If you follow the links at the ends of Rifftides items, you’ll know that the distinguished Toronto broadcaster Ted O’Reilly commented on the recent Rod Levitt item. In his restrained way, O’Reilly wrote, in part:
Wow, yeah! Rod Levitt. In the ’60s RCA Canada did not release those LPs in Canada, but John Norris was running the jazz department at the main Sam The Record Man store and astutely imported some US copies. I got them all for the radio station where I worked, and played the hell out of them all.
That prompted Mr. Jazzolog to respond with a comment of his own:
What a treat to run the names and sounds of both Rod Levitt and Ted O’Reilly through my head on the same page! One of the worst parts of moving from the Buffalo area down into the wilds of southeast Ohio a number of years ago was not hearing Ted’s wonderful radio show out of Toronto anymore. He’s the kind of DJ who segues from Jelly Roll Morton to the Art Ensemble of Chicago without batting an earplug. Great to see his comment! Now, how about someone reflecting on the work of Tom Talbert…whose last CDs I’m scrambling through the Net to find?
Someone did so a year-and-a-half ago, shortly after Talbert died. From the Rifftides archives:
An elegant, soft-spoken man, he was an early and drastically overlooked composer, arranger and band leader on the west coast before West Coast Jazz was a category…The recordings Talbert made shortly after World War Two sound fresh today. Art Pepper fell in love with Tom’s treatment of “Over the Rainbow” and adopted the song as his signature tune.
To read the whole thing, complete with leads to some of Tom Talbert’s recordings, go here.