Mosaic produces these sets limited to 5000 units, and all their sets can bring 2 or 3 times what thye originally sold.
If you have your sights on any of the out of print sets, don't wait, the prices will rise. In fact, I have noticed many of these 3 CD sets selling at original cost to just 25 to 50% above that price.
Many of you may not know, and here is a tip, many of the Mosaic Select issues are available for download at on line retailers as The Capitol Vaults Jazz Series. and you will not believe how cheap this set is. Of course you won't get the booklet, or be helping an independent company like this to keep up the service they provide to jazz crazed people like us.
I suspect that is another reason for the bottom falling out of the secondary market on these, If your some one who doesn't need the physical product or the quite good liner notes, discographies and essays, that may be the way to go, I did purchase the Don Pullen set in this format, it cost less than 20 dollars, wow!
Michael Cuscuna, Co founder of Mosaic contributes the fantastic liner notes, he gives a first hand account of the music, why it laid in the Capitol vaults for 30 plus years, and many thoughts from the late pianist on the music.
Liberty Records had bought out Blue note in 1967, and Liberty went a much more commercial direction, therefore artists like hill were on the out side looking in.
Disc 1 is music that reminds me of Point Of departure from 1964 on Blue Note, with the exception of "Diddy Wah" and "Ocho Rios" which bring to mind the Grass Roots session, the last 2 tracks "Monkash" and "Mahogany" and the first 4 tracks on disc 2 "Illusions", "Poinsettia", "Fragments" and "Soul Mate" are Quartet performances augmented by a string quartet.
The first 6 tracks were previously released on the 70's double vinyl One for One that was part of the Michael Cuscuna produced Blue Note Re-Issue Series.
These are all interesting, with a few tracks being focused on the string quartet, and a few funkier pieces that seem to not really need the strings, but still an interesting
experimentation.
Disc 2, after the 4 string quartet numbers, we have some very interesting trio music from 1967, With Ron Carter on bass and a drummer named Teddy Robinson, he played on Donald Byrd's Chant album, and disappeared into obscurity.
This Robinson is no slouch and offers fine support for some very free sounding piano music, very complex, and any Hill fan needs to hear these trio performances, Andrew actually plays some soprano sax on "Six at the Top" and Organ on sections of "Nine at the Bottom" and "Resolution", again, very interesting hearing the the experimentation in the music.
Disc 3 is the main reason to acquire this set in my opinion, both of these sessions from 1967 are stellar, free jazz, but not completely free from melody or structure, very much in the vein of Some of Sam Rivers Mid 60's Blue Notes, in fact it's a shame this music was not released until this set.
Both sessions feature Sam Rivers to great affect, The Oct. 1967 session also features Woody Shaw on trumpet and Howard Johnson of Tuba and baritone sax, This music is tight and crisp and definitely lifts the legacy of Andrew Hill, The Feb.1967 session features Rivers again with Robin Kenyatta on alto, and Nadi Qamar playing African Thumb Piano and assorted bells to add some color to the music.
Unfortunately this session could only be found in the original mono Van Gelder session tapes, no stereo copy could be located, but the sound is still remastered and each instrument is clear, the latter session is a little more laid back than the previous, especially on track 6 "Awake" which reminds me of some of the music on Bobby Hutcherson's Dialogues album with Andrew.
I highly recommend this set, It is now out of print, but can be had a reasonable prices, and that Capitol Jazz Vault Download. (You won't believe the price! as of Sept. 16, 2015 by the way.) The price is absolutely ridiculous for the quality of the music.
You won't get that fantastic Mosaic box, and Cuscuna liner note, which are worth the original price $39.00 7 or 8 years ago; but at least you can have the music for a fraction of the eBay out of print markup.
Any one who likes advanced hard bop that borders at times on free jazz will enjoy this wildly varied set. This mosaic set cleaned out the vaults with the Passing Ships issue and a few others, every ounce of Hill's music with Blue Note is now available to the public as Cuscuna states in these liner notes.
2 comments:
Thanks for the info. I am a big fan of Andrew Hill's music & had the pleasure of meeting him at a solo piano gig at a long gone Greenwich Village spot in the mid seventies. A great musician & a real gentleman.I have almost everything he recorded except for some of the Mosaic stuff that was not on the Blue Note twofers (as they were called back then).
@Michael Evans Thanks for the comment: I have really grown to like that Mosaic Select box and Passing Ships as much as the released classics. Passing Ships juts might be my favorite Andrew Hill. Don't forget you can subscribe to this blog by email to get all my latest posts.
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