what you said and say that WOR's Doug Hawkins was a great engineer IMO; the 1952 Horace Silver Trio and Milt Jackson sessions recorded for BN are some of the best examples of his work.
    I 100% agree with you about Rudy's mastering work compared to modern masterings of his BN recordings. It's really hard to find OGs in great condition, and even when they're clean, they lack what I call the "accuracy" of modern reissues. But I think it's important to distinguish between sound quality issues caused by Rudy's mastering choices vs. record wear and damage. I'm with you though, the reputation of OG Blue Notes is a bit inflated when it comes to sound quality and hence so are the records' values.
    You make an interesting point about the most famous/legendary jazz musicians not recording for BN, however I'm not sure I'm in full agreement. Monk recorded for BN first and exclusively for five years. Miles recorded several 78s and 10-inches for them. Herbie, of course, was exclusively theirs for a while. What also needs to be considered is that a lot of legends left smaller labels as a sheer matter of economics (RE: Trane, Impulse was backed by ABC). Even Jimmy Smith eventually left BN for Verve.

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks for watching and for the thoughtful comment. And of course you are right that Blue Note does have representation from “the greats.” Though it’s hard to maintain that, Monk aside, any of those made their greatest contributions on Blue Note. I suppose my point is really to suggest the irony of Blue Note’s reputation being primarily cemented later on by some excellent musicians who have not really endured as household names.

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว

      And an interesting note about Hawkins. Will need to investigate! Thanks again for sharing these thoughts.

  • @mymixture965
    @mymixture965 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It is all about taste. I love the original Blue Note Monos but you MUST play them on a dedicated mono system. Then they are hard to beat and to me only Roy Dunan on Contemporary is as good as Blue Note. Ellington on Blue Note was never possible, Blue Note was an independent label and could not pay the big artists but they brought us the Avantgarde of the day. Who gave Monk a chance? And I like organ Jazz, maybe because I play in an organ Jazz band 🙂. The value is based on the many collectors who want them, supply and demand and this is not Blue Note fault. So as you see in my comments, I am a Blue Note collector and I have most of them up to the time the company was sold, about 450 records. I have about 70 originals and a lot Japanese pressings and I can recommend the King pressings, they sound fantastic and are as good as the Tone Poets to me. As a professional musician I maybe listen a little different than the audiophile community. Great video anyway, thank you for doing that.

    • @TenMinuteRecordReviews
      @TenMinuteRecordReviews  ปีที่แล้ว

      Thanks Wolfgang. Point noted about the Kings... must investigate further. And I agree about Roy DuNann. To me, he is at the top of the heap.