Saturday, January 21, 2017

50 Year Old Sealed Copy Of Stan Getz's "Sweet Rain" LP

Sweet Rain

Stan Getz
1967, mono
Verve V-8693

Wow, it doesn't get any better than this. A couple of days ago, while going through some LPs at an antiques store not too far from my home, I came across a sealed copy of the 1967 Verve release Sweet Rain by tenor sax great Stan Getz. Think about that. This record has been sitting somewhere for 50 years, perfectly preserved in its original shrink wrap. The price was a steal at $30 (a sealed copy sold for $239 on Ebay in 2013), so I brought it home. I know that some people like to leave the open shrink wrap on their records, but since I store all my albums in poly outer sleeves, I always remove the shrink. Plus it's a gatefold album, and there would be no way to read the liner notes and other info inside if I didn't remove the plastic. But before I did, I took a picture of the price sticker that was still on the back, which shows that the album had been marked down from its original release price of $4.79, to $1.98. Talk about a steal!



Wikipedia tells us that Getz was born in Philadelphia on February 2, 1927 (which makes it the 90th anniversary of his birth in just a couple of weeks). He was the grandson of Ukrainian immigrants who came to America in 1913. His parents moved the family to New York City to find work during the depression. While still a young boy, Getz showed great promise musically, and when he was 13, his father bought him a saxophone. He practiced eight hours a day, and showed such promise that he was accepted into the All City High School Orchestra.

In 1943, at the age of 16, Getz joined Jack Teagarden's band, and because of his youth, he became Teagarden's ward. Getz also played with Nat King Cole and Lionel Hampton. After playing for Stan Kenton, Jimmy Dorsey, and Benny Goodman, Getz was a soloist with Woody Herman's band  from 1947-1948. He gained wide attention as part of the band's saxophone section, which was collectively known as the "four brothers." One of the other "brothers" was Zoot Sims. Owing to his reputation with Herman's band, Getz was able to launch his solo career, and by 1950, he was leading his own recording sessions.  

Getz spent most of the second half of the 50s in Europe, honing his chops playing and recording with countless jazz greats, including Horace Silver, Jimmy Smith and Oscar Peterson. 

Back in the U.S. in 1961, Getz teamed up with Charlie Byrd and became a central figure in introducing Brazilian bossa nova music to the American audience. He recorded Jazz Samba in 1962, which won a Grammy for Best Jazz Performance and sold more than one million copies. He quickly followed up that album with Big Band Bossa Nova, and then Jazz Samba Encore! In 1963, Getz recorded the seminal album Getz/Gilberto with Antonio Carlos Jobim, Joao Gilberto and Gilberto's wife, singer Astrud Gilberto. The hit single from that album, "The Girl From Ipanema," won a Grammy and became one of the most popular Latin jazz tracks of all time. Two live albums, Getz/Gilberto Vol. 2 and Getz Au Go Go came out in 1964. Unfortunately, during this time Getz and Astrud Gilberto began having an affair, which put an end to his collaboration with Joao.

By the mid 60s, bossa nova was losing steam, so Getz moved back toward more traditional jazz. Which set the stage for his 1967 recording, Sweet Rain. In his review on AllMusic, Steve Huey says that Sweet Rain is "one of Getz's all-time greatest albums. Sweet Rain was his first major artistic coup after he closed the book on his bossa nova period. The album features an adventurous young group that pushed him to new heights in his solo statements." The all-star band was made up of pianist Chick Corea, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Grady Tate. Huey goes on to say that "Getz plays with a searching, aching passion throughout the date. . . The quartet's level of musicianship remains high on every selection, and the marvelously consistent atmosphere the album evokes places it among Getz's very best. A surefire classic." 

I couldn't have said it better myself, so I didn't even try. And to top it off, the sound of the Verve LP is stunning. But what would you expect from an album produced by the great Creed Taylor and mastered by Rudy Van Gelder? The session was recorded at Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, N.J. on March 30, 1967. The engineer was the legendary Val Valentin. The labels have the classic Verve black and silver design which I call the "thumbtack" logo for obvious reasons. 






As you may recall if you read my earlier post about the Verve release of Anita O'Day, Verve Records was founded by Norman Granz in 1956. He sold the label to MGM Records in December of 1960, which is why the rim text at the bottom of the labels above reads: "MGM Records-A Division of Metro-Goldwin-Mayer, Inc. - Made in U.S.A." The vinyl is absolutely flawless, not a tick on either side. And the mono sound is fabulous. 

The inside left panel has credits and recording information.





The matrix info for the album is:

Side 1: V-8693 MG-944 32 VAN GELDER 1-8693
Side 2: V-8693 MG-945 15 VAN GELDER "S" (MGM stamp)

This is truly one of those holy grail finds that every record collector dreams of and that makes collecting so rewarding. Sure, I could have bought the CD online. But how can you compare a digital file to the experience of opening a 50-year-old record, seeing the inner sleeve with ads for contemporary LPs, reading the liner notes and credits, and then enjoying the amazing sound of vinyl. 

Enjoy the music! 







Sunday, January 15, 2017

Joni Mitchell Retrospective - Part II

Next up on my look at the Joni Mitchell albums in my collection is her fourth album, and arguably her masterpiece, Blue, which was released in June, 1971. 


Blue, 1971

Blue is one of the most raw and revealing albums ever made, as Joni pours out her sorrow over lost love in the album's 10 songs. You can read the backstory on the internet, but the short version is that after breaking up with Graham Nash, Joni began a brief affair with James Taylor. After they broke up, Joni went to Europe to get away from it all. She fetched up on the Spanish island of Formentera, which in the 60s had become a hippy hangout. (There is an ongoing debate about whether Bob Dylan lived there for a time in a lighthouse (or maybe a windmill), occasionally showing up to play guitar in local bars.) Anyhoo, alone on the island with her guitar and a broken heart, Joni wrote most of the soul-baring songs that make up Blue. 


Blue, 1971 original pressing
Blue, 2009 remaster
















Although it is clearly a brilliant album, every time I listen to it I feel like I'm eavesdropping on a painful conversation or reading a private entry in a diary. The music and lyrics are incredible, but it also makes me cringe a little. And the only song on the album that isn't about lost love is "Little Green," which Joni wrote several years earlier and is about the pain of giving up her daughter for adoption when she was a 21-year-old unwed mother in Canada. Oddly, "Little Green" has somehow become a modern Christmas classic, even though it is anything but uplifting. But I digress.


I own two copies of Blue. The first is an original 1971 release, which is still in VG++ condition, which is remarkable considering the state of my equipment back then. I suspect that my not playing it all that often is what saved it. My copy has the initials BG on the deadwax, indicating that the lacquer was cut by the great Bernie Grundman. Needless to say, the sound is fabulous. 

My second copy of Blue is the 2009 Rhino Vinyl remaster. Like the Rhino remaster of Ladies of the Canyon, they did a wonderful job. It is pressed on dead flat 180-gram vinyl with a heavyweight replica jacket and blue dust sleeve. The Rhino reissue was remastered by Kevin Gray and Steve Hoffman, two more audio legends, so once again the sound is fantastic. 

Here are the matrix numbers on the two releases:

-Original 1971 release:

Side 1: MS-2038 31218 (RE-2) - 2 BG A5 P
Side 2: MS-2038 31219 (RE-2) BG C P


Mastered by Bernie Grundman
Pressed by Columbia Records, Pittman, NJ

-2009 Rhino Vinyl remaster:

Side 1: MS-2038-A KPG&SH@ATM 14569.1(3)
Side 2: RHI-1-74842B KPG&SH@ATM 14569.2(3)

Remastered by Kevin Gray and Steve Hoffman at AcousTech Mastering
Pressed by Record Technology Incorporated, Camarillo, CA


Blue is the last of Joni's naval-gazing, confessional albums. And even though there is still plenty of soul searching on For The Roses, she also begins to turn her attention more to social and political issues. The shift is evident on the opening song on the album, "Banquet," which looks at the alienation of young people and the problem of poverty and income inequality. She poignantly writes: "Some get the gravy, and some get the gristle, some get the marrow bone, and some get nothing, though there's plenty to spare."


For the Roses, 1972

For The Roses, which was released in October, 1972, also marks a shift from the lean sound of Joni's solo guitar, dulcimer, or piano, toward fuller arrangements with more bass, drums, and supporting musicians. I still get a little thrill when I hear the tom-tom intro to the break in "Blonde In The Bleachers," and Joni sings: "You can't hold the hand of a rock 'n' roll man, very long, or count on your plans with a rock 'n' roll man, very long . . . "  Wow, Joni Mitchell rocking out!

For The Roses also marked one more change in Joni's career: She left Reprise and signed with Asylum Records, a label founded by her friend David Geffen in 1971. [Just an aside, "Free Man In Paris" from Court And Spark is about the workaholic Geffen and refers to a trip the two of them made to Paris along with Robbie Robertson and his wife. A Platonic trip presumably, since Geffen is gay.] 

I have three copies of For the Roses. Two are original 1972 releases, one of which I bought when it came out, and one that I picked up at a used record store about ten years ago, which is to say 35 years after I bought my first copy. Both are in VG++ condition. And the really weird thing is that both of them have the exact same matrix information. What are the odds? The third copy I have is a 1976 repressing, which I grade at VG+. The white Asylum label was only used for about a year, so it makes it easy to to date the release. The blue sky label was used from 1973 - 1984. 

1972 original pressing

1976 repressing

Here is the deadwax information:

-1972 original pressing #1:

Side 1: ST-AS-722647A  11T  PR
Side 2: ST-AS-722648A PR

Pressed by Presswell Records, Ancora, NJ


-1972 original pressing #2:

Side 1: ST-AS-722647A 11T  PR
Side 2: ST-AS-722648A PR


Pressed by Presswell Records, Ancora, NJ

-1976 repressing:

Side 1: SD 5057-A 0-1
Side 2: SD 5057-B 0-1

There is no indication in the matrix of who pressed the record, but from the size of the pressing rings on the label, I'm almost certain it was Specialty Records Company, Olyphant, PA



Which brings us to Joni's most commercially successful album, Court And Spark, which peaked at #2 on the Billboard chart. It's easily Joni's most upbeat album. And even if it's not all sunshine, there is at least a nice balance of hopefulness and angst. After five albums of introspection, unrequited love and melancholy, Court And Spark had a hopeful spirit and a welcome touch of whimsy.


Court And Spark, 1974
It's also a more mature, sophisticated album, both musically and lyrically. Engineer Henry Lewy recruited some of L.A.'s best session musicians to play on the disk, including Tom Scott's L.A. Express, The Jazz Crusaders, as well as old friends like Robbie Robertson, David Crosby and Graham Nash. There is even a cameo appearance by Cheech and Chong, for goodness sakes. 

I have two copies of Court And Spark. The first is an original 1974 copy, bought when it came out.  I played the heck out of it for years, so it's not in great shape, probably a VG at best. Interestingly, the labels on the first pressings all say 1973, though the official release date was January, 1974.  My second copy is the 2009 Rhino Vinyl remaster. And once again its a terrific reissue, with mastering by Chris Bellman. It is a beautiful sounding disk with warmth and amazing detail.


1974 Original pressing

2009 Rhino Vinyl reissue


-1974 original pressing:

Side 1: 7E 1001 A2  B  2
Side 2: 7E 1001 B  SX  0-1 S-M 1-2  A


Pressed by Columbia Records, Santa Maria, CA.

-2009 Rhino Vinyl reissue:

Side 1: R1-1001-A 18364.1(3) CB
Side 2: R1-1001-B 18364.2(3) CB

Remastered by Chris Bellman
Pressed by Record Technology Incorporated, Carmarillo, CA



Enjoy the music!

Monday, January 9, 2017

Joni Mitchell Retrospective - Part I


A young Roberta Joan Anderson
I've been a big fan of Joni Mitchell for just about as long as I can remember. The first album of hers that I bought was Ladies of the Canyon, which came out in 1970 when I was 13. My brother, who was two years older, had bought Clouds when it came out in 1969, so I was already familiar with her music. For a long time, Ladies of the Canyon remained my favorite Joni album. 

The reason I mention this is because we had a snowstorm a few days ago. And although it was only a few inches, it was enough to strand us indoors for a couple of days since we live on a very steep hill that never gets plowed. So I thought it would be a great time to take a look and listen to all the Joni Mitchell albums in my collection, which turns out to be exactly 30.

Song To A Seagull, 1968
Joni's debut album is titled Song To A Seagull, released in March, 1968. The album is usually just called Joni Mitchell since some of the seagulls spelling out Song To A Seagull in Joni's psychedelic cover painting were cut off in early pressings and are kind of hard to make out in any case. (In addition, Song To A Seagull is not printed on the spine or on the labels.) The album was released on Reprise Records, which was founded by Frank Sinatra in 1959 in order to give himself more artistic freedom. (Since he promptly sold the label to Warner Brothers in 1960, it must not have been as much fun as it sounded.) My copy of Song To A Seagull is a second pressing from 1970. The first pressing is on a two-toned orange/tan label which Reprise used from 1968-1970. In addition to the different colors, it is also distinguishable from their other label variations because it has the Warner Seven Arts logo (W7) in a small box beside the round Reprise Records logo at the top.


1968 first pressing
2nd pressing, 1970
In 1969, Warner Seven Arts was bought by the Kinney National Company, and the label was changed in 1970 to reflect that the parent company was now called Warner Brothers Records. The new label, used from 1970 to 1974, was changed to all orange (it looks more pumpkin-colored to me) and the W7 logo was dropped. The Reprise ":r" logo, which had been a tan circle, became an orange square without the word "reprise."  My copy is evidently an early reissue since it has the same matrix numbers as the original pressing:

Side 1: T 0 30753 RS6293A-1B  AB 13
Side 2: T 1 30754 RS6293B-1L  A


Pressed by Columbia Records at their Terre Haute, IN plant.

While my copy looks very clean, it has a number of ticks and some groove noise, no doubt caused by the cheap record player my brother and I used to listen to our albums. I would grade it a solid VG/VG. However, even if it were in better shape, this is just not a great-sounding album. Producer David Crosby had the bright idea of having Joni sing into an open grand piano, resulting in a rich, resonate sound, but also causing some high-level sympathetic string vibration that had to be filtered out later, along with most of the top end. (Which may be why the album has never been remastered.) That said, Stephen Still's bass on "Night In The City" is deep and punchy and the songs are terrific. I'll be looking for a cleaner copy at some point.


Clouds, 1969
Joni's second album is Clouds, released on Reprise Records in May, 1969. Like her first album, original pressings of Clouds are on the two-toned Reprise Records / Warner Seven Arts label. I have three copies of Clouds. One is an original 1969 pressing on the Warner Seven Arts label, one is a 1970 repressing on the solid pumpkin-colored label, and the third is a 1976 repressing. The 1976 label is identical to the 1970 label except it for the rim text at bottom. The 1970 label reads: Reprise Records, a Division of Warner Brothers Records, Inc., Made in U.S.A. The new label reads: Reprise Records, a division of Warner Brothers Records, Inc., 3300 Warner Blvd., Burbank, Calif. 91505, a Warner Communications Company, "W" logo, Made in U.S.A." The new "W" logo is commonly referred to as the sausage logo. This new rim text was first used in 1974 after a reorganization of Warner Brothers. The only other small change was the addition of an "R" in a circle beside the logo at the top to indicate that the orange Reprise ":r" logo was a registered trademark. 


Clouds, 1976 repressing


Post-1974 Reprise Records label with sausage logo.
My original 1969 copy is graded VG, while the repressings are both VG++. The original pressing has more surface noise, but the sound on all of them is great, with no significant differences in sound quality that I can hear. After the screw up with the sound on her first album, Joni produced Clouds herself with an assist from the great sound engineer Henry Lewy, who would go on to work on Joni's next 12 albums. Clouds has a wonderful natural tone and sounds excellent.

Here are the matrix numbers for my three copies:

-1969 original pressing:

Side 1: 30885 1S I
Side 2: 30886 1S I

Pressed by RCA Records, Indianapolis, IN


-1970 repressing:

Side 1: 30885 RS 6341 A RE1-1L (S) C17 1Ƨ
Side 2: 30885 RS 6341 B RE-1 1-C (S) F T1

Side 1 stamper was made for Columbia Records' Santa Maria, CA pressing plant, while the side 2 stamper was made for Columbia's plant in Terre Haute, IN. For some reason, one of the stampers was sent to the other plant.


-1976 repressing:

Side 1: RS-6341 30885 RE1 A2 P
Side 2: RS-6341 30886 C P

Pressed by Columbia Records, Pittman, NJ



Ladies of the Canyon, 1970

As I mentioned at the top, Joni's third album, Ladies of the Canyon has long been my favorite of her albums. (Although lately I've been leaning a little more toward The Hissing Of Summer Lawn.) But I have a confession to make. The first song on Ladies of the Canyon is "Morning Morgantown," which is rose-colored memory of the brief time that Joni spent studying in the city that houses the University of West Virginia back in 1966 or 67. From that song, I somehow got the idea that the "Canyon" in the title referred to the mountains of West Virginia, and that the whole album was a kind of reverie to Wild, Wonderful, West Virginia. I was an East Coast kid, so how was I to know that the West Hollywood suburb of Laurel Canyon had become the center of the musical universe in the late 60s? It was only many years later that I had a big "DUH" moment and realized the title referred to Laurel Canyon where Joni lived at the time with her boyfriend Graham Nash (inspiring Nash's song "Our House"), while hanging out and making music with neighbors Stephen Stills, David Crosby, Mama Cass, Peter Tork, Frank Zappa, Jackson Browne, Neil Young, Jim Morrison, Roger McGuinn, and many others. I feel a little sheepish every time I play the record.

I have two copies of Ladies Of The Canyon. The first is my 1970 original pressing on the pumpkin-colored Reprise label. The album also appeared on the two-toned Reprise / Warner Seven Arts label, but since it came out the year that Reprise changed their labels, it was available on both labels from the start. The matrixes are the same.

1970 original pressing
2009 Rhino Vinyl remastering
My second copy is the 2009 remastering by Chris Bellman which was issued by Rhino Vinyl. It was beautifully pressed by Record Technologies Incorporated in Camarillo, CA on 180-gram vinyl. My original 1970 pressing is VG++ (almost NM) and sounds excellent. But the 2009 remastering is a whole other level of amazing -- hyper-real, but not in a clinical way, in a "Holy crap, Joni is sitting right there" kind of way. The timbre of every plucked guitar string, the texture of Milt Holland's brushed drums, every subtle expression in Joni's voice comes through. It's a stunner. Listening to this new version recently got me thinking that Ladies Of The Canyon might still be my favorite Joni album after all. It's certainly my favorite jacket, with a wonderful self-portrait line drawing combined with a watercolor (or colored marker?) drawing of the Canyon. On the back are a row of colorful geese. Rhino's re-issue comes in a heavyweight replica gatefold jacket. The vinyl has the 1970 pumpkin-colored Reprise label.

-1970 original pressing:

Side 1: RS-6376 30992 C3 P
Side 2: RS-6376 30993 B3 P

Pressed by Columbia Records, Pittman, NJ


-2009 Rhino Vinyl remastering:

Side 1: R1-6376-A CB 18397.1(3)
Side 2: R1-6376-B CB 18397.2(3)

Remastered by Chris Bellman
Pressed by Record Technology Incorporated, Camarillo, CA


More to come.

Enjoy the music!