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mtlibrary · 1 month
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Provenance mysteries: Opera, quae exstant L. Annaei Seneca
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This edition’s provenance mystery features a three volume set of the collected work of Seneca: Opera, quae exstant L. Annaei Senecae ; cum integris Justi Lipsii, J. Fred. Gronovii, & selectis variorum commentariis illustrata ; accedunt Liberti Fromondi in quæstionum naturalium libros & [apokolokuntosin] notæ & emendationes, printed by Daniel Elzevir in Amsterdam in 1672. It includes commentaries by the noted Dutch humanist Justus Lipsius and botanist Johannes Fredericus Gronovius amongst others.
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As can be seen in the photograph, the book is bound in vellum over boards with a gold-tooled armorial crest on the front (and back) boards. The coat-of-arms has the motto ‘Honi soit qui mal y pense,’ part of the British royal motto, and also used by knights and ladies of the Order of the Garter. The coat-of-arms is probably easily identifiable by someone with the knowledge and skills, but remains a mystery to this writer. There is no other provenance information in the book itself, and no record of its acquisition by the Library.
The book was published during the period when Daniel Elzevir worked with his cousin Louis Elzevir in Amsterdam, printing and publishing a range of classical Latin texts in octavo format, such as this one. The gilt armorial stamp and vellum binding sets this book apart from many of the books in our collection, which tend to have undecorated calf bindings. Vellum and parchment bindings are commonly found in continental libraries, but their presence is not as common in seventeenth century English libraries. Vellum was an expensive material to use as well, suggesting that this was a high status item for its owner.
The book features in the Library’s current exhibition: Mapping the Early Modern Inns of Court. This exhibition highlights some of the areas that the ‘Mapping the Early Modern Inns of Court’ group has explored in seminars and publications: recreation (fencing, revelling, and gaming); literary culture at the Inns; religion and preaching; learning the law and verbal skills; travel and exploration endeavours. Barristers regarded Seneca as a model orator and lawyer, and they frequently studied, quoted, and translated his works. They were taught Senecan verse while still at school, and continued to study, and translate his works as adults.
As ever, if you recognise this armorial device or have further comments please get in touch: [email protected].
Renae Satterley
Librarian
August 2024
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brookstonalmanac · 10 months
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Birthdays 11.19
Beer Birthdays
Frantz Philip “Frank” Brogniez (1898)
Mark Silva (1961)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Tommy Dorsey; jazz trombonist, bandleader (1905)
Adam Driver; actor (1983)
Allison Janney; actor (1959)
Meg Ryan; actor (1961)
Clifton Webb; actor (1891)
Famous Birthdays
Raymond Blanc; French chef (1949)
Roy Campanella; Brooklyn Dodgers C (1921)
Dick Cavett; television host (1936)
George Clark; American revolutionary war general (1752)
Eileen Collins; astronaut (1956)
Jack Dorsey; Twitter founder (1976)
Terry Farrell; actor (1963)
Jodie Foster; actor (1962)
Indira Gandhi; Indian politician (1917)
James A. Garfield; 20th U.S. President (1831)
Dan Haggerty; actor, animal trainer (1941)
Ryan Howard; Philadelphia Phillies 1B (1979)
Charlie Kaufman; screenwriter (1958)
Larry King; television show host (1933)
Jeane Kirkpatrick; diplomat (1926)
Calvin Klein; fashion designer (1942)
Yuan T. Lee; chemist (1936)
Fred Lipsius; saxophonist, pianist (1944)
Glynnis O'Connor; actor (1956)
Kathleen Quinlan; actor (1954)
Tony Rich; R&B singer-songwriter (1971)
James Sumner; chemist (1887)
Billy Sunday; religious evangelist (1862)
Earl Wilbur Sutherland, Jr.; biochemist (1915)
Allen Tate; poet (1899)
Ted Turner; media mogul (1938)
Gene Tierney; actress (1920)
Alan Young; actor (1919)
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lasclfreelance · 2 years
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Band blood sweat and tears songs popular
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The tracks on the album were arranged by Al Kooper, Dick Halligan and Fred Lipsius. “You Made Me So Very Happy,” appeared on the band’s second album entitled Blood Sweat & Tears. It also defines the importance of the arrangers who work on the albums. The Blood Sweat & Years recording of “You Made Me So Very Happy,” defines the brilliance of the band’s arrangements and song interpretations. The Blood Sweat & Tears version of the song “You Made Me So Very Happy,” was dramatically different from Brenda Holloway’s version. The song’s arrangement was pure Motown with that iconic drum and bass groove wrapping itself around the smooth Brenda Holloway vocal. It was originally recorded by Brenda Holloway and reached the number 39 spot on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1967. “You Made Me So Very Happy,” was written by Brenda Holloway, Patrice Holloway, Frank Wilson and Berry Gordy. It reached number one on the Billboard Hot 100 in 1969. It is one of the band’s most well known songs. The song was released by the band in 1969. The Blood Sweat & Tears song “You Made Me So Very Happy,” was recorded during the David Clayton Thomas era. The great song “Back Up Against The Wall,” was released on the Blood Sweat & Tears album No Sweat. We open up our Top 10 Blood Sweat & Tears songs list with the horn’s blasting, guitars blazing and the drums pounding with a ferocious fever while that big band smacks you in the face and says “wake up,” it’s time to strut, boogie, run, jump, swing and everything that the music of Blood Sweat & Tears inspires to be. Our Top 10 Blood Sweat & Tears Songs list is an attempt to choose some of the band’s most essential songs while at the same time throwing in few surprises. The album was followed by B, S & T 4in 1971, New Blood in 1972, No Sweat in 1973, Mirror Image in 1975, New City in 1975, More Than Ever in 1976, Brand New Day in 1977, and Nuclear Day in 1980. BTS teaser - BLOOD, SWEAT AND TEARS Japanese Ver CHI ASE NAMIDA, BTS - Blood Sweat and Tears, Blood sweat and tears ringtone, Blood sweat and tears, Blood Sweat and Tears (Inst)., Blood, Sweat and. In 1970 the band released Blood, Sweat & Tears 3. The band’s second album simply titled Blood Sweat & Tears would become one of the greatest rock recorded ever released in Classic Rock History. The same year, the band released their second album with new lead singer David Clayton Thomas aboard. Blood Sweat & Tears released their first album in 1968 entitled Child is Father to Man.
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mosaicrecords · 5 years
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Fred Lipsius: A Musical Genius?
The word genius is certainly thrown around too easily. But Fred Lipsius is an excellent alto saxophonist. Along with Randy Brecker (and later Lew Soloff) he was the true jazz voice in Blood, Sweat & Tears. This article in Patch.com fills in the rest of his career. Like other musicians who tour with crossover bands or make their living in the studio world, Lipsius’s jazz abilities has gone largely unnoticed.
-Michael Cuscuna
Read from the Boston MA Patch… Follow: Mosaic Records Facebook Tumblr Twitter
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longliverockback · 2 years
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Blood, Sweat & Tears [SACD] 1992 Mobile Ffdelity Sound Lab ————————————————— Tracks: 01. Variations on a Theme by Erik Satie (1st and 2nd Movements) 02. Smiling Phases 03. Sometimes in Winter 04. More and More 05. And When I Die 06. God Bless the Child 07. Spinning Wheel 08. You’ve Made Me So Very Happy 09. Blues – Part II 10. Variations on a Theme by Erik Satie (1st Movement) —————————————————
Bobby Colomby
Jim Fielder
Dick Halligan
Jerry Hyman
Steve Katz
Fred Lipsius
Alan Rubin
Lew Soloff
David Clayton-Thomas
Chuck Winfield
* Long Live Rock Archive
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filosofablogger · 2 years
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♫ You've Made Me So Very Happy ♫
♫ You’ve Made Me So Very Happy ♫
A comment conversation with a relatively new member of my ‘blogging family’ led to this song.  I was thinking how it is that a new reader pops in to a post, and maybe that’s the only time we ever see him/her, but then on the other hand, maybe there’s a connection, a spark, something that says, “Hey, I really click with this person!”  I’ve had that happen on a number of occasions since I started…
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tfc2211 · 3 years
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David Clayton-Thomas: Vocals, Guitar Steve Katz: Guitar, Harmonica, Vocals Dick Halligan: Keyboards, Trombone, Flute Jerry Hyman: Trombone Fred Lipsius: Alto Saxophone, Piano Lew Soloff: Trumpet, Flugelhorn Chuck Winfield: Trumpet, Flugelhorn Jim Fielder: Bass Bobby Colomby: Drums Chip Monck – “It’s Really Annoying To Have To Constantly Make This Announcement” 1 - More And More / Just One Smile 2 - Somethin' Comin' On 3 - I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know 4 - Spinning Wheel 5 - Sometimes In Winter 6 - Smiling Phases 7 - God Bless The Child 8 - And When I Die 9 - You've Made Me So Very Happy Chip Monk (Stage Announcements) & Unknown – “What About The Moody Blues?” 🤣
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myrecordcollections · 5 years
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The problem with Blood, Sweat and Tears was that many rock fans didn’t consider them to be a real rock band. Their guitarist, Steve Katz, never reeled off the flaming, red hot, twelve-minute, guitar jams that were so popular at the time. Eric Clapton, he was not. Jazz purists didn’t believe the band was the genuine article either.
The rest of us, the people who actually bought their records, didn’t much care either way.
Nevertheless, most people were surprised when singer David Clayton-Thomas picked up his electric guitar for “Go Down Gamblin,'” way back in 1971. The Clayton-Thomas/Fred Lipsius (alto sax and piano) composition was definitely the loudest rock track the group ever put on vinyl. With their singer rocking out at full throttle, and playing some heavy guitar riffage, the song sounded more like something from Chicago Transit Authority than anything Blood Sweat and Tears ever recorded.
The song is about a gambler who never wins at any game he plays, yet he doesn’t feel like a loser because even though the “cards are ‘bound to break me I’ve been called a natural lover by that lady over there.” So, in the protagonist’s world, all is well.
Unfortunately, “Go Down Gamblin” didn’t do a thing for the band’s reputation. It still wasn’t hard enough for the rockers — and it was an additional excuse for the jazzers to write them off completely.
The LP version (4:14) of the tune was the lead track on Blood Sweat and Tears 4. The shorter, single version (2:45) climbed to No. 32 on the pop chart. The hitmaking lineup of the group began disintegrating right after this record was released — and Blood Sweat and Tears, despite hanging around for years, was never a viable commercial force again.
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diceriadelluntore · 6 years
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Storia Di Musica #59 - Blood, Sweat & Tears - Blood, Sweat & Tears, 1968
Al Kooper è uno dei grandi maghi della musica rock. Se volete degli esempi a conferma della mia affermazione, vi dico solo di ricordare l’organo Hammond di Like A Rolling Stone di Dylan e altre meraviglie sparse in quelle leggende che furono Highway 61 Revisited (1965) e Blonde On Blonde (1966). Kooper aveva da tempo una sua idea in testa, cioè creare una rock band che partisse dal blues ma avesse, cosa all’epoca ancora inesplorata, una sezione fiati. Eppure Kooper dopo l’esperienza con Dylan (di cui va detto diventerà fido e ciclico collaboratore fino agli anni ‘90) nel 1966 si unisce ai The Blues Project, uno dei primi grandi gruppi americani di blues elettrico, insieme a Danny Kalb (chitarra), Steve Katz (chitarra), Tommy Flanders (voce), Andy Kulberg (basso e flauto) e Roy Blumenfeld (batteria). Il gruppo grazie anche alla bravura dei musicisti e alla azzeccata scelta di unire vertiginose versioni dei classici blues a piccoli momenti delicati con i primi due dischi, Live At The Cafè Au Go Go (1966) e il leggendario Projections (1966), diviene famosissimo e una vera e propria band di culto a New York. Ma nel momento più bello Kooper se ne va, sempre con in mente l’idea di una big band rock che gli possa dare mano libera nella sua ricerca musicale. Con lui si unisce Steve Katz, ed inizia una serie infinita di telefonate, appuntamenti, appostamenti a musicisti per convincerli nel progetto. Il lavoro dura oltre un anno, e Kooper grazie alla sua amicizia con Dylan ottiene persino un contratto con la Columbia. Per rimarcare la fatica di questa gestazione, Kooper sceglie come nome alla band un passaggio dello storico discorso che Winston Churchill tenne alla camera dei Comuni nel 1943 appena ricevuto l’incarico dal Re come primo ministro, nei momenti più drammatici della guerra mondiale: Blood Sweat & Tears (Sangue, Sudore e Lacrime). In questa avventura oltre a Katz, Fred Lipsius (tromba e sassofono). Randy Brecker (tromba, tra i più grandi di sempre) e Jerry Weiss. Kooper punta a fondere il rock blues tanto caro con il jazz e il R’n’B puntando sulla classe e la tecnica dei suoi compari, creando di fatto il primo nucleo di quell’ecclettismo che proprio in quegli anni stava diventando il jazz-rock e la musica fusion. Nel primo disco, Child Is The Father To The Man (1968), la magia si compie attraverso un repertorio che tra brani autografi, tra cui la magica e meravigliosa I Love You More Than You'll Ever Know di Kooper, include Morning Glory di Tim Buckley, Without Her di Harry Nilsson, Just One Smile di Randy Newman. Il disco ebbe critiche favorevolissime e fu un successo di vendite, ma Kooper non è del tutto soddisfatto e clamorosamente se ne va mentre si sta registrando il nuovo disco con Weiss e Brecker: lo attenderà Mike Bloomfield per Super Sessions, altra pietra miliare del rock di tutti i tempi. Il resto della truppa non si scompone e imparata la lezione chiama un nuovo cantante, David Clayton-Thomas, dalla voce potente e soul e sforna uno di quei dischi manifesto che, anche se con il tempo un po’ dimenticati (in maniera del tutto immeritata) colgono appieno i fermenti e le idee del periodo. Blood Sweat & Tears esce nel dicembre 1968 e le aspettative sono alte. La band mira alto e lo dimostrano le due delicate citazioni dalle Gymnopedies di Erik Satie e la stupenda cover di Smiling Phases dei Traffic (da Mr. Fantasy). Le altre cover diventeranno pezzi clou del loro repertorio: God Bless The Child di Billie Holiday, When I Die di Laura Nyro, eccellente, You Made Me So Very Happy di scuola Motown. Ma due pezzi a firma BST diventeranno il loro biglietto da visita: Blues - Part II, che in 11 minuti cita anche Sunshine Of Your Love dei Cream, Spoonfull di Willie Dixon e Somenthin’ Goin’ On di Kooper dal primo album ma soprattutto Spinning Wheel, una delle canzoni degli anni ‘60, così famosa che Miles Davis, arrabbiato sul fatto che la Columbia, sua stessa casa discografica, spendesse così tanti soldi in promozione per questi qui, ne citerà la melodia in Bitches Brew. Il disco divenne il loro più grande successo, primo in classifica negli Stati Uniti, con 4 singoli nella top 5, di cui 3 al numero uno. Nel 1970, Blood, Sweat & Tears vince come miglior album ai Grammy Awards. Il momento caldo continuerà con Blood, Sweat & Tears 3, altro numero 1, con la famosa Lucretia McEvil ma lo spirito creativo andrà via via esaurendosi nel corso degli anni ‘70: la loro scintilla sarà determinante per il jazz rock che di lì a poco vedrà la luce, con buona pace del grande Miles, che grazie alle milioni di copie vendute da dischi come questo continuerà la sua cavalcata nel jazz essendo pagato dalla Columbia anche nei momenti più bui.
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don-lichterman · 3 years
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Blood, Sweat & Tears Co-Founder Dick Halligan Dead at 78 – Billboard
Blood, Sweat & Tears Co-Founder Dick Halligan Dead at 78 – Billboard
Blood, Sweat & Tears co-founder Dick Halligan, who won two Grammys with the classic jazz-rock band, died of natural causes on Jan. 18 in Rome, Italy. He was 78. Halligan grew up in Michigan and moved to New York for school, and as the story goes he first turned down his friend and jazz saxophonist Fred Lipsius when he asked him to join Blood, Sweat & Tears. But, Halligan changed his tune and…
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brookstonalmanac · 2 years
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Birthdays 11.19
Beer Birthdays
Frantz Philip “Frank” Brogniez (1898)
Mark Silva (1961)
Five Favorite Birthdays
Tommy Dorsey; jazz trombonist, bandleader (1905)
Adam Driver; actor (1983)
Allison Janney; actor (1959)
Meg Ryan; actor (1961)
Clifton Webb; actor (1891)
Famous Birthdays
Raymond Blanc; French chef (1949)
Roy Campanella; Brooklyn Dodgers C (1921)
Dick Cavett; television host (1936)
George Clark; American revolutionary war general (1752)
Eileen Collins; astronaut (1956)
Jack Dorsey; Twitter founder (1976)
Terry Farrell; actor (1963)
Jodie Foster; actor (1962)
Indira Gandhi; Indian politician (1917)
James A. Garfield; 20th U.S. President (1831)
Dan Haggerty; actor, animal trainer (1941)
Ryan Howard; Philadelphia Phillies 1B (1979)
Charlie Kaufman; screenwriter (1958)
Larry King; television show host (1933)
Jeane Kirkpatrick; diplomat (1926)
Calvin Klein; fashion designer (1942)
Yuan T. Lee; chemist (1936)
Fred Lipsius; saxophonist, pianist (1944)
Glynnis O'Connor; actor (1956)
Kathleen Quinlan; actor (1954)
Tony Rich; R&B singer-songwriter (1971)
James Sumner; chemist (1887)
Billy Sunday; religious evangelist (1862)
Earl Wilbur Sutherland, Jr.; biochemist (1915)
Allen Tate; poet (1899)
Ted Turner; media mogul (1938)
Gene Tierney; actress (1920)
Alan Young; actor (1919)
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moviesandmania · 3 years
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ASTEROID VS EARTH (2014) Reviews and free to watch online in HD
ASTEROID VS EARTH (2014) Reviews and free to watch online in HD
‘Heaven is falling, so Earth must move’ Asteroid vs Earth is a 2014 American science fiction disaster movie about a shower of massive meteors that can wipe out our planet. Directed by Christopher Ray, Fred Olen Ray’s son, from a screenplay written by Adam Lipsius. The movie stars Tia Carrere (Collision Course; Dark Honeymoon; Zombie Nightmare), Jason Brooks, Tim Russ, Darin Cooper, Robert R.…
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rainingmusic · 4 years
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Blood, Sweat, and Tears - Go Down Gamblin'
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tomorrowedblog · 3 years
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Friday Releases for August 13
Friday is the busiest day of the week for new releases, so we've decided to collect them all in one place. Friday Releases for August 13 include Brand New Cherry Flavor, Beckett, Days, and more.
Beckett
Beckett, the new movie from Ferdinando Cito Filomarino, is out today.
Following a tragic car accident in Greece, Beckett, an American tourist, finds himself at the center of a dangerous political conspiracy – and on the run for his life.
Days
Days, the new movie from Tsai Ming-liang, is out today.
Under the pain of illness and treatment, Kang (Lee Kang-sheng) finds himself adrift. He meets Non (Anong Houngheuangsy) in a foreign land. They find consolation in each other before parting ways and carrying on with their days.
CODA
CODA, the new movie from Sian Heder, is out today.
Gifted with a voice that her parents can’t hear, seventeen-year-old Ruby (Emilia Jones), is the sole hearing member of a deaf family—a CODA, Child of Deaf Adults. Her life revolves around acting as interpreter for her parents (Marlee Matlin, Troy Kotsur) and working on the family’s struggling fishing boat every day before school with her father and older brother (Daniel Durant). But when Ruby joins her high school’s choir club, she discovers a gift for singing and finds herself drawn to her duet partner Miles (Ferdia Walsh-Peelo). Encouraged by her enthusiastic, tough-love choirmaster (Eugenio Derbez) to apply to a prestigious music school, Ruby finds herself torn between the obligations she feels to her family and the pursuit of her own dreams.
Crime Story
Crime Story, the new movie from Adam Lipsius, is out today.
When ex-mob boss Ben Myers is targeted in a home robbery, he goes on a deadly rampage of vengeance. But with his family caught in the crosshairs, Myers must finally face the consequences of his dark past in this action-packed crime thriller.
Don’t Breathe 2
Don’t Breathe 2, the new movie from Rodo Sayagues, is out today.
The sequel is set in the years following the initial deadly home invasion, where Norman Nordstrom (Stephen Lang) lives in quiet solace until his past sins catch up to him.
Free Guy
Free Guy, the new movie from Shawn Levy, is out today.
In Twentieth Century Studios’ epic adventure-comedy “Free Guy,” a bank teller who discovers he is actually a background player in an open-world video game, decides to become the hero of his own story… one he rewrites himself. Now in a world where there are no limits, he is determined to be the guy who saves his world his way… before it is too late.
Gone For Good
Gone For Good, the new movie from Juan Carlos Medina, is out today.
Guillaume Lucchesi had drawn a line under the terrible tragedy which saw the two people he loved the most die: Sonia, his first love, and Fred, his brother. Ten years later, Judith, his new lover, suddenly disappears. To find her, Guillaume will have to face all the truths hidden by his family and friends, as well as the ones he’d decided to ignore. For better, but mostly for worse.
Raging Fire
Raging Fire, the new movie from Benny Chan, is out today.
Shan (Donnie Yen) is a highly respected hardline cop with a long history of success on dangerous cases. However, his past unexpectedly comes back to haunt him when a sting operation is attacked by a mysterious group of criminals led by Ngo (Nicholas Tse), his former protégé, a talented former officer who had once respected and admired Shan. However, a terrible mistake three years prior landed him in prison, quickly turning the once rising star into a furious man with a grudge, and the will to destroy everyone who had wronged him—including his former mentor.
Brand New Cherry Flavor
Brand New Cherry Flavor, the new TV series from Nick Antosca and Lenore Zion, is out today.
A filmmaker heads to Hollywood in the early ‘90s to make her movie but tumbles down a hallucinatory rabbit hole of sex, magic, revenge - and kittens.
A Martyr’s Reward
A Martyr’s Reward, the new album from Ka, is out today.
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krispyweiss · 4 years
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In-the-works Film Seeks One Answer: “What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears?”
- “This won’t be your typical music doc, in any way, shape or form,” drummer Bobby Colomby says
A new film under development seeks to answer one simple question: “What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears?”
Building on 65 hours of footage shot during the band’s 1970, State Department-sponsored tour of the countries behind the iron curtain, the film, to be written, produced and directed by John Scheinfeld, dives “deep into the mystery of what actually happened to the band that suddenly fell from grace at the peak of their fame,” per a news release.
A short trailer begins with bassist Jim Fielder addressing an assembled throng at State as bandmates David Clayton-Thomas, Fred Lipsius and Lew Soloff look on.
“We speak the language of music, which is a language common to just about everybody in the world,” Fielder says as someone shouts a supportive, Right on!
The clip finds the band members talking politics in Yugoslavia and performing “Somethin’ Comin’ On” in Poland. And while “What the Hell Happened to Blood, Sweat & Tears?” doesn’t have a release date, drummer Bobby Colomby says it’ll be worth the wait.
“John Scheinfeld is a unique combination of filmmaker, historian and detective,” he said in a statement. “ ... This won’t be your typical music doc, in any way, shape or form.”
11/23/20
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jazzworldquest-blog · 5 years
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USA: Inner Visions by saxophonist Lawrence Clark featuring Jeremy Pelt & Duane Eubanks
A native of Camden, NJ, Lawrence Clark was introduced to the saxophone at an early age and later played in his middle and high school concert and jazz ensembles before attending Berklee College of Music in Boston, MA where he studied with Fred Lipsius, Andy McGee, and Bill Pierce. Clark remained in Boston for several years before moving to New York City in pursuit of a higher level of musicianship. There, he became actively involved within the local music scene and eventually began leading several groups of his own. Clark has performed in venues and festivals throughout the United States, Europe, Asia and Africa, playing alongside many world-renowned musicians including Norman Simmons, Winard Harper,David Bryant, Jeremy Pelt, Orrin Evans, Azar Lawrence, Tyshawn Sorey, Eric McPherson, David Weiss, Billy Hart, Anthony Wonsey, Gene Jackson, Reggie Workman, Babatunde Lea, Dwayne Burno, Billy Drummond, and Rashied Ali, to name a few. In 2017, Clark self-released his first album as a leader entitled Forward Motion. His forthcoming recording, INNER VISIONS, showcases a stellar line-up that includes Jeremy Pelt, trumpet; David Bryant, piano and Rhodes; Duane Eubanks, trumpet; Darrell Green, drums; and Joris Teepe, bass. The album represents Clark’s journey both musically and spiritually and pays homage to one of his biggest inspirations with whom he played for many years, Rashied Ali. Of Ali, Clark states, “Rashied was not only my mentor but also my good friend, like family. This album is a dedication to him and all my heroes.” Another significant influence of Clark’s is John Coltrane, and the selections “Blew” and “Freedom” were written with the jazz master’s open and free artistic philosophy in mind. INNER VISIONS was recorded at Tedesco Studios in New Jersey in 2018 and is scheduled for release via the JAZZ TRIBES label in Summer 2019. Jeremy Pelt, trumpet (tracks 4,7) David Bryant, piano and Rhodes Duane Eubanks, trumpet (tracks 2, 3, 5, 6, 8) Darrell Green, drums Joris Teepe, double bass Lawrence Clark, tenor saxophone Recorded at Tedesco Studios, Paramus, NJ 9/17/2018 Mixed and mastered by Aelx Geurink at Studio West Hoogland, The Netherlands audio: web: Track Listing: 1. Mr Ali-1 2. Blew 3. Judgment Day 4. Freedom 5. Time Traveler 6. Anit 7. Inner Visions 8. Nibiru 9. Mr Ali-2 via Blogger https://ift.tt/2Y6OKE2
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