"Golden Greats" Box Sets

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mark0tz
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"Golden Greats" Box Sets

#1 Post by mark0tz » Mon Apr 21, 2003 8:19 am

Okay, so I saw a 3disc Basie set for $9.99. Even though I had versions of many of the tracks, I couldn't resist. 3CD's for $9.99? Even if it's trash, I'm not out that much. Much to my suprise the quality is decent, and the track selection was very enjoyable. They have some sweet live versions that I hadn't heard before. One major drawback: no liner notes; nothing; not even a piece of promotional paper.

I liked the set so much, I went and bought the Woody Herman 3 disc set for the same price. (Getting these at my local Tower Records) This set is excellent, too. And I don't have much Woody Herman, so I'm even happier. Still sad there are no liner notes, but 3 CD's full of pretty good recording quality, and fine track selections make it easily worth the $9.99.

Wondering if anyone has bothered with these box sets.
Mike Marcotte

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#2 Post by GemZombie » Mon Apr 21, 2003 8:22 am

interesting. I'll have to keep an eye out for these. Are they imports? They must be for that price.

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#3 Post by mark0tz » Mon Apr 21, 2003 11:03 am

Yea, imported from The Netherlands I believe. Label is DISKY. Disky Communications Europe B. V. The actual mastering and stuff was done in London.
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#4 Post by SpuzBal » Mon Apr 21, 2003 4:38 pm

I've bought a couple of them - Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong. For the most part, I found the sound quality to be only mediocre (sometimes unacceptable for DJing). But maybe it's just those two specific sets.
"In my opinion, out of the ten great guitarists in the world, Django is five of them!" - Rex Stewart

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#5 Post by mark0tz » Wed Apr 23, 2003 8:52 am

Well, I don't have experience with either of those two sets. The quality of the Woody Herman and Basie sets aren't great, or even very good. The recordings themselves were lo-fi, and I do think they're good enough to play at a gig.

Would I pay $20 for these sets? Maybe. Possibly not because of the omission of liner notes. Fact is, at $9.99, I think they're worth it. We'll see what the dancers think... :)
Mike Marcotte

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#6 Post by SpuzBal » Wed Apr 23, 2003 9:31 pm

Given that your sets were dealing with Basie and Herman, a lot of the material would have been recorded later than a lot of the Ellington and Armstrong stuff on my sets, so I can definitely understand that yours might have better sound quality. :)
"In my opinion, out of the ten great guitarists in the world, Django is five of them!" - Rex Stewart

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#7 Post by mark0tz » Thu Apr 24, 2003 8:23 am

Yea, I mentioned the same point to Rayned last night... I played some of those sets for the first time last night and they passed my test for quality at the venue. Although, I can definitely imagine some of that older Armstrong and Ellington being scratchy/hissy/low-quality. allgood
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#8 Post by Boogie Woogie King » Fri Apr 25, 2003 1:27 am

I have purchased five of these sets, Nat King Cole, Glenn Miller, Andrews Sisters, Peggy Lee, and the compilation Greatest Swing. Like what was stated before, they are okay quality. It is pretty hit and miss with some of the tracks. The Andrews Sisters disc is the only one I have had complaints about. I thought the quality was fine, and so did just about everyone else, but one person ( who shall remain nameless) didn't like it. I think they were mostly annoyed that they weren't asked to dj that week and I was. Anyways, stay away from the Greatest Swing Box set. The first disc, starting on about track 5, runs all of the songs together on one track, leaving the remaining 22 tracks blank and you scratching your head wondering where the music is on your cd. If you want to buy it you will have to take the time on a program like Nero to seperate the tracks and burn them to a new disc.
The Glenn Miller stuff is not the greatest. Most of it is very old stuff, from his first few years.
Nat King Cole is good all around. One of the cds has a misprint on the track listings. You have two track 22s printed on it.
In general, they are mostly good in quality. Well worth at ten spot at your local music store.

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#9 Post by Lindy Bomb » Sun Apr 27, 2003 11:02 pm

I bought a Big Band compilation set once, it was only $9.99, so I figure what the heck. Even if it was bad, it was only $9.99- so it wasn't a total loss. There were no liner notes, and there were one or two tracks that were switched in order on the case- but still, the music is good and the quality's not bad at all. All in all, worth what I paid- though I wouldn't have paid much more for it.

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