These Three Friends Make a Poor Decision in 'Day Trippers' goodmenproject.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from goodmenproject.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Jazzology: Cartoon Bebop, Vinnie Riccitelli, Tunetown, The Dave Weckl Band
Post-Bop, Jazz-Rock Fusion, Swing and Canada s Finest!
Author:
Jazzology May
Cartoon Bebop (self-released) by
The 14 Jazz Orchestra, arranged by saxophonist/composer/educator Dan Bonsanti, who has played with the biggest and the best including Kenton, Jaco, Brecker, Streisand, BeeGees and Dolly. Recorded remotely with players from Wisconsin, Arizona, Maine, California, Tennessee, New Jersey and Florida on four woodwinds, two trombones, three trumpets, guitar, bass, keyboard and drums, all stitched together magnificently by engineer Mike Levine, playing the music of Stanley Clarke, Chick Corea, Herbie Hancock, Wayne Shorter and Bonsanti himself (dig his pairing of Beatles and blues on “A Day Tripper’s Blues Buffet”), this is one for the ages. Bravo!
How Kabir Bedi interviewed The Beatles in 1966 (and asked John Lennon if he took drugs)
Edited excerpts from the actor’s memoir ‘Stories I Must Tell’. Kabir Bedi
In 1966, while returning from a tour in Manila to London, The Beatles made a three-day layover in Delhi. Kabir Bedi, a 20-year-old-freelance reporter with All India Radio at the time, managed to get an exclusive interview with the Fab Four. In his memoir Stories I Must Tell
(Westland Books), Bedi wrote that he spoke to John Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison and Ringo Starr for 30 minutes by bluffing to their manager, Brian Epstein, that the government had asked for the interview.
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The legendary singer, 78, claimed to Uncut magazine that bandmate Ringo Starr thought the ceiling was moving. It was at the Delmonico Hotel on Park Avenue and 59th in New York City in August, 1964. We were in a hotel room, all being good old lads having our Scotch and Coke – it was an afterparty, I think, McCartney recalled. Dylan arrived and he went into the bedroom with his roadie. Ringo went along to see what was up. So he finds Dylan, rolling up, and he has a toke, the Grammy-winner described.