Who are the Jazz Cats on Audiogon?


Okay, let's get down to it. WHO are the audiophiles on this site who claim JAZZ as their first music? In other words, every time you consider a new piece of equipment, it's because you want to hear Miles sound a little sweeter, or Trane sound a little more authorative, or Duke more like the master composer that he truly is? How about a roll call . . .
crazy4blues

I reckon I'm a jazz cat, or at least a kitten. As is the case with so many, my portal into jazz was Miles Davis--fusion first (I believe Jack Johnson and Bitches Brew were the first two jazz LPs I bought, in the early 1980s), then the immortal 'Kind of Blue' shortly thereafter. I am a newspaper columnist, and for years I've relied on Kind of Blue as the soundtrack when I write. For the next decade and a half, I slowly added to my collection, mostly the immortals--Monk, Coltrane, Ellington, Coleman, Parker, Holiday, Armstrong, etc. But I was still mostly a rock and roll cat, buying at least 10 rock LPs for every jazz LP. In the past couple of years, the balance seems to have tipped. Now I tend to buy a LOT more jazz LPs and my collection has grown exponentially. Still, it is the tip of the ice berg at 500 LPs. Virtually every month I discover someone new that I just love. This month it was Sam Rivers and Don Pullen. Next month, who knows? It is simply a thrilling adventure. I'm now as likely to reach for Cecil Taylor's "Conquistador" as the Stones' "Exile on Main Street."

If all that makes me a jazz cat, then 'meow'...
I've been a hardcore jazz fan for 30 years but am still learning every day. For me, it all started during the fusion period in the early 70's with the Mahavishnu Orchestra, The 11th House, and Tony Williams. I lived in Chicago so I had an opportunity to see someone nearly every week. Fusion allowed me to bridge the gap to Coltrane and Miles and I never turned back. Coltrane opened my ears to all the free players.

Listening to, and learning about jazz is a real process which continues to evolve. Lately, I'm listening to Anita O'Day. Great.

I admit it. I'm a jazz snob. But at least I'm an educated jazz snob. I've put in my time.

Tenor sax fans ... try Billy Harper, Odean Pope and Booker Ervin.
Oh yeah, A Love Supreme played during my entire wedding ceremony. Great wife, huh?
Big jazz fan here (Dolphy, Stitt, Bowie, Byas, Dorham, Mobley, et al.). As my audio system improves, I find such pleasure in jazz and chamber music. I've almost rid myself of "popular music" altogether...except for Dylan ;-)
Absolutely. I just started listening a few months ago and then I read the Professor's (SD CAMPBELL)response to a thread and got educated quickly. I'm a bee bopper - Trane, Monk, Morgan.

See ya