originally posted by Eden Mylunsch:
2019 Pascal & Jean-Philippe Granger Beaujolais-Villages "Le Bouteau" has been unexpectedly enjoyable over the past few days. A little closed and tannic at first, it blossomed and developed more fruit and volume, but despite its Julienas origins, I don't think it transcended its Beaujolais-Villages place in the regional hierarchy. That initial angularity gave way to a pleasant fruitiness that's hung on for a few days and I think that the old(ish) vines add to the complexity. Not much discernable benefit in cellaring it for much longer, but for the $5.99 I paid for it at Grocery Outlet, I'm not complaining. I've found it a very worthwhile habit to peep at the importer strip on the bottles at GO.
originally posted by BJ:
It helps to listen to some JJ Johnson with this - some of his early albums are great. The new phono preamp helps.
I get it. Me, I have been on a Serge Chaloff kick over the past few weeks and the similarities between him and JJ are kind of interesting. The baritone sax is in the same register as the trombone ('cello too). Johnson and Chaloff were born in the late 1920s and came up in the big band scene, not the Squaresville Glenn Miller and Sammy Kaye bands, but more like Count Basie and Woody Herman. Both were junkies, but Johnson never sank to the depths that Chaloff reached and subsequentlylived about 40 years longer and made a hell of a lot more records than Serge. Although Chaloff (like Johnson) kicked heroin, a year or so later he died of cancer. I find it interesting that he was so much better on his instrument (baritone sax)than anyone else back then (except for maybe Harry Carney) that I wonder how much more he might have accomplished had he had a longer career. Gerry Mulligan is thought of as the father of putting the bari sax up front of the band, and he was a few years younger than Chaloff, and Serge was THE bebop bari guy while Mulligan was working more with the California Sound, which wasn't as big-band dependent. Both played with Charlie Parker, both Chaloff and Mulligan were addicts, but Mulligan cleaned up in 1953 and went on to greater renown on the instrument to the point where if you ask someone who their favorite baritone saxophonist is, they're probably going to say "Gerry Mulligan" because he's the only one they've heard of. One might say he's the Mouton-Rothschild or Caymus of the baritone sax world (I think Ronnie Cuber was the guy who pulled it all together but the world wasn't looking for an alternative to Mulligan). I'm not sure if any of these guys drank Beaujolais though.
BTW, Which phono preamp did you get? I recently upgraded to a Primare (from a Rega Fono) and it's made a huge difference. 'Tis SUCH a slippery slope, y'know?
-Eden (I used to double on baritone saxophone and oboe in high school. Talk about a f'd-up embouchure!!)(which is why I switched to bass guitar)