Ge> I have a friend of mine who is curious about jazz and AJ, but is a
 Ge> total newbie.  He asked me for some titles & artists who made
 Ge> excellent/revolutionary jazz albums.
 Ge> First off I thought of "Kind of Blue" and "Bitches Brew" but what
 "bitches brew" is kinda heavy to start someone off.  the first time i heard 
 it i couldn't get to it...  "in a silent way", "on the corner" or "man w/the
horn" is better 
 to introduce someone to miles electric stuff.  everyone should own "kind of 
 blue".
 Ge> other albums might you all reccomend to someone who wanted to get into
 Ge> jazz with no experience?
 "a love supreme" by coltrane is definitly in the revolutionary category, the  
 cti stuff (bob james "1"-"4", "feels so good" & "mr. magic" by grover 
 washington, etc.--on the funk end of things) is always good to have (that
stuff
 gets sampled a lot).  herbie hancock's blue note & columbia stuff.  "empyrean
 isles" (blue note) contains "canteloupe island" which became us3's
"cantaloop", and 
 "oliloquy valley", sampled by simple e and eric b. & rakim.  "chameleon" from
 "head hunters" (columbia/sony) is a jazz/funk classic, and "thrust"(columbia/
 sony) simply must be owned, if you can find it--i have it on vinyl, don't know
 if it's on cd, yet.  there's always compilations, blue note has "blue note 
 breaks vol. 1&2" and "straight no chaser".  impulse's "red, hot on impulse"  
 has some groundbreaking stuff.  love & haight's "jazz dance classics" series
 has always been their bread & butter.  "fat jazzy grooves" (new breed) is
great      
 for acid jazz, as is instinct's "this is acid jazz", or "rebirth of cool" 
 (4th & Broadway).  also check out the dorado label and eightball records.  the
 acid jazz label is ok, but i find them to be inconsistent...
 dj t-bird
... music is whatever we say it is-john cage
--- Blue Wave/Max v2.30 [NR]