"Sonny Clark Trio : The 1960 Time Sessions with George Duvivier and Max Roach" November 24th From Tompkins Square

Tompkins Square announced today the upcoming release of Sonny Clark Trio : The 1960 Time Sessions, a limited edition 2LP set available exclusively via participating independent record stores as part of Record Store Day, on Black Friday, November 24th, 2017.

Thanks in great part to superb vinyl releases over the past few years from both Analogue Productions and more recently Music Matters (and decades ago on Classic Records), of Sonny Clark's classic Blue Note records like Cool Struttin' (33BST-1588), Dial S For Sunny" (MMBLP-1570> and Leapin' and Lopin' (MMBST-84091), Clark's legacy as both a leader and session man with Lee Morgan, Grant Green and others has grown.

Clark, like too many others of his era, sadly passed away due to a heroin addiction at age 31 in 1961. The The late Bob Shad, owner of Time and Mainstream Records produced The Time sessions, which was re-mastered for this reissue by Dave Donnelly from the original analog tapes (based on Donnelly's website info, you can assume the record was cut from a high file by someone else, hopefully from a high resolution file). Also included is a previously unavailable on vinyl alternate take.

Nat Hentoff wrote the original liner notes, included in the reissue package, and former New York Times critic Ben Ratliff contributes a new 3500-word essay. The set was produced for reissue by Mia Apatow (Time Records) and Josh Rosenthal (Tompkins Square).

COMMENTS
Montpier's picture

Not that anyone cares, but as much as I'm a fan of Sonny Clark and Tompkins Square, I'm not a fan of the increasing level of planned "collectors items". Okay, I'm a marketer by profession and know full well the usefulness of exclusivity as a platform to drive interest.

But sorry, this is getting out of hand and taps into the most unbecoming aspects of vinyl fetish.

I thought one of the points of recorded music was to democratize the magic of music performance in a way that it could be more widely shared for those, let's say unable to attend a performance of Caruso in person. Is limiting it the only viable business model for Tompkins Square to release this music? Increasingly seems it's eBay that's really profiting from RSD.

rl1856's picture

I now have a reason to participate in Black Friday. I usually stay home and avoid the great unwashed masses. Seriously, I generally refrain from most reissues preferring instead to pursue original pressings where possible. A first pressing of this title is both difficult to find in clean condition, and tends to be expensive.

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