No offense to your sister, Flora, but Thursday is the ONE night of that week I CAN’T make it. How 'bout Wednesday?
Mel, I feel that generally the arranger for a large modern jazz ensemble will use the tuba as a link between the trombone section and the saxophone section. Most often it will act as the lowest voice in the trombone choir, but it occasionally doubles the baritone saxophone line. In this second case, arrangers are most probably influenced by the Gerry Mulligan/Gil Evans arrangements for the infamous 1948 “Capitol” (after the record label that released the record) or “Royal Roost” (after the one venue where they played, as an opener for the Count Basie Orchestra) band, the nonet led by Miles Davis that’s featured on the “Birth of the Cool” recordings. As an example, Mulligan and Bill Barber played in tandem in the opening of “Godchild,” a rising figure that was joined midway by the trombone and F horn, and finally by the trumpet and alto, to lead to a rousing full-group fanfare.
And Alpha’s just jealous 'cause chicks don’t dig scientists.
“I feel that generally the arranger for a large modern jazz ensemble will use the tuba as a link between the trombone section and the saxophone section. Most often it will act as the lowest voice in the trombone choir, but it occasionally doubles the baritone saxophone line. In this second case, arrangers are most probably influenced by the Gerry Mulligan/Gil Evans arrangements for the infamous 1948 “Capitol” (after the record label that released the record) or “Royal Roost” (after the one venue where they played, as an opener for the Count Basie Orchestra) band, the nonet led by Miles Davis that’s featured on the “Birth of the Cool” recordings. As an example, Mulligan and Bill Barber played in tandem in the opening of “Godchild,” a rising figure that was joined midway by the trombone and F horn, and finally by the trumpet and alto, to lead to a
rousing full-group fanfare . . .”
Gee, Mel, don’t you just suh-WOON when guys say things like that to you?
Flora, think about a man wearing Alphagene’s lab coat, metroshane’s fedora but talking about jazz like Uke. Mmmmm. Now I have no reason to leave the house.
Oh, sure, Mel. The last time Flora and I got together I entertained her for forty minutes with an extrapolation of the differing interpretive approaches of John Coltrane and Sonny Rollins toward a theme by Thelonious Monk, if performed in association WITH Monk or with Horace Silver, Mal Waldron, or Cedar Walton. When I concluded, I found that she had eaten all of my French fries.
Damn it, now I’M fantasizing about Alphagene in a lab coat.
Flora, Thursday (or Wednesday, in deference to Uke) would be just fine with me.
There are plenty of Kosher places. Do you want to meet uptown, downtown, Brooklyn, Queens? Prefer Chinese, BBQ, Deli? I can give you a few choices, based on region or cuisine.
CM, I think we found that most people found midtown most convenient. So work from there and post a few restaurants in different cuisines. Alternatively, a link to a site of kosher restaurants in NY would be great.
Also, forgive my ignorance on this issue. Do kosher restaurants have full bars? Or should we meet at a bar and go eat later (or the other way around)?