Jazz Recording Resources

Started by Bogey, January 02, 2016, 06:20:43 AM

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Bogey

Thought it might be nice to have a few of these for us to refer to.  Most resources are never complete, but with everyone chipping in when they come across one, we should be able to build a decent reference library.  Here is a beauty:

http://www.jazzdisco.org/

The "disco" in the thread refers to discography.  Neat, clean and ready to blow your mind on some of your favorite jazz musicians.  Even lists session notes.  If you click on a particular musician, above you will find an option to look few things.  For example, I clicked on Miles and got these options:

Miles Davis [Miles Dewey Davis III] (b Alton, IL, May 26, 1926; d Santa Monica, CA, September 28, 1991; aged 65) trumpet, leader.

List of Albums/Singles by Record Number:
Miles Davis Catalog - album index

List of Sessions by Recording Location & Date:
Miles Davis Discography - session index
There will never be another era like the Golden Age of Hollywood.  We didn't know how to blow up buildings then so we had no choice but to tell great stories with great characters.-Ben Mankiewicz

aligreto

That looks like a great resource; thank you for sharing it. I am not well versed in jazz but I will forward it to a friend of mine who should find it very interesting.

king ubu

jazzdisco is indeed a handy resource, but mostly it just copies "known" sources (such as Tom Lord's discography, which again seems to be based on the older Bruyninckx discography ... these aren't free sources).

The discographies here on the other hand are way more complete (but cover less musicians), but then they get clogged up to a ridiculous level by including all euro PD releases and even MP3 editions:
http://www.jazzdiscography.com/
Also check out the "leader entries" - straight link here:
http://www.jazzdiscography.com/Leaders/Leaders.php

Then there's this site with a few more, very thorough discographies:
http://www.attictoys.com/

Also, this site is pretty good for organ jazz/soul jazz mainly, but for other things as well:
http://www.jazzlists.com/
Es wollt ein meydlein grasen gan:
Fick mich, lieber Peter!
Und do die roten röslein stan:
Fick mich, lieber Peter!
Fick mich mehr, du hast dein ehr.
Kannstu nit, ich wills dich lern.
Fick mich, lieber Peter!

http://ubus-notizen.blogspot.ch/

Bogey

Excellent, KU.  When we get enough sources, we should create a page with short descriptions.
There will never be another era like the Golden Age of Hollywood.  We didn't know how to blow up buildings then so we had no choice but to tell great stories with great characters.-Ben Mankiewicz

king ubu

yeah ... I should have at least added the names: jazzdiscography.com is Michael Fitzgerald's brainchild, he's had lots of helping hands, there's also a label listing hidden there:
http://www.jazzdiscography.com/Labels/
which links, on top, to the both sides now project, which isn't jazz-focused but provides a huge amount of information about plenty of labels:
http://www.bsnpubs.com/discog.html

The attictoys site is from Noal Cohen, who also published a book about Gigi Gryce (a quite wonderful yet unsung musician - check out for instance his three Prestige albums with Richard Williams on trumpet - once named his favourite trumpet player by no less than Charles Mingus!)

Also, this site here, Red Saunders Research Foundation, focusing on Chicago's post-WWII jazz scene is pretty amazing:
http://myweb.clemson.edu/~campber/rsrf.html
each of the "chapters" there opens up to a dedicated site with most thorough documentation

One more, by Jan Evensmo: solographies of many famous and obscure musicians ... Evensmo is pretty opinionated, but obviously there's lots of work put in there and lots of interesting stuff to read:
http://www.jazzarcheology.com/
Es wollt ein meydlein grasen gan:
Fick mich, lieber Peter!
Und do die roten röslein stan:
Fick mich, lieber Peter!
Fick mich mehr, du hast dein ehr.
Kannstu nit, ich wills dich lern.
Fick mich, lieber Peter!

http://ubus-notizen.blogspot.ch/

Trazom H Cab

If you have an android or Smartphone, you can download an app called "Jazz Radio" which gives you a bunch of channels of all kinds of jazz--big band, be-bop, hard bop, cool jazz, bossa nova, swing, fusion, trumpet jazz, piano jazz, vocal jazz, guitar jazz, sax jazz, etc. I'm a bassist so I listen to the bass jazz channel.  Every bassist you an think of.  I've listened to the other channels and they're all really good.  A tremendous resource of jazz recordings.

The drawback is that they play commercials about every 10 minutes and the commercials will just cut in no matter what's playing and it's always the same commercials.  But for $8 a month, the commercials go away and the sound resolution is bumped up a notch.  You can pay by the year or by the month.  You can have the cost added to your phone bill and take care of it every time you pay for your phone.  It's not much money so I took it.  All the channels will be cleared of commercials so you can listen to any channel commercial-free.  It's 24/7, no dj.  The display tells you the featured artist and song. 

I listen to it at work with earbuds and at home. I plug it into my stereo system or into the computer speakers I keep on my nightstand and listen all night long.  I'd like to make digital recordings of these channels.  Just an hour of the bass jazz channel is like listening to a great bass compilation CD.  And you hear stuff you'd never hear otherwise. And it never stops.

JonSRB77