Lennie Tristano Live At The Half Note
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@kathieann18 : H0W COOL ARE YOU????....HE MUST HAVE BEEN SOME KIND OF ....GUY/PLAYER/HEADTRIPPER....
.WHAT A WAS A NORMAL DAY FOR NICK?.... -
@tobiasrueger Properly, it is a Tristano composition (wich title I don't know but certainly he did so) over the chord changes of Out of Nowhere, a very habitual practice then
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It is. Out of nowhere.
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Hey, this is "Out of Nowhere", right?
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Hi Jazzfriends, I'm happy to invite you to enjoy a new free walking bassline clinic, type in "Dave Frank" bassline on YT
I guarantee an educational and entertaining time:)
Blessings and keep swingin!
God bless you Lennie!
We remember you with gratitude, love, and smiles.
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We hung out at the Half Note in the early 70's.
Chatted with Anita O'Day regularly, talked about cars with Richie Kamuca outside during breaks, Clark Terryy would stop by to pester Kai Winding, and the beat went on, we thought, forever. Spaghettti plate was $3.50.
Anita was the house singer, Vic Sproles was the house bassist, I forget the piano player's name. Jazz by total immersion. Irreplaceable memories, the building is now a bodega, no kidding.
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Where did you get this from? nick Stabulas was my father and it is so amazing to see this
kathieann18 1 year ago 4
@kathieann18 - Your father was one of the great underrated drummers of that period. I regret that I never got to hear him in person, but he's on many of my favorite records - Al Cohn & Zoot Sims, Eddie Costa, and many more.
He really was one of my favorite drummers, ever since the fifties. You should be very proud of him, and I'm sorry that you lost him at such a young age.
P.S. Was your family name pronounced STAB'-yoo-las or Stab-YOO'-las?
glene37 1 year ago 2