Charlie Parker Quintet – Waukegan, IL (12/xx/47)

Charlie Parker Quintet (w/ Miles Davis)
12-xx-47
Unknown venue
Waukegan , Illinois

Project ID – LL90

Source: Audience Recording
Lineage: Audience recording > ?? > cd (Peter Losin’s Archive) >
cd duplicated (burner to burner) > eac > flac (lvl8)

Miles Davis (tpt); Charlie Parker (as); Irving “Duke” Jordan (p); Tommy Potter (b);
Max Roach (d)

disc 1

d1t01. Dexterity
d1t02. The Way You Look Tonight
d1t03. All the Things You Are
d1t04. 52nd Street Theme
d1t05. Diggin’ Diz/
d1t06. Embraceable You

Notes:

  • *** all tracks are fragmented
  • d1t01 is a different version all together than what was released on LL44.
  • d1t03 is a different version all together than what was released on LL44.
  • d1t04 is a different version all together than what was released on LL44.
  • d1t06 is a different version all together than what was released on LL44.
  • I was hoping to get some clarification upon receiving Peters masters of this
    date. I would most certainly believe that this is the correct version. It is
    very hard to tell what is what and where it belongs on this date. I would
    consider this the source to have based on Peter Losin’s take on what belongs here.
  • The sound is a little brighter on this version.
  • Thanks to Peter Losin for the source!!
  • “Very fragmentary; edited to Parker solos for the most part. These may be dubs of
    wire recordings — the fidelity is very poor throughout.” – Credit to Peter Losin,
    http://www.plosin.com
  • Although these tunes are usually dated (as on Philology) in December 1947, this is
    doubtful. The Parker Quintet was booked for two weeks at Chicago’s Argyle Show Lounge
    (November 11-23, 1947), then for four nights at the Pershing Hotel Ballroom (January 3-6,
    1948). The group played a Saturday night dance at the New Savoy Ballroom on January 3,
    and two items from this date appear on Philology Volume 14.”- Credit to Peter Losin,
    http://www.plosin.com
  • Three other tunes — “Barbados,” a longer version of “Embraceable You,”
    and “How High the Moon” — are usually listed with these tunes
    (as e.g. on Philology Volumes 1/4), but they are probably from
    the Pershing Hotel Ballroom, March 28-April 10, 1949, with Kenny Dorham on trumpet.
    Two of these items are issued on Philology Volume 14, although the speed is different
    and “Embraceable You” is incomplete. But the music is the same.- Credit to Peter Losin,
    http://www.plosin.com
  • QC done by bgreen

Miles Davis – New York, NY (06/30/50)

Birdland All-Stars
06-30-1950
Birdland
New York, New York

Project ID – 84

Source: Audience Recording

Lineage: Audience Recording > ?? > cd (Peter Losin’s Archive) >
cd duplicated (burner to burner) > eac > wave > flac (lvl 8 )

Miles Davis (tpt); Theodore “Fats” Navarro (tpt); J.J. Johnson (tb);
Charlie Parker (as); Milton “Brew” Moore (ts); Tadd Dameron (p);
Walter Bishop, Jr. (p); Dillon “Curly” Russell (b); Art Blakey (d);
Roy Haynes (d); Chubby Newsome (voc); Pee Wee Marquette (ann)

disc 1

d1t01. Band warming up
d1t02. Wee
d1t03. Ow/
d1t04. Band warming up
d1t05. September in the Rain
d1t06. Embraceable You
d1t07. Introduction
d1t08. Chubby’s Blues
d1t09. For You My Love

disc 2

d2t01. Band warming up
d2t02. Max is Making Wax
d2t03. /Hot House
d2t04. 52nd Street Theme
d2t05. Conception/Deception
d2t06. Eronel
d2t07. 52nd Street Theme/

Notes:

  • d1t03 is cut at the beginning of the track
  • d2t04 is a short teaser of 52nd street theme
  • d2t07 is cut at he end of the track.
  • The quality is what you would expect from an audience recording from 1950. It is plauged
    with static and distortion is definetly present, especially up to d1t03. It
    improves on/after d1t03.There is another step up in quality on/after d1t06. The sound
    on/after d1t06 is very pleasing.
  • “Parker plays only on the closing chorus of “Conception.”- Credit to Peter Losin,
    http://www.plosin.com/
  • “There is a lot of uncertainty about the dating of this music. The Miles Davis-Stan
    Getz Sextet was booked at Birdland for a week in February (Feb 9-16), and some
    broadcast recordings have been issued.” – Credit to Peter Losin, http://www.plosin.com/
  • “Davis’s own sextet, with Brew Moore replacing Getz and occasionally joined by
    vocalist “Little” Jimmy Scott, remained at Birdland (opposite Ella Fitzgerald and the
    Bud Powell Trio) through July 6th.” – Credit to Peter Losin, http://www.plosin.com/
  • “In the notes to the JMY CD, Enrico Merlin argues that these tunes are all from a
    single night, June 30. Ken Vail (Miles’ Diary) claims that broadcast recordings were
    made over several nights during this period:
    • May 17 (Wed): Max is Making Wax; Chubby’s Blues; Conception/Deception
    • May 18 (Thu): Hot House; 52nd Street Theme (Davis was in Columbia’s 30th Street
      Studios with Sarah Vaughan and the Jimmy Jones Octet for sessions on May 18 and 19.)
    • May 20 (Sat): ‘Round Midnight; Embraceable You; Wee
    • May 21 (Sun): Ow; For Now My Love [sic]; September in the Rain; Eronel; 52nd
      Street Theme
    • May 29 (Mon): 52nd Street Theme
    • May 30 (Tue): Wee; Chubby’s Blues
    • June 30 (Fri): Hot House; Embraceable You; Eronel; 52nd Street Theme
      (Walter Bishop, Jr. replaces Tadd Dameron)

Vail’s source is probably Boris Rose’s “log,” which lists many of these tunes with the
titles under which they were first issued — “Poobah,” “Moo,” “Mile’s Midnight Breakaway,”” “Overturia,” “Rambunctious Rambling,” etc.

  • Credit to Peter Losin, http://www.plosin.com/
  • “A second trumpet is audible on several tunes — “Hot House,” “Conception/Deception,”
    “Eronel,” and the long “52nd Street Theme” — and this is usually identified as Fats
    Navarro, who died of tuberculosis on July 7. He’s in sad shape here, and seems especially
    lost on “Conception/Deception.”” – Credit to Peter Losin, http://www.plosin.com/
  • “”In favor of the June 30 date, however unlikely it may seem given Navarro’s death on
    July 7, Dan Morgenstern writes in the Columbia liner notes that “Ira Gitler, who saw
    Fats at Birdland in 1950, recalls him as a shrunken, pitiful figure, racked by coughing
    and playing feebly. But available clues have been checked and rechecked, and June 30 is
    the date that comes up.” On the other hand, writing about some other recordings of Navarro,
    Gitler remarked, “I question the May 1950 dating of records made of his broadcasts from
    CafÈ Society… His playing seems… too alive for the man who would be dead of
    tuberculosis on July 7″ (Jazz Masters of the Forties, p. 101.” – Credit to Peter Losin,
    http://www.plosin.com/
  • QC done by Bgreen

Charlie Parker – Los Angeles, CA (03/xx/46)

Charlie Parker Quintet
Sound improved Pitch Fixed !!
Finale Club, Little Tokyo, Los Angeles CA
Unknown Radio Broadcast
Early March 1946

Unknown Radio Broadcast > ?? > cd Peter Losin’s Archive > cd Duplicated burner to burner > eac > flac lvl8

Miles Davis (tpt); Charlie Parker (as); Joe Albany (p); Addison Farmer (b); Chuck Thompson (d)

01 Billie’s Bounce 3:38
02 Ornithology/ 5:00
03 All the Things You Are 5:00
04 Blue ‘n’ Boogie 5:08
05 Anthropology Announcement 2:52

A Flambay – u014945 production !!

uploaded march 16 2012 by u014945

Dime > Audacity (noises cutting) > tlh (SBE – Flac 8) > Dime

* Contrast cLAUSE
improvement in sound of the following torrent:

Torrent #332961 Charlie Parker Quintet featuring Miles Davis – 1946-03-XX, Los Angeles, Radio Broadcast

the first 2 tracks received pitch fixing
Tracks 03-04-05 are sounding OK.

No pitch correction necessary.

— flambay

All tracks received a great cleaning
Now you can listen to the tracks !!!!

enjoy

Maurizio

Original notes :

  • This version is more complete than the previously released LL43. This is the most complete version known to circulate.
  • 02 is cut at the end of the track
  • There is the standard flaws with this recording as is to be expected from a 61 year old recording, but it is still listenable.
    A fine early specimen

Charlie Parker Quintet – New York, NY (12/11/48)

Charlie Parker Quintet
featuring Miles Davis
December 11, 1948
Royal Roost, New York NY
WMCA radio broadcast


(9 items; TT = 23:38)

Source: WMCA Radio Broadcast
Lineage: Radio Broadcast > ? > wave > ? > flac

Miles Davis (tpt); Charlie Parker (as);
Al Haig (p); Tommy Potter (b); Max Roach (d);
with “Symphony” Sid Torin (announcer)

d1t01. Jumpin’ with Symphony Sid (L. Young) 1:05
d1t02. Groovin’ High (D. Gillespie-F. Paparelli) 4:49
d1t03. Introduction (Symphony Sid Torin) 0:36
d1t04. Big Foot (C. Parker) 4:45
d1t05. Introduction (Symphony Sid Torin) 0:27
d1t06. Ornithology (C. Parker-B. Harris) 5:39
d1t07. Introduction (Symphony Sid Torin) 0:21
d1t08. Slow Boat to China (F. Loesser) 5:08
d1t09. Announcement (Symphony Sid Torin) 0:47

Notes:

  • A very good recording for this period with only some light hiss and sparing crackle
    mostly noticeable during announcements and between audio portions. The dynamic range is somewhat compressed. The tracks run continuously from beginning to end. Last track cuts off on
    announcerís outro.
  • Peter Losin notes,
    “The first of the weekly broadcasts of the Parker Quintet from the Royal Roost. Parker
    began a four-month engagement at the Royal Roost on December 9; the gig ran
    through March 12, 1949, though as it turned out, Davis didn’t stay long.”

Kenny Dorham replaced Miles Davis on trumpet in Charlie Parker’s Quintet starting with the
December 25, 1948 Royal Roost show and throughout the remainder of the Quintet’s Royal Roost run.
However, Miles was to reappear at the Royal Roost in early 1949 as part of Tadd Dameron’s
Big Ten line-up.

Charlie Parker – Bird 53 Plus 50

Charlie Parker
July 26, 1953 (20 items; TT = 66:50)
Open Door, New York NY
Private recording (Tape)
Jam session

Charlie Parker (as); Benny Harris (tpt); Al Haig (p); Charles Mingus (b); Art Taylor (d)

First set
1 Out of Nowhere (E. Heyman-J.W. Green) (incomplete) 3:02
2 Star Eyes (D. Raye-G. DePaul-P. Johnston) (incomplete) 3:53
3 Cool Blues (C. Parker) (incomplete) 4:41
4 East of the Sun (And West of the Moon) (B. Bowman) (incomplete) 3:24
5 The Song is You (J. Kern-O. Hammerstein) (incomplete) 6:07
6 52nd Street Theme (T. Monk) (incomplete) 2:33

Second set
7 Ornithology (C. Parker-B. Harris) (incomplete) 3:18
8 Scrapple from the Apple (C. Parker) 3:30
9 My Old Flame (A. Johnston-S. Coslow) 4:13
10 My Little Suede Shoes (C. Parker) (incomplete) 2:11

Third set
11 I Remember You (J. Mercer-V. Schertzinger) (incomplete) 3:01
12 All the Things You Are (J. Kern-O. Hammerstein) [Bird of Paradise] 4:12
13 Just You, Just Me (R. Klages-J. Greer) (incomplete) 2:00
14 I’ll Remember April (D. Raye-G. DePaul-P. Johnston) (incomplete) 4:15
15 Hot House (T. Dameron) (incomplete) 3:16
16 52nd Street Theme (T. Monk) (incomplete) 2:58

Fourth set
17 I Cover the Waterfront (E. Heyman-J.W. Green) (incomplete) 2:26
18 This Time the Dream’s on Me (H. Arlen-J. Mercer) 4:14
19 I’ll Remember April (D. Raye-G. DePaul-P. Johnston) (incomplete) 2:37
20 52nd Street Theme (T. Monk) (incomplete) 0:34

The tape, made by Chan Parker, is edited to some themes and Parker solos only. There are no Bud Powell solos, although Parker can be heard announcing him.

October 23, 1950 (15 items; TT = 48:11)
Pershing Hotel Ballroom, Chicago IL
Private recording (Tape)
Charlie Parker Quintet

Charlie Parker (as); Unknown (tb); Earl Lavon “Von” Freeman (ts); George Freeman (g); Chris Anderson (p); Leroy Jackson (b); Bruz Freeman (d); Unknown (voc)

First set
1 Indiana (J.F. Hanley-B. McDonald) 5:51
2 I Can’t Get Started (V. Duke-I. Gershwin) 2:47
3 Anthropology (D. Gillespie-C. Parker) 5:18
4 Out of Nowhere (E. Heyman-J.W. Green) 2:46
5 Get Happy (H. Arlen-T. Koehler) 5:34

Second set
6 Hot House (T. Dameron) 5:00
7 Embraceable You (G. Gershwin-I. Gershwin) 2:00
8 Body and Soul (J.W. Green-E. Heyman-R. Sour-F. Eyton) 2:15
9 Cool Blues (C. Parker) 3:14
10 Stardust (H. Carmichael-M. Parish) (incomplete) 0:56
11 All the Things You Are (J. Kern-O. Hammerstein) [Bird of Paradise] 3:07
12 Billie’s Bounce (C. Parker) 3:08
13 Pennies from Heaven (J. Burke-A. Johnston) (incomplete) 3:18
14 Pennies from Heaven (J. Burke-A. Johnston) (incomplete) 2:57

From a tape made by Donald Coy. Edited to Parker solos and exchanges. The tape was recorded off a dressing room speaker, and parts of some items (“Embraceable You” through “All the Things You Are”) are marred by conversation. It’s unlikely that the titles from this session and the next one are all from the same date, but they’re probably from the same gig.

Charlie Parker – Portland, OR (02/25/54)

CHARLIE PARKER & DIZZY GILLESPIE
with STAN KENTON & HIS ORCHESTRA
Civic Auditorium
Portland, OR (USA)
February 25, 1954 Sound cleaned and Pitch Fixed



uploaded to Dime 2012 February 5 by u014945

a Flambay – u014945 production

The Sound was good
There were just 2 clicks in the first 2 tracks and one in the following 3 tracks (7 clicks in total)

Nothing else was done

Dime > Audacity (noises cutting ) > TLH ( SBE – Flac 8) > dime

Charlie Parker (as on tracks 1 – 3)
Dizzy Gillespie (tp,announcements on tracks 4 – 6)

with Stan Kenton & his Orchestra:
Sam Noto, Vic Minichiello, Buddy Childers, Don Smith, Stu Williamson (tp),
Milt Gold, Joe Ciavardone, George Roberts, Frank Rosolino tb),
Charlie Mariano, Dave Schildkraut (as), Mike Cichetti, Bill Perkins (ts),
Tony Ferina (bs), Stan Kenton (p), Bob Lesher (g),
Don Bagley (b), Stan Levey (dr), Candido (cga on track 5)

  1. NIGHT AND DAY (2:42) 2:47
  2. MY FUNNY VALENTINE (3:17) 3:23
  3. CHEROKEE (3:03) 3:09
  4. ON THE ALAMO (2:50) 2:56
  5. MANTECA (5:56) 6:11
  6. A SHORT ONE (0:22) 0:24

Total time: 18:13 18:55

On the right timing after pitch Correction

Sound: B

Lineage: 7″ blank disc @ 33 1/3 r.p.m > CDRec > CD > Nero (flac 8) > HDD

Note: As to the best of my knowledge these recordings are/were only available on various bootlegs (EPs, LPs, CDs); no official release is known.
Discographical information:
Piet Koster: Bird Lore, a revised Charlie Parker Discography (Names and Numbers, Almere 2005)
Chris Sheridan: Dizzy Gillespie Discography (not yet published but in progress)

Charlie Parker – New York, NY (05/29/53)

Charlie Parker
Birdland, New York City, NY
Sound Improved Pitch Fixed !!
1953-05-29

uploaded to Dime 2012 january 31 by u014945

a Flambay – u014945 production

The Sound was pretty good
Just a bit ‘dusty’ so I used 3 CEP utilities to remove pos and clicks and
after that I had only to remove very few clicks

The right channell needed normalization too

I have also divided Mc intro from tracks so that those ,
(like Myself) who don’t like
listening to people shouting before tracks ,
can leave such things out.

Dime > > Cool edit Pro (click/pops elimination) > Audacity (noises cutting and volume adjusting) > TLH ( SBE – Flac 8) > dime

01 Moose the Mooche 05:07
02 Intro to 00:18
02 Cheryl / Lullaby Of Birdland 07:46
TT 13:14

Enjoy

Maurizio

below the original tom Shyman’s notes:

WJZ broadcast > ? > “The Bird You Never Heard” (Stash STCD 10) > EAC > FLAC (secure mode) + checksum by amellowsoul

01 Moose the Mooche 5:08
02 Cheryl / Lullaby Of Birdland 0018 + 7:51 (8:09)
TT 13:19

Charlie Parker – Alto sax
Bud Powell – Piano
Charles Mingus – Bass
Arthur Taylor – Drums
Candido Camero – Conga
Bob Garrity – Announcer

Charlie Parker Quintet – Chicago, IL (11/xx/47)

Charlie Parker Quintet
11-XX-1947
Argyle Show Lounge
Chicago, Illinois

Project ID – 83

Source: Audience Recording
Lineage: AUdience Recording > ?? > Philology Volume 14/62 > ripped with soundforge >
wave > Unknown editing (possible re-indexing, noise reduction, EQ, normalization,
speed-correction by Peter Losin as needed) > cd (Peter Losin’s Archive) > cd duplicated
(burner to burner) > eac > wave > flac (lvl 8 )

Miles Davis (tpt); Charlie Parker (as); Irving “Duke” Jordan (p);
Tommy Potter (b); Max Roach (d)

disc 1

d1t01. I Got Rhythm/
d1t02. /Cool Blues/
d1t03. /Ornithology/
d1t04. Dizzy Atmosphere/
d1t05. /Wahoo/ >
d1t06. /Wahoo/
d1t07. Groovin’ High/
d1t08. /I Can’t Get Started/
d1t09. /I Can’t Get Started/

Notes:

  • d1t01 is cut at the end
  • d1t02 is a fragment missing both the start and end
  • d1t03 is cut at the beginning and the end.
  • d1t04 is cut at the end
  • d1t05 is a fragment missing the start and finish
  • d1t06 is an additional fragment for “Wahoo” missing the start and finish
  • d1t07 is cut at the end
  • d1t08 is a fragment missing both the start and finish
  • d1t09 is an additional fragment of “I can’t get started” missing the start and finish
  • This recording not for the casual listener. This is one of those that is definetely
    for completists only. There are more flaws to this than I can list, but it is a
    piece of history and is worth preserving none the less.
  • Thanks to Peter Losin for contributing this source source. http://www.plosin.com/
  • “Very fragmentary — edited to Parker solos for the most part. These may be dubs of
    wire recordings; fidelity is very poor throughout.”- Credit to Peter Losin,
    http://www.plosin.com/
  • “Philology W 844 contains 22 titles purporting to be from this date, but I’m skeptical.
    First, the trumpet player sounds like Kenny Dorham, not Davis. Second, Frank Loesser’s
    tune “On a Slow Boat to China” was not copyrighted until 1948, and Parker’s “Barbados”
    was not recorded in the studio until the Savoy date on September 18, 1948. It’s very
    unusual for a Parker original to appear in the live repertoire before it has been
    recorded. Third, Parker’s quotations and his playing (especially during his solo on the
    second “Slow Boat to China”) sound like 1949, not 1947. The Parker Quintet (with Dorham,
    Haig, Potter, and Roach, and guest vocalist Arthur Daniels) were booked for two weeks
    at Chicago’s Pershing Hotel Ballroom (March 28-April 10, 1949), and my guess is that
    those 22 tunes were recorded during this gig. If so, Davis was half a country away in
    New York at the Royal Roost and Capitol Recording Studios.” – Credit to Peter Losin,
    http://www.plosin.com/
  • QC done by Bgreen