April 28th, 2024
Kronos Quartet's Deepest Album Now on Vinyl for the 1st Time Crumb's "Black Angels" and Shostakovich's 8th get double-LP treatmentBy: Fred Kaplan
As part of its 60th anniversary celebration, Nonesuch Records is reissuing several of its albums on vinyl for the first time, among them one of the greatest recordings by the Kronos Quartet, which happens to be marking its 50th year as an ensemble.The album is Black Angels, the label’s 6th Kronos album, released in 1990 and still among the most jarring and important in the entire Nonesuch catalogue and in the Kronos discography.Nonesuch and Kronos made a perfect... Read More
Comments: 9April 28th, 2024
Catching Up With The Blue Note Classic Vinyl Series Three Funky Jazz/R&B Organ Records from 1969By: Joseph W. Washek
The Blue Note Classic Vinyl series has issued nearly 100 records since its inception in 2020 and put back in print many of the long acknowledged classic Miles, Monk, Rollins, Mobley, Morgan, Shorter, and Hancock LPs from the label’s incredible bop/hard bop catalog. The series has also released a substantial selection of funky jazz/R&B organ records from Blue Note’s late period, which have been ignored by fans of “Blue Note jazz” but revered and considered equally... Read More
Comments: 0AXPONA 2024 hosted 10,391 attendees from 42 states and 31 countries at the Renaissance Schaumburg Hotel & Convention Center April 12-14, 2024— 14% increase over 2023. It was the best attended AXPONA yet.As with 2023's strong vinyl sales, the doom and gloom crowd was again wrong. This is a vital and growing hobby that has something affordable for every music lover but aside from shopping at a price point, there's so much fun looking at and listening to... Read More
Comments: 8April 26th, 2024
Taylor Swift’s ‘The Tortured Poets Department’: Perversely Fascinating, Subtly Disastrous Failures at this level are rare. Enjoy them when they happen.By: Malachi Lui
Social scientists will likely spend years analyzing Taylor Swift’s retained meteoric success, but the primary cause seems very simple: pure narcissism. Swift’s music is almost entirely about her, from her perspective only; in both her music and her public presence, those around her (lovers, friends, enemies) are secondary to her and how she feels, their proximity or distance meant to prove something favorable about her. In the age of main character syndrome, Swift’s... Read More
Comments: 75AXPONA Saturday began for me moderating a reissue panel titled "Second Time Around: The World of Reissuing and Remastering" with a group of the best: Chad Kassem (Analogue Productions), Shane Buettner (Intervention), Abey Fonn (IMPEX) and Julia Miller (Delmark Records). I keyed off of the recent and somewhat controversial Rhino High Fidelity "Marquee Moon" reissue, asking each whether their task was to release a reissue as close as possible to the... Read More
Comments: 16April 24th, 2024
A Name to Remember, A Band to Celebrate Kahil El'Zabar's eye-opening 50th anniversary in jazzBy: Fred Kaplan
Jazz is to New York as port is to Portugal or coal is to Newcastle, yet there are great musicians who live elsewhere, many of them obscure in the metropole because they live elsewhere, and that’s a shame for us all. Kahil El’Zabar is one of those great musicians, a composer and percussionist who dwells mainly in Chicago, except when he travels through Europe, where he’s better known than he is in New York, even though he and his main band, the Ethnic Heritage... Read More
Comments: 1April 24th, 2024
Revisiting 80s Bond: The Return of John Barry LaLa Land Records Releases All the Notes in its New Deluxe EditionBy: Mark Ward
Released as a companion to its Live and Let Die reissue, this limited edition, deluxe 2CD set explores every note composed by John Barry for his return to the series, whose sound he created two decades earlier.
Read More Comments: 2April 23rd, 2024
When James Bond Met Two Beatles... LaLa Land Records' Deluxe Reissue Revisits How Paul McCartney and George Martin Re-Invented the James Bond SoundBy: Mark Ward
This is the first of two recent releases from LaLaLand Records exploring lesser-known Bond scores from the 1970s and 1980s. First up, this limited edition, deluxe 2CD release of Live and Let Die (1973), which was the first Bond film not to be scored by John Barry, and the first to star Roger Moore. While at the time of the film’s release many felt George Martin’s score was a pale shadow of Barry’s template, the passage of time has been kinder to this music, and there’s no doubting the power of Paul McCartney’s iconic theme song. Time, therefore, to follow LaLaLand Records’ cue and dive deep into the origins of “the Bond sound” and how two of the Beatles team tackled this impossible assignment to reinvent Barry’s stylings for a new era and a new leading man.
Read More Comments: 0April 23rd, 2024
Andrew Singer, Legendary NYC Audio Retailer Dies beneath the bluster sound by singer store owner was a sweet manBy: Michael Fremer
Andrew Singer, New York City audio retailing legend, passed away this past Sunday April 21st at age 73, succumbing to pancreatic cancer after a prolonged battle that for a while he seemed to be winning. Singer was opinionated, gruff, didn't suffer fools and could be very difficult to deal with but beneath all of that he did have the proverbial heart of gold as anyone who dealt with him over time and got to really know him can attest. He also knew the equipment... Read More
Comments: 9April 22nd, 2024
A Superbly Built, High Value MC Cartridge From India an excellent valueBy: Michael Fremer
This is another of those very familiar stories. The vinyl bug bit EBI Audio's founder Tariq Shafeeque at an early age. His father was a big collector and you know how that goes. He grew up and became a structural engineer but vinyl continued to be his passion and hobby. Over time it morphed into a business, which is EBI Audio. EBI stands for "Engineering Beyond Imagination".You'll be thrown by your first visit to EBI's website where... Read More
Comments: 6April 20th, 2024
Michael Cuscuna, Jazz Producer, Record Label Founder, Blue Note Discogropher Dies at 75 Mosaic co-founder set the standard for jazz reissue compilationsBy: Michael Fremer
Sad to report that record producer, Mosaic Records co-founder, reissue supervisor and Blue Note discographer/historian Cuscuna passed away yesterday. He was 75 and had been fighting cancer for a number of years. Until very recently he was doing well. Cuscuna began his storied music career in the late '60s as a disc jockey and music journalist, writing for Down Beat and Jazz and Pop magazines. He moved on to producing records in the mid 1970s for Capitol, Arista,... Read More
Comments: 6April 20th, 2024
Record Store Day at Factory Records in Dover, New Jersey my first RSD ever because of previous AXPONA conflictsBy: Michael Fremer
Factory Records in Dover New Jersey (not far from Rockaway, NJ where RCA pressed its east coast records) is a really big record store that opened 3 years ago. Today was my first visit but as Arnold said, "I'll be back". Friendly people, a huge inventory, more new than used, and an enormous selection of vintage audio gear, which you'll see in this video.I talked to people on the line waiting to get in and glad I did. One guy played on the Bernie... Read More
Comments: 4April 19th, 2024
Sonny Rollins "Freedom Weaver" —A Last Minute RSD "Must Have" late arrival among the essential RSD 2024 jazz titlesBy: Michael Fremer
These 1959 European tour recordings have often been bootlegged with Rollins not getting royalties. This box rights that wrong and presents the piano-less trio in the best possible sound. It's not "audiophile" quality but it's decent enough mono, professionally recorded and not the result of a microphone hung from a ceiling.There's something rock'n'roll about sax, bass and drums, especially when Rollins leads the trio and this trio is... Read More
Comments: 10April 19th, 2024
On Record Store Day Bernie Worrell Waves to You From His Wooniverse All-Star Friends help keyboard titan complete unfinished catalog recordings.By: Evan Toth
What are woo doing this Record Store Day? There’s always something to please almost everyone each year. One of my shopping strategies is to try to find something unique, containing music that hasn’t been heard before; I appreciate when an artist - or, their team - waits for this special annual shopping moment to drop some music that the world hasn’t yet heard; it makes it an event. This year, the record release that falls on that side of my barometer is Bernie... Read More
Comments: 2April 18th, 2024
Producer James Sàez Interviewed About "Nat King Cole: Live at the Blue Note Chicago" the recently unearthed and restored RSD release finds Cole in fine formBy: Evan Toth
I once had an Uncle Louis, who as far as I know, I’d only met as an infant. He and my dad had a complicated relationship and, unfortunately, over the years they drifted apart. Louis died unexpectedly sometime in the 1990s; I don’t think my father ever made peace with the estrangement. Though I have no personal memory of Uncle Louis, I do have some interesting familial folklore.My dad used to tell a story about Louis moving from NJ to Las Vegas during the late... Read More
Comments: 0April 17th, 2024
Townshend Audio Seismic Isolation Podium Welcoming Good Vibes, Banishing BadBy: Paul Seydor
By breaking the connection between floor and speaker, the Seismic Isolation Podium frees speakers from sound-degrading room/floor interactions
Read More Comments: 29