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LATEST ADDITIONS

Joint Recordings of December 1990: Fish Out Of Water & The Widow In The Window

<B>CHARLES LLOYD QUARTET: <I>Fish Out Of Water</I></B><BR>
Charles Lloyd, tenor sax, flute; Bobo Stenson, piano; Palle Danielsson, bass; Jon Christensen, drums<BR>
ECM 1398 (841 088-2). TT: 57:50<BR>
<B>KENNY WHEELER QUINTET: <I>The Widow In The Window</I></B><BR>
Kenny Wheeler, fluegelhorn, trumpet; John Abercrombie, guitar; John Taylor, piano; Dave Holland, bass; Peter Erskine, drums<BR>
ECM 1417 (843 198-2). TT: 61:17<BR>
<I>Both</I>: CD only. Jan Erik Kongshaug, eng.; Manfred Eicher, prod. DDD.

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Sonny & Linda Sharrock: Paradise

One of the records we listened to <a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/stephenmejias/at_the_monkeyhaus/">at the Monkeyhaus</a> last week was Sonny & Linda Sharrock's <i>Paradise</i>&#151a powerfully uplifting record, in my opinion. Sonny Sharrock, however, did not feel the same. In a 1989 interview with WKCR's Ben Ratliff, Sonny dismissed <i>Paradise</i> as being "not a good album," and attributed the album's failure to his own incompetence as a bandleader.

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Bust and Booms on the Download Front

With good news to share about new downloads, let's dispense with the downer first. As <A HREF="http://www.twice.com/article/CA6661607.html?nid=2402&">reported by Twice.com</A>, HDGiants, aka MusicGiants, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in US Bankruptcy Court on May 18. Although the site, often praised by <I>Stereophile</I> as a leader in CD-quality and high-resolution music and video downloads, still appears to be operating, the layoff of its sales and marketing staff raises serious questions about its future.

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Joe Lovano & Us Five

Joe Lovano’s <I>Folk Art</I>, his 22nd album on the Blue Note label, is an odd, sometimes jarring record—it took a few hearings before I found my bearings—but once the fragments snap into place, it’s a rousing pleaser, bursting with indigo moods, heart-skipped romance, and free-flow funk riffs. Lovano plays all kinds of reeds—tenor sax, straight alto sax, clarinet, and, on one song, the aulochrome, a Hungarian-built horn that’s a double soprano sax (attached to one reed), each side tuned to a different key, so that you blow melody and harmony simultaneously. He plays with a somewhat hardened tone, reminiscent of Sonny Rollins, but with a more soulful sensibility, stemming from his Midwestern roots (his father was a tenor blues saxophonist in Cleveland), though over the past couple decades, he’s played with, and gleaned ideas from, a wide variety of masters, including Hank Jones, Gunther Schuller, and Mel Lewis, to name a few.

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