#chris dingman
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worldsofzzt · 3 months ago
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Source “Yoshi's Dino-Quest” by Chris Dingman/Kevin Anderson (1993) Published by: CrystaLens Productions [YOSHIQST.ZZT] - “Iggy's Castle 1” Play This World Online ---- Discover More Information About This World on the Museum of ZZT
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bewitchingbaker · 9 months ago
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What ghost haunts you?
The Kind Witch || Chris Luna
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The ghost of your bloodline
you were doomed from the start, weren’t you? born to bend yourself to the will of a bloodline that sneers at every effort you take towards betterment. you are stained by the hand of your father, your mother, perhaps a family member that looms over your weary shoulders. the first grave is the childhood home, after all. you can escape all you wish. your body can leave the home, the state, the country, but you will always be haunted by what raised you. when chelsea dingman wrote, “i have been trying to go home my entire life.” when graham greene wrote, “from childhood i had never believed in permanence, and yet i had longed for it.” when oscar wilde wrote, “a burnt child loves the fire.”
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nahavic-blog · 1 year ago
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Chris Dingman
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goalhofer · 1 year ago
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Where Every Player Played During The 2004-05 NHL Lockout: Tampa Bay
CHL: Brad Lukowich (Ft. Worth Brahmas) Eishockey-Bundesliga: Nolan Pratt (E.V. Duisburg) Slovak Extraliga: Martin Cibák (H.K. 32 Liptovský Mikuláš/H.K. Košice) Czech Extraliga: Martin Cibák (H.K. Lasselsberger Plzeň) & Pavel Kubina (H.K. Vítkovice) NL: Ben Clymer (C.D.H. Biel-Bienne) & Martin St. Louis (Lausanne C.D.H.) SHL: Dan Boyle (Djurgårdens I.F. Ishockeyförening) & Jan Modin (Timrå I.K.) AHL: Éric Perrin (Hershey Bears), Darren Rumble (Springfield Falcons) & Shane Willis (Springfield Falcons) RSL: Dmitri Afanasenko (K.K. Lada Tolyatti), Nikolai Khabibulin (X.K. Ak Bars), Vincent Lecavalier (X.K. Ak Bars) & Brad Richards (X.K. Ak Bars) Didn't Play: Dave Andreychuk, Chris Dingman, John Grahame, Ruslan Fedotenko, André Roy, Cory Sarich, Darryl Sydor & Tim Taylor
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dustedmagazine · 2 years ago
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“Everybody Hollerin’ GOAT” — Derek Taylor’s 2022
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I’ve been reverentially pilfering Bill Steber’s photos as visual ledes for as long as I’ve been writing these Year End paeans (the first was in 2003, making this one the nineteenth). There’s something about Steber’s keen eye for negative space, composition and context that makes me think of Blue Note’s Francis Wolff, if transplanted to the Mississippi hill country. No blues to speak of in the stack of recordings this time around, at least as sourced from that legendary, loamy region, but still lots that’s helped keep my head screwed on and faculties relatively fog-free over the past twelve-months.
Wadada Leo Smith
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Smith’s ascendance to octogenarian eminence was simply too merry and momentous an occasion to be contained to a single year. As the concluding two entries in a hexalogy of releases on the Finnish TUM label highlighting facets of his multifarious output, Emerald Duets and String Quartets, Nos. 1-12 dropped in May and were also arguably the most ambitious. The Dusted bullpen collectively dug in on both sets in a rousing Listening Post roundtable that forgivably favored the more accessible exploratory encounters with drummers Jack DeJohnette, Andrew Cyrille, Han Bennink and Pheeroan AkLaff.
Joe McPhee
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The Powerhouse from Poughkeepsie turned 83 years young in November and as with past years his productive spirit appears immune to enervation or ennui. Ensemble efforts like Survival Unit III’s The Art of Flight (Astral Spirits/Instigation) and Pride of Lion’s No Question No Answers (RogueArt) continue to be the common currency of his artistic realm, but McPhee also found aegis for the release of exhilarating duets with cellist (and freshly-minted MacArthur “genius”) Tomeka Reid (Let Our Rejoicing Rise) and British sax eidolon Evan Parker (Sweet Nothings (For Milford Graves), both pressed on the prolific Corbett vs. Dempsey imprint (see below).
Peter Brötzmann
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Speaking again of unstoppable octogenarians, Herr Brötzmann came out of COVID isolation with renewed vigor and a concert calendar still compellingly competitive with musicians a fraction his age. New entries in his edifice-sized discography weren’t nearly as plentiful, but a pair of archival releases still packed a gobsmacking punch. Historic Music Past Tense Future (Black Editions Archive) drops the German reedist and bassist William Parker into the precision polyrhythmic maelstrom of Milford Graves circa spring 2002 across a double slab of vinyl. In a State of Undress (FMP/Be!) is free jazz of a more formal sort with the one-off aggregate of trumpeter Manfred Schoof, bassist Jay Oliver and drummer Willi Kellers tempering the leader’s orotund edges.
Tyshawn Sorey + Greg Osby — The Off-Off Broadway Guide to Synergism (Pi)
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Keeping up with Tyshawn Sorey’s indefatigable activities is a lot like keeping pace with Joe McPhee, a full-time pursuit worth every penny and effort. This three-disc set has the instant enticement of capturing his working trio in the hothouse context of an extended gig at the Jazz Gallery in NYC. Add to that a program of alchemized standards sourced from the Great American Songbook and jazz brethren along with altoist Greg Osby in a rare sideman station and the results become an irresistible trigger pull. In a word: epic.
Cecil Taylor
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Taylor’s been gone four-plus-years, but his in-life prolificacy continues to bestow posthumous gifts. Revelatory and digital-only, The Complete, Legendary, Live Return Concert at the Town Hall, NYC, November 4, 1973 (Oblivion) expands greatly on its previously truncated incarnation, Spring of Two Blue-J’s originally on Taylor’s own Unit Core imprint back in 1974. Respiration (Fundacja Słuchaj!) and Live in Ruvo Di Puglia 2000 (Enja) reveal previously unreleased prototypes of his solo repertoire separated by the span of thirty-two years. Sharing a surname with the pianist probably suggests the presence of bias, but I will still ardently go on record in stating that all three are essential.
Albert Ayler — Revelations: The Complete ORTF 1970 Fondation Maeght Recordings (Elemental)
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Previous editions of this material are now obsolete thanks to this magnificent, meticulously assembled set. So invasive were earlier edits and excisions, particularly as concerns the catalytic contributions of Ayler’s life and musical partner Mary Parks (aka Mary Maria), that it’s like hearing the concerts anew. Parks’ memory and jazz history are restored by producer Zev Feldman and his retinue of collaborators. The results are glorious, both in terms of restored fidelity and the extended majesty of Ayler’s last band firing on collective, conflagratory cylinders.
Chris Dingman — Journeys Vols. 1 & 2 (Inner Arts)
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Chris Dingman nearly topped my Year End list two-years ago with an ambitious five-disc opus Peace, a dedicatory body of work for solo vibraphone initially conceived as an aural paregoric for his ailing father. The elder Dingman passed away prior to its release and in navigating the grief in the years since, the son’s doubled down on the unaccompanied format as means of realizing Albert Ayler proffered adage that “music is the healing force of the universe.” Journey’s 1 & 2 reflect their predecessor, but also refract it through a sequence of malleted excursions emphasizing melody and repetition in rippling, elliptical patterns that soothe and enthrall.
Corbett vs Dempsey
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John Corbett is indicative of my favorite species of record collector: an altruist whose obsessiveness in the endeavor is exceeded by his ardor for sharing the spoils of this searches through reissues that completely do the artifacts justice. Chief among the offerings this year, German free jazz pianist Georg Gräwe’s first two forays as a leader, New Movements (1976) and Pink Pong (1978), and the pivotal Globe Unity (1967), which restores Alexander von Schlippenbach’s first multinational large ensemble enterprise to circulation. Also of note, another stack of entries inspired by the Sequesterfest series of concerts initiated during the pandemic. Drummer Hamid Drake’s Dedications features solo percussion-planted encomia to his influences and is probably my pick of the eight titles released so far.
The Pyramids — Aomawa: The 1970s Recordings (Strut)
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A box set that brings a personal blind spot into bracing focus and rectifies it. The Pyramids initial three albums plus a concert air shot given the deluxe treatment by the Strut label. Ancient to the Future with audible Sun Ra Arkestra and Art Ensemble influences, reedist Idris Ackamoor’s ensemble is never slavish or supine in its interpretations of precedence. Percussion jams are plentiful, as are spiritual jazz overtones, and it all combines in an earthy gestalt that also has a healthy respect and acumen for groove. I’m of an age where regrets feel increasingly impractical, but it’s still good to catch up.
Grounation — The Mystic Revelation of Rastafari (Soul Jazz)
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An arguable Jamaican analog to Aomawa in its assemblage of certain analogous ingredients, Groundnation was also something else entirely. Sprawling across three LPs (a milestone in the country’s recording industry), The Mystic Revelation of Rastafari resonates as history lesson, call to arms, sacred text, and adulatory celebration among other appellations. Count Ossie, Cedric IM Brooks and their confreres mined both zeitgeist and musical alloy that had lasting effects not just on reggae, but self-determinate roots-oriented music of all sorts. Soul Jazz’s painstaking attention to accurate reproduction and contextualization is admirable and immersive.
Robbie Basho — Bouquet (Lost Lagoon)
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Self-produced, released and circulated in 1984, Basho’s penultimate album tests and perhaps proves the prevailing theory that detractors of his singing far outnumber those of guitar playing. Still, he succeeds where other great polarizers of the pipes like Irene Aebi, Yoko Ono and Ethel Merman fail in his unflappable earnestness and credulity. The self-doubt and cumulative frustrations that haunted Basho in life subsume in the sincerity of his music, strangely sui generis in its intensely personalized strains of borrowed religion, spirituality and mysticism. Mileage varies, but there’s no denying Basho’s commitment to his muses.
Sun Ra
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Labels like Modern Harmonic and Cosmic Myth Ra continue to keep Ra relevant even though the Saturnian left the planet decades ago. This year’s passel of reissues includes timely returns of Ra to the Rescue and Universe in Blue, each augmented with extra and/or extended tracks. The latter album includes several showstopping John Gilmore spotlights and ample Ra organ-omics while the former gets its most complete edition yet with a survey of snapshots across 1970s sessions. A genuinely new release, Prophet zeroes in on Ra’s 1986 in-studio experiments with the then-newfangled eponymous console and he responds like a kid in a keyboard candy store with select Arkestral band members, including an ailing June Tyson, in exuberant, if fleeting, support.
Steeplechase
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The Danish label is an old reliable in these pages, plugging along with current releases from its international stable of artists alongside occasional, but always welcome, reissues. Stephen Riley’s My Romance isn’t the tenorist’s first recording with B-3 organ, but it does mark his first as a leader. Electing Brian Charette to cover the keys with just Billy Drummond on cans in support is a stripped-down stroke of genius. Vintage concert performances with bop pianist Duke Jordan in the company of Danish tenorist Bent Jaedig (Montmartre ’73) and archival recordings by tenorist Brew Moore (Special Brew) and dearly departed Philly guitarist Monette Sudler (In My Own Way) stand out, too.
Bear Family
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Bear Family basically has access to a bank vault-sized archive when it comes to vintage country fare. It’s a mighty good thing because Bill Carter holds at best token traction with the 21st century arbiters of the genre. Sixty-seven tracks across two discs chart the ups, downs, and all arounds of Carter’s career (The Complete Recordings from 1953 to 1961) jumping from Western Swing to hillbilly to honkytonk to rockabilly. Perhaps best of all, Carter was 92, lucid, and around to see the release back in March. Western Swing legend Bob Wills’ younger brother Billy Jack was the recipient of similar treatment with Cadillac In Model ‘A’, a comparatively stingy 31-track survey and latest in the label’s long running Gonna Shake This Shack Tonight series.
Ezz-thetics
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Born out of both providence and necessity, the Ezz-thetics label exists in the continued absence of the venerated Hat Hut lineage of imprints. The earlier catalogs are tied up in legal proprietary knots, leaving owner Werner X. Uehlinger to throw caution to the curb and pursue a longstanding dream of applying his decades-honed judgment as a producer to free/jazz classics. The venture immediately ran afoul of critics who took umbrage with his audacity in side-stepping stateside copyright considerations and reimagining sacred texts. Wherever one opines on those controversies, there’s no denying the new lease audio engineer Michael Brandli has accorded the source materials. Cecil Taylor’s (With) Exit to Student Studies Revisited, Paul Bley’s Play Annette Peacock Revisited, and Sun Ra’s Nothing Is… Completed & Revisited are exemplary stand outs.
Fresh Sound
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Lisbon-based Fresh Sound is another reissue label that continuously courts its share of contention. The logical, if admittedly self-serving counter is that American rights holders to nearly all of the music that they traffic in couldn’t be bothered to apply even a fraction of the care or quality they bring to bear. Exacting attention to the most esoteric and obscure jazz artists has long been the archetype. This year’s batch includes definitive collections of trumpeter Dave Burns (1962 Sessions), baritone saxophonist Virgil Gonsalves (Jazz in the Bay Area 1954-1959), altoist Joe “Mouse” Bonati (Portrait of a Jazz Hero) and Belgian vibraphonist Fats Sadi (Sadi’s Vibes: A Retrospective 1953-61).
Morteza Mahjubi — Selected Improvisations from Golha, Parts 1 & 2 (Death is Not the End)
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Tempered instruments aren’t an intuitive match for micro-tonal composition, but that hasn’t hindered musicians of manifold ethnicities from adapting them to the intricacies of indigenous music. Iranian pianist Morteza Mahjubi did so prolifically during his lifetime, recording his innovations for Golha (Flowers of Persian Song and Poetry) radio programs between 1956 and his passing in 1965. Spread over two album-length discs (with hopefully future volumes to follow), Mahjubi applies his custom tuning system to the ivories and approximates the sonorities of endemic instruments like the tar (lute) and santur (hammered dulcimer).
Branko Mataja — Over Fields and Mountains (Numero)
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Mataja’s biography reads like a Spielbergian screenplay. Abducted from his native Belgrade and conscripted to a German work camp during WWII, the lifelong guitar enthusiast worked a variety of trades after being liberated, before emigrating to England, then Canada, and finally a string of stateside cities. Mataja eventually settled in Los Angeles where he worked as a barber and started a side business a freelance guitar technician. Memories of his home country haunted him, and he recorded a pair of albums in his garage studio/workshop from which this LP is sourced. Milky, murky reverb and sustain are calling cards, alongside an improvisatory approach to traditional Croatian melodies that’s equal parts melancholic and mysterious.
V/A — Padang Moonrise: The Birth of the Modern Indonesian Recording Industry 1955-1969 (Soundway)
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A double-LP + 7” survey stacked with sublime discoveries from coordinates geographic and temporal that beg for an even deeper dive. Reverb-dipped guitars and swirling, droning organs are persistent common denominators alongside varied hand percussion and a revolving cast of melancholic crooners across genders and dialects. It’s cross-cultural music that’s exotica-adjacent and still ripely redolent of American soul. Ghost World’s Enid would’ve had a field day immersing herself in this stuff. I know I have.
Jalaleddin
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Old, but still new to me, and perhaps my most listened to platters among the many vinyl discoveries procured on record shop safaris this year. Discogs lists seven albums to Jalaleddin’s name, and I feel fortunate to have found six on the cheap in a single shop. Based in San Francisco in the 1970s and a master of the kanun (Turkish trapezoidal zither,) Jalal Takesh started his musical career cutting belly dance records. Benefiting from a Santana-like broadmindedness, his bandleading would soon conscript musicians of other traditions including Indian ragas, Greek rebetika, and Spanish flamenco. Hand-sketched and colored by an academic friend of Takesh’s, the album cover illustrations are aces, as well.
25 More in No Fixed Order…
Andrew Cyrille/William Parker/Enrico Rava — 2 Blues for Cecil (TUM)
Michael Bisio Quartet — MBefore (Tao Forms)
Ingrid Laubrock/Brandon Lopez/Tom Rainey — No Es La Playa (Intakt)
Patricia Brennan — More Touch (Pyroclastic)
Mark Turner — Return from the Stars (ECM)
Jeb Bishop/Pandelis Karayorgis/Damon Smith — Duals (Driff/Balance Point Acoustics)
Ches Smith — Interpret it Well (Pyroclastic)
Sam Rivers — Caldera (NoBusiness)
Toots Thielemans & Rob Franken — The Studio Sessions 1973-1983 (Dutch Jazz Archive)
The Pyramids — Penetration! (Sundazed)
Horace Tapscott Quintet — S/T (Mr. Bongo)
V/A — Girls with Guitars Gonna Shake (Ace)
John Ondolo — The Hypnotic Guitar of John Ondolo (Mississippi)
Biluka y Los Canibales — Leaf-Playing in Quito 1960 to 1965 (Honest Jon’s)
Myra Melford’s Fire & Water Quintet — For the Love of Fire & Water (RogueArt)
Ndikho Xaba & The Natives — S/T (Trilyte/Mississippi)
Brandon Seabrook — In the Swarm (Astral Spirits)
Sirone — Artistry (Moved by Sound)
William Parker — Universal Tonality (Centering)
Charles Mingus — The Lost Album from Ronnie Scott’s (Resonance)
Markos Vamvakaris — Death is Bitter (Mississippi)
Jeff Parker — Mondays at the Enfield Tennis Academy (Eremite/Aguirre)
Mal Waldron — Searching in Grenoble: The 1978 Solo Piano Concert (Tompkins Square)
Allan Botschinsky Quintet — Live at The Tivoli Gardens 1996 (Stunt)
Jimmy Castor Bunch — The Definitive Collection (Robinsongs)
Derek Taylor
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jgthirlwell · 7 years ago
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02.25.18  Sadly tonight was the final night at John Zorn's club The Stone on Avenue C. It ended with a killer improv night featuring Ches Smith, Simon Hanes, Will Greene, Kenny Wollesen, Jeremiah Cymerman, Maria Grand, Taylor Levine, Miles Okazaki,Sam Kulik, Chris Dingman and Aaron Edgcomb, and of course Zorn himself. I feel emotional about the closing of this space, where I have spent countless hours hearing amazing music, as well as playing and curating there myself. The Stone will now operate from The New School Glass Box Theater with concerts Tuesday through Saturday nights at 8:30 PM.
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anahermusic · 2 years ago
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Banquet of Love: New Album!
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Ana Hernandez - Banquet of Love, Vol. I: Big Chants Project (hearnow.com)
A dream team of jazz players and choral singers in chants to renew and strengthen, nurture, and deepen spirit. God within, between, and among us all. Click the link above for clips and ALL the links. 
Ike Sturm – bass Chris Dingman – vibraphone Laila Biali – piano Mike Webster – sax Melissa Stylianou – vocals Chanda Rule – vcals  Steve Rosser – vocals Zaneta Sykes – percussion Ana Hernández – vocals, shruti box, guitar Mark Dann – all recording, editing, mixing, and bass The Adult and Youth Choirs of Church of the Heavenly Rest, Mollie Nichols, director, Prince Nyatanga, asst. director. Part studio, part live recording at St. Peter’s Lutheran, NYC.
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dippinginthe4door · 4 years ago
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Wait what’s on the “thanks to” section on Swan Songs I must know
Obviously there’s lots of the standard stuff, but I like how the guys added their touch to it in some lines.
Deuce:
Our fans for helping create this. Rita & Alex (Mom & Dad), Arina Erlichman, Angela Marie Young, Jeff Peters, Mike Renault, Riva, Zeda, My Grandma, Jim Milner & Ben Milner (Milner Bros.), Joel Foss, Marc Bosserman, Jeanie Ibert. Everyone in HU working hard with me. Tim from LADAY, Alex Sophli, Brian Weinberg. Everyone @ A&M/Octane Records …… and of course Merlin.
J-Dog:
Thanks to my parents, especially my Italian, ball busting Mom, my Mother Jennifer. All the band’s parents, especially Deuce’s. Science. The Phantasm. Truth & his Brother. Wes & his Brother. Everyone from JOR & EL. The whole Panther family. LA Pride Lauren. Jeff Peters, for putting up with our shit. Mike Renault. Desiree “money making, jerry maguire” Mandelbaum. Ann Murray. Steve Busch. Ben and Jim “Milner Bros”. Jimmy Iovine & James Diener, for making me rich for a hot minute. Ashlee and Asia for the awesome double dates. Glen Danzig, the real one who plays our drums. MTA workers for getting me around this city for so long. JLo and Steve from Tiny’s Bar ….and most of all of course, all our fans and everyone who likes our music and has supported it. No thanks to haters and the Glendale and Burbank pigs and MI and all it’s students, for not letting me in the building, you know who you are. Get the fuck out of my town.
Johnny 3 Tears:
Jeff Peters, the band’s manager, but more than that, my mate. Mike Renault for shutting Jeff up ….sometimes ! ! Desiree Mandelbaum. Jeff Kurtich, the Boston Brawler. My Mom for all her help. My Brother for inspiring me. Jim Milner, for all his hard work. Ben Milner, for being the light side of the darkness. Jack, J.K., Jake and Jesse Terrell. Fydor Dostoevsky. Don Gilmore. Danny Lohner. Tony Lavato, my first mate. James Diener, for that fat dollar ! ! Asia, for being so beautiful. Lauren Byrnes. Ann Murray. Steve Busch. Greg Ladanyi. “Biscuits”. Glendon Crain. The Mothers and Fathers of all the members of HU for all their support. The Mothers and Fathers of all the members of HU for all their support. ……...and much love to all our fans for the support.
Charlie Scene:
Jack Terrell, for teaching me everything I know, I love you Dad, To my Mom J.K. Terrell, don’t worry, I love you just as much. My funny Brother Jake and big ups to my Big Bro Jesse, raise yer hands if you hear me. Thanks to the rest of my family in Ohio and Florida. To all my friends. To my Managers, Jeff Peters, me mate and me manager, all together me mate-ager, and Mike Renault, both you guys are an unstoppable force. James Diener. Tom Anderson, my dick has more friends than you ever will. Ed Alexander. Don Gilmore. Danny Lohner, the porn star fucker. Shady Fizz, you know where you at dog. My 3 blonde buddies, Graham Noll, Sean Noll and Jared. Daniel “da big homie” Dingman. Jeremy Martiniano, for getting “lost” with me every Thursday. Tommy “T-head” Scribner, a.k.a Contagious. Gangster George, for always havin’ my back. Bully Shaun. Aaron Gfarm. Upright Radio. Lucas Macauley. The Milner Brothers. Nigel Smithwick, see ya at the pub. Brad Pitt, for letting me crash on the couch. The Hideaway Bar, where I go to hide away from Da Kurlzz. Debra Lee and the trigger happy. Joel Bennett. Jer Bear. Gsellman. Shadow Skillz. Sky, Glen “Biscuits” Crain , Drew Young, Jared Miller…...and to my glock, cause my glock is my hoe and my hoe go everywhere I go……..and of course, thanks to all the UNDEAD ARMY.
Funny Man:
I’d like to give a big thanks to my Madre Joanne, Paco, my Father, and my lil’ sis Mingo. To my Grandparents and the rest of my family, for the love, support and always being there for me, and being a huge impact on my life. Jeff Peters, for sticking his neck out for us and making this shit happen. If it wasn’t for you and Mike Renault, “we’d be wondering these streets so aimlessly”.
For all my homies, Big Badass T-HEAD, thanks for all the nugs bro. Snake The Coin Collecta and 3-B. Big E. SAUS MAN. Thug Life George. Felipe. Spazz Money. Gavin. Jesse. Cmar. Titts. Stanley. Shady Fizz. Dirty Jack. BULLY. Science. Big Worm. Cory The Champ, Obar and Big Luke Duke. A big shout out to everyone at A&M/Octane Records. Jimmy, thanks for the I-Pod. That lil’ monkey Dez, and that beautiful Latina Ann. The Snooge Bros. Danny “The Lone Machine” Lohner. Don G and his bitch ass crew. Glen a.k.a “Biscuits” , Lil’ Tony, Donland from Stonehurst Park, Ritchie Stites, Sleepy Brown, Bones. Thanks to G-STAR for making me look so damn good, And the Bitches with the big ol’ butts. . .and last but not least to the UNDEAD ARMY, this is for you, stay Undead, uno, dos, Ghost……..I’m Gone.
Da Kurlzz:
My Dad a.k.a. “The Frenchman”, My Mom, I thank you both for your love and support.
Jeff Peters & Mike Renault, for being there for me through all the crappy ups & downs, honestly the best managers I could ever have. My Sister and the rest of the Family, BEAR (RIP) ! ! ! Conner “CADE” Garrity, my best buddy @ Studio City Tattoo. Lemmer. Des & Ann, Glenn. Eric “FSUsXe” Curry. Erik “FSUsXe” Scandalous. BAJOS. Scott K. Tdogg. Murph. Lauren Byrnes @ LA PRIDE. Chris & PTW. BERM. Ms. Lupi. Bojesse Christopher. Ben & Jim Milner. Mark V, Sam and everyone @ Safari Sam’s. Steve Busch. All my good friends that have stuck around the past three years, who have been there and supported me (a small amount), the rest can fuck off ! ! Our fans the UNDEAD ARMY, you know this band only happened because of you. I love you. Tom Anderson, thanks for buying me smokes that one time. All the Girls that wasted their time with me. Last …...but most important of all, my five Brothers, Johnny, J, Deuce, Charles P. and Funny, for not only being my best friends, but amazingly talented fucks as well. I love you guys…...Now let’s fuckin’ party ! !
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longforyesterday · 4 years ago
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ceevee5 · 5 years ago
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diyeipetea · 8 years ago
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HDO 268. Pere Bujosa Group - Bryan and the Aardvarks - Linda May Han Oh. Tres de contrabajistas (Especial 3X3) [Podcast]
HDO 268. Pere Bujosa Group – Bryan and the Aardvarks – Linda May Han Oh. Tres de contrabajistas (Especial 3X3) [Podcast]
Tres propuestas lideradas por contrabajistas en la entrega 268 de HDO. Who’s Holland (Rock CD Records, 2017) del Pere Bujosa Group (con Pere Bujosa, Tomàs Fosch, Quique Ramírez, Pep Garau, Tomeu Garcias, Sebastià Rosselló, David Soler y Magalí Sare); Sounds From the Deep Field (Biophilia Records, 2017) de Bryan and the Aardvarks (con Bryan Copeland, Fabian Almazan, Chris Dingman, Joe Nero,…
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zacharystertz · 3 years ago
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It’s been a minute since my last post but I wanted to share my friend Chris Dingman’s newest album, Journeys Vol. 1, that I had the pleasure of photographing. I can’t wait to listen. @dingmanvibes . . . . . . . #chrisdingman #journeys #vibraphone #vibraphonejazz #musicphotography #zms #zmsphotography #zacharymaxwellstertz #zacharymaxwellstertzphotography (at The Beach) https://www.instagram.com/p/CaIm94KOij9/?utm_medium=tumblr
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goalhofer · 3 years ago
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Where Every Player Played During The 2004-05 NHL Lockout: Tampa Bay
Didn't Play: Cory Stillman, Dave Andreychuk, Ruslan Fedotenko, Tim Taylor, Chris Dingman, André Roy, Cory Sarich, Darryl Sydor & John Grahame
RS: Brad Richards (K.K. Ak Bars), Vinny Lecavalier (K.K. Ak Bars), Dmitri Afansenkov (K.K. Lada Tolyatti) & Nikolai Khabibulin (K.K. Ak Bars)
SEL: Jan Modin (Timrå I.K.) & Dan Boyle (Djurgårdens I.F. Ishockeyförening)
Czech Extraliga: Martin Cibák (H.K. Lasselberger Plzeň) & Pavel Kubina (H.K. Vítkovice Ridera)
NLA: Martin St. Louis (Lausanne C.D.H.)
Slovak Extraliga: Martin Cibák (M.H.K. 32 Liptovský Mikuláš/H.K. Košice)
AHL: Shane Willis (Springfield Falcons)
CHL: Brad Lukowich (Ft. Worth Brahmas)
NLB: Ben Clymer (E.H.C. Biel-Bienne)
GBun 2: Nolan Pratt (E.V. Duisburg)
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dustedmagazine · 3 years ago
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Chris Dingman – Journeys Vol. 1 (Inner Arts Initiative)
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Solo album statements often invite inventories of precedence in their appraisal. In the instance of the vibraphone the available index is a comparatively modest number. Album-length offerings by Walt Dickerson, Bobby Naughton, Jay Hoggard are part of the canon. Vibraphonist Chris Dingman already achieved a remarkable record prior to the release of this collection of solo compositions. In 2018, Dingman embarked on a highly personal project playing and recording solo music as an aural paregoric for his ailing father prior to his passing. Three-years later, he self-released the music as a five-disc set under the signifier Peace in the hopes that it could provide similarly ameliorative and calming effects on a broad swathe of listeners. Journeys Vol. 1 carries deep corollaries to that earlier venture, but it’s also a different construct and compound.
A graduate of Wesleyan, student of Anthony Braxton, and active leader, collaborator, and educator for the last two decades, Dingman’s pedigree is that of a creative composer and improvisor. His decision to devote attention to solo expression grew out of his experience with his father but gained even greater momentum with the pandemic. In the fall of 2020, he started releasing one new solo piece per week for subscribers to his Bandcamp page. That catalog now tallies to over forty entries and this project aligns keenly with those efforts. Intimate but not insular, his luminous expressions feel enveloping and involving without ever becoming invasive or effacing. Emphasis stays on the exploration of structures and the relationships between them. The easy analogy is that of people and the importance of interpersonal relations. Each of us going about our business, but hopefully retaining and responding to an elemental awareness of our inherent connectivity and communality.
Dingman divides the program into five discrete pieces. “Silently Beneath the Waves” is the first and longest, stretching to a quarter-hour of delicately malleted and manipulated tone clusters. Ethereal melodies coalesce and acquiesce, and a penumbra of mellifluousness persists throughout. Separate tones and patterns are readily discernable, but there’s an emotional gestalt at work as well, particularly in the closing minutes when Dingman works his pedals to apply a shimmering aura of gently whirring sustain. “Light Your Way,” “Hope-Rebirth,” and “The Long Road” each echo their titles. The first alights on globular progressions that float and eddy like firefly lanterns. A loose cyclical rhythm develops along with an underlying, undulating drone. The other pieces follow contrasting trajectories and sequences, but to similar cumulative effect. The tone poem “Refracted Light” serves as coda inviting the promise of a second volume.
 Derek Taylor
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qljazz · 5 years ago
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New photo posted in JAZZ по русски: 'Читайте и слушайте рецензии на новые релизы: John Di Martino • Passion Flower: The Music of Billy Strayhorn #jazz Chris Dingman • Embrace (feat. Linda May Han Oh & Tim Keiper) #contemporaryjazz Duchess • Live at Jazz Standard #swing #vocaljazz Songs of Tales • Life Is a Gong Show #fusion Jason Tiemann • T-Man #jazz #bebop Monika Herzig • Eternal Dance #jazz #contemporaryjazz John Stein • Watershed #latinjazz #contemporaryjazz Peripheral Vision • Irrational Revelation and Mutual Humiliation #fusion #contemporaryjazz Paromschik Luda • Esse Quam Videri #fusion Мои обзоры на ЮТюбе: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OS8qWGSp-yI&list=PLTP5IHcMX7FuTDHtkLp1uGjxlqsI9Wicv' https://ift.tt/3dzFG2u
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biophiliarecords · 8 years ago
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The Aardvarks are back in #NYC! Catch them Nublu Weds Oct 4th, 9 & 11 pm Bryan Copeland Chris Dingman Fabian Almazan http://ow.ly/EWmZ30ftQ8i #BiophiliaRecords #vibes #vibraphone #drums #nycmusic #indiemusic
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