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data-original-title="" title="">Nick Millevoi, a young guitarist and composer of Philadelphia, likes to surprise, as the sheer diversity of his project demonstrates. He has the innate curiosity of the best music explorers and is equally at ease composing for large ensembles as for small rock bands. As his bio aptly puts it, Nick Millevoi is a guitarist and composer whose music searches for the sonic cracks between jazz, rock and roll, noise, and modern composition.
1. 


Jeff Parker
guitarb.1967
I've been listening to this album at least once a day for a week. Jeff Parker's latest album features a combination of loops, beats, and live playing. The tunes are great and the whole record grooves really hard. I really like how fun this record is and how unique it sounds.
2.

Grant Green
guitar1935 - 1979
I love country-jazz hybrid albums, and this record is Grant Green playing cowboy tunes with

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Reggie Workman
bassb.1937

Billy Higgins
drums1936 - 2001
3.

Lou Donaldson
saxophone1926 - 2024
Blues-y straight ahead jazz with congas. I can't get enough of it. Donaldson's approach is very direct and there's no extra notes to be found anywhere on this record. The version of "South of the Border" falls into the cowboy-jazz genre for me, which is what got me listening to this record in the first place.

This is a great compilation of mostly guitar-based instrumentals written by Lee Hazlewood. A lot of Duane Eddy on here, as well as The Ventures, Hal Blaine, The Astronauts, Jack Nitzsche, and others. I happened upon this album just searching around on the internet and it's been in steady rotation. Music like this makes me with that the epic guitar instrumental still held the cultural value that it did 50 years ago!
5.

John Zorn
saxophone, altob.1953
The fourth album by

John Zorn
saxophone, altob.1953

Kenny Grohowski
drums
John Medeski
organ, Hammond B3b.1965
6. Ana Hogberg Attack: Ana Holberg Attack (Omlott, 2016)
I don't know much about this album. A friend told me about it the other day and I've listened three or four times since. The only player on here I'm familiar with is the bassist,
Elsa Bergman
bass, acoustic7. Willie Nelson: Teatro (Island, 1998)
More cowboy music. Willie as produced by Daniel Lanois, around the same time that Lanois did Dylan's Time Out of Mind and Emmylou Harris' Wrecking Ball. A student of mine got me into this record and it's become one of my favorite Willie Nelson albums. The playing is really sparse -there's not even a bass on a lot of the tracks -but with some great drumming that gives it a Tex-Mex feel.
8. Joni Mitchell: Hejira (Asylum, 1976)
A classic that I come back to every now and then. This is the first Joni Mitchell album I got into after seeing "The Last Waltz." Every song is great and so is the playing. I watched the

Jaco Pastorius
bass, electric1951 - 1987


Ahmad Jamal
piano1930 - 2023
Ray Crawford
guitarb.1924
It's the trio recordings on this album that particularly get me. The arrangements and playing are so tight and perfect and
Ray Crawford
guitarb.1924
10.

Cal Tjader
vibraphone1925 - 1982
I've found myself listening to a lot of exotica and vibraphones recently and this record has it all. The cover is really what made me gave it a listen. There's a great picture of a cactus on the cover that screams mid-century jazz-western crossover music. The selection of tunes is great, the arrangements are really tasteful, and Tjader's playing is impeccable.
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What I'm Listening to Now
Nick Millevoi
Vincenzo Roggero
Jeff Parker
Grant Green
Lou Donaldson
john zorn
Ana Hogberg
Ahmad Jamal
Ray Crawford
Cal Tjader
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