Thursday, January 1, 2026

Introduction to the Blog

More Favorites: Jazz in the 1990s
Dan Robey 

Who Am I?

I'm a retired college professor who has been listening to jazz for over 70 years. At about age 10, I heard my oldest brother's record albums played on an inexpensive turntable in his bedroom. He brought the turntable and his albums along for our summer holidays. With no TV or radio in the cottage, he played jazz records by the likes of the Modern Jazz Quartet, Gerry Mulligan, Lennie Niehaus, and others. 

My brother also gave me my first jazz album - Ray Charles at Newport - in about 1958; another brother gave me John Coltrane's My Favorite Things in about 1960. I owned Miles Davis's Kind of Blue in high school and bought a number of Art Blakey albums in the 1960s. This was a great time for jazz, and I never stopped listening. 

Blogging Experience

Six years ago, I discovered Scott Mortensen's blog about jazz in the 1970s. PLAYING FAVORITES: Reflections on Jazz in the 1970s (jazzinthe70s.blogspot.com)I was intrigued by Scott's selections and commentaries and contributed numerous comments to his posts. When he finished, I proposed that we co-author a new blog about jazz in the 1980s. That blog reviewed about 300 albums and was completed in early 2023 MORE FAVORITES: Reflections on Jazz in the 1980s (jazzinthe80s.blogspot.com). I then created a blog about progressive rock with my son and completed it in late 2023 Discovering Prog: From Father to Son and Back Around (discoveringprogfatherandson.blogspot.com).

All of these blogs were enjoyable to work on, so I decided to blog about the next decade of jazz in the sequence - the 1990s. You are reading that blog now.

Why the 1990s?

Aside from simply being the next decade in the procession, the 1990s are distinguished in three related ways. 

First, digital recording was thoroughly ensconced in the music business during the 1990s. Almost all new records were released on CD, and new LPs were scarce. Most new music of the decade never made it to vinyl. Jazz lovers therefore added CD racks to their music collections, sometimes trading in LPs as titles came out on CD. 

Second, jazz had become postmodern and international, as Scott and I document in our 1980s blog. In the 1990s, European labels recorded new jazz in a variety of styles. SteepleChase, ECM, Criss Cross, Black Saint, and Soul Note would yearly release dozens of new jazz albums on CD, allowing collectors to expand their libraries to include American and European artists. 

Third, the first edition of The Penguin Guide to Jazz (1992) surveyed hundreds of artists and thousands of albums. Based in the UK, authors Richard Cook and Brian Morton issued 10 editions published between 1992 and 2010. Their astonishing insights across jazz's complete history guided my collecting during the 1990s and beyond.


Blog Objective 

Today, much of the great music recorded in the 90s is ripe for rediscovery. While current vinyl reissue programs favor material from the 1950s and 1960s on LPs, physical CDs are now either rare or cheap depending on where you look. I see used CDs listed on Amazon priced at $100 or more, while my local used record shops can hardly find room for their CD surplus priced under $10. 

In this blog, I present detailed posts on 104 of my favorite jazz albums of the 1990s. The albums are selected from my own music library and include CDs, digital downloads, and vinyl. Fortunately, music of all genres and vintages is available on streaming and download services such as Qobuz, Tidal, Spotify, iTunes, and Amazon Music, among others. Although resolution, subscription rates and availability vary across these services, they are convenient ways to sample and acquire digital music. 

Schedule

I plan to post reviews of two albums per week on 
each Saturday in 2026. Set your calendars to read my new posts every Saturday beginning January 3, 2026.  

In addition to personal commentary, my posts include photos of album covers and artists, recording dates and venues, and recording engineers. The format is text and photos but not links to YouTube versions. Since most albums in this review are available for streaming or download, curious readers can cut and paste song titles or album names into their favorite streaming services' search windows. 

My Biases

Favorites are subjective, and mine are biased toward my 70+ years (roughly 1955-2025) of listening. During this span, jazz exhibits a lot of diversity, so my favorites are also diverse.

My other bias is toward music that sounds good, regardless of format. I love vinyl, but I am not a vinyl snob. I also prefer to collect and possess rather than stream, although I do not begrudge anyone's format or listening preferences.

My Hi-Fi System

For those who care, I list my Hi-Fi equipment below:

LoudspeakersVandersteen Kēnto Carbon
CrossoverVandersteen M5-HP Balanced
Stereo Power AmplifierAyre VX-R TWENTY
PreamplifierAyre KX-R TWENTY
Phono Equalizer (preamp)DS Audio DS-W3
Stylus CleanerDS Audio ST-50
DACAyre QX-5 Digital Hub TWENTY (upgraded)
Digital Music ServerAurender N100H
CD PlayerAyre C5xe MP
TurntableBrinkman Audio Bardo
Turntable Power SupplyBrinkmann Audio RoNt Tube
Tone ArmBrinkman Audio 12.1"
CartridgeDS Audio DS-W3 optical cartridge
Turntable ClampHMS Analog Disk Heavy
Plasma Display SystemPioneer Elite PRO-1150HD
AC Power ConditionerAudioquest Niagara 7000
Speaker CablesAudioquest Gibraltar s/s 8'
Interconnect CablesAudioquest Sky 1m XLR
Interconnect CablesAudioquest Colorado .5m XLR
Interconnect CablesAudioquest Colorado 1m XLR
Interconnect CablesJPS Super FX 1m XLR
AES/EBU CableAudioquest Diamond 1m
USB CableAudioquest Diamond 3m
FurnitureBush
Isolation BaseHRS M3X
StandPremier
ConesGoldmund
Wood BlocksAyre Acoustics Myrtle Wood Blocks (3)
Wall Power OutletMaestro
AC Power CordAudioquest Hurricane 1m
AC Power CordAudioquest Thunder 2m
AC Power CordAudioquest Tornado 2m
AC Power CordAudioquest Tornado 2m
AC Power CordAudioquest Monsoon 3m
AC Power CordJPS Digital AC
Mobile PlayerPono
Media SoftwareJRiver MC 32


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