Archive for October 9th, 2009

Roots Of Afro-Cuban Jazz – Various on Blue Note 2001

Roots Of Afro-Cuban Jazz – Various on Blue Note 2001: “

01. Machito – Stan Kenton
02. Cubano Be, Cubano Bop – Dizzy Gillespie
03. Jahbero – Tadd Dameron, Fats Navarro
04. Cu-Ba – James Moody
05. Tin Tin Deo – James Moody
06. Basheer’s Dream – Kenny Dorham, Eliane Elias
07. Afrodisia – Kenny Dorham, Sabu Martinez
08. Asabache – Sabu Martinez
09. Move – Art Taylor Listen
10. Congalegra – Horace Parlan
11. Mambo Inn – Grant Green

320
Enjoy

(Via flageolette.)

13th Floor Elevators – The Psychedelic Sounds Of

13th Floor Elevators – The Psychedelic Sounds Of: “

A classic. If you don’t have this already, you better get it. ‘You’re Gonna Miss Me’ is one of my all time favorite songs.

Download here.

(Via id Reverberations..)

Grant Green – Street of Dreams

Grant Green – Street of Dreams: “Grant Green’s second session with organist Larry Young, Street of Dreams brings back drummer Elvin Jones and adds Bobby Hutcherson on vibes for a mellow, dreamy album that lives up to its title. There are only four selections, all standards and all around eight to ten minutes long, and the musicians approach them as extended mood pieces, creating a marvelously light, cool atmosphere that’s maintained throughout the record. Hutcherson is the perfect addition for this project, able to blend in with the modal advancement of the rest of the ensemble while adding his clear, shimmering tone to the overall texture of the album. All the musicians play with a delicate touch that’s quite distinct from the modal soul-jazz on Talkin’ About; it’s not so much romantic as thoughtful and introspective, floating along as if buoyed by clouds. There aren’t really any fireworks or funky grooves, as the music is all of a piece, which makes it difficult to choose the highlights from French songwriter Charles Trenet’s ‘I Wish You Love,’ ‘Lazy Afternoon,’ the title track, or ‘Somewhere in the Night.’ It’s another fine record in a discography filled with them, and yet another underrated Green session. – by Steve Huey, AMG

Artist: Grant Green
Album: Street of Dreams
Year: 1964
Label: Blue Note (20-bit remastered, SBM, 1998)
Total time: 33:37

Personnel:
Grant Green (Guitar)
Bobby Hutcherson (Vibraphone)
Larry Young (Organ)
Elvin Jones (Drums)

Tracks:
1. I Wish You Love (Charles Trenet) 8:45
2. Lazy Afternoon (John Latouche/Jerome Moross) 7:45
3. Street of Dreams (Sam M. Lewis/Victor Young) 9:04
4. Somewhere in the Night (Mack Gordon/Josef Myrow) 8:01

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Important! Only for your information.
Please delete it from your HDD after listening to. If you like the music, buy the CD.

(Via Into the Rhythm.)

Clifford Brown – Clifford Brown With Strings

Clifford Brown – Clifford Brown With Strings: “Jazz trumpet’s inveterate romantic, Clifford Brown, in his most intensely creative period, records with his own rhythm section and the finest New York studio string players. With twelve lushly beautiful songs and the jazz studio orchestra arranger, Neal Hefti (who describes the trumpeter’s preparation as ‘sensational’ in the liner note. – from CD cover

There are two schools of thought regarding this Clifford Brown with strings session (which has been reissued on CD). Brownie plays quite beautifully and shows off his warm tone on such numbers as ‘Portrait of Jenny,’ ‘Memories of You,’ ‘Embraceable You’ and ‘Stardust.’ But on the other hand the string arrangements by Neal Hefti border on muzak and Brown never really departs from the melody. So the trumpeter’s tone is the only reason to acquire this disc which to this listener is a slight disappointment, not living up to its potential. – by Scott Yanow

Artist: Clifford Brown
Album: Clifford Brown With Strings
Year: 1955 (EmArcy)
Label: Verve (1998, Remastered, Master Edition)
Total time: 40:35

Personnel:
Clifford Brown (Trumpet)
Richie Powell (Piano)
Barry Galbraith (Guitar)
George Morrow (Double Bass)
Max Roach (Drums)
Neal Hefri (Conductor and Arranger)
Unknown musicians (Strings)

Tracks:
1. Yesterdays (Jerome Kern/Otto Harbach) 3:01
2. Laura (David Raksin/Johnny Mercer) 3:28
3. What’s New? (Bob Haggart/Johnny Burke) 3:27
4. Blue Moon (Lorenz Hart/Richard Rodgers) 3:16
5. Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man (Jerome Kern/Oscar Hammerstein II) 3:46
6. Embraceable You (George Gershwin/Ira Gershwin) 3:03
7. Willow Weep For Me (Ann Ronell) 3:27
8. Memories Of You (Andy Razaf/Eubie Blake) 3:34
9. Smoke Gets In Your Eyes (Jerome Kern/Otto Harbach) 3:15
10. Portrait Of Jenny (Irving Burgie/Jessie Mae Robinson) 3:26
11. Where Or When (Lorenz Hart/Richard Rodgers) 3:30
12. Stardust (Hoagy Carmichael/Mitchell Parish) 3:22

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Important! Only for your information.
Please delete it from your HDD after listening to. If you like the music, buy the CD.

(Via Into the Rhythm.)

Lonnie Johnson – Another Night to Cry

Lonnie Johnson – Another Night to Cry: “Lonnie Johnson, a talented vocalist and guitarist who chose to spend much of his life playing blues (although in the 1920s he recorded with some of the top jazz stars), had his fifth recording for Prestige/Bluesville (a solo set) reissued on this CD. Since there is only around 34 minutes on this set and none of the individual songs even reach four minutes, this is not one of the more essential Lonnie Johnson releases but it does have its strong moments.- by Scott Yanow, AMG

In the 1920s and early 1930s, Lonnie Johnson was simply the greatest blues guitarist there was. His work with Eddie Lang the guitarist for Paul Whitemans band, as well as his recordings with great jazz bands like Ellington and Armstrongs units, mark him as a founder of Jazz guitar. Even into the thirties, musicians like Robert Johnson would model their work on Lonnies playing and not make that mark.Lonnie had tough times in the depression and afterwards that would sometimes take him out of music. Though he had national R&B hits in the early and late 1940s, Johnson was found working in a store in Philly in the late 1950s and brought back to recording.The old fire he had 40 years before on the guitar may be missing, although on every tune he shows his mastery not just of blues techinique but of Jazz harmony, and the voice is older and lacks the fire of some of his early recordings or the jubilant jive of his work in the 1940s, but there is wisdom here of a man who has lived in these tunes done with just Lonnies voice and a very acoustic sounding electric guitar. When he speaks of Fine Booze and Heavy Dues were know this is a man who knows of what he speaks. He gives you the feeling in all of these tunes of a real person telling you the lessons not only in the words of these songs, but in between the words, behind the words, even the truth the words hide.Playing this and other records of this period are more like having the man over your place. You need to pull out some of your best whiskey. Sit down, pay attention, listen, and learn and gain not just some of his music, but some of his life! – by Tony Thomas, Amazon.com

Artist: Lonnie Johnson
Album: Another Night to Cry
Year: 1962
Label: Oroginal Blues Classic (1992)
Total time: 34:45

Personnel:
Lonnie Johnson (Guitar and Vocals)

Tracks:
1. Another Night To Cry 3:19
2. I Got News For You, Baby 3:15
3. Blues After Hours 3:27
4. You Didn’t Mean What You Said 3:46
5. Fine Booze And Heavy Dues 3:05
6. I’ve Got To Get Rid Of You 2:37
7. Bow Legged Baby 2:46
8. Make Love To Me, Baby 2:54
9. Lots Of Loving 2:47
10. A Story About Barbara 3:18
11. Goodbye Kitten 3:26
All compositions by Lonnie Johnson

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Important! Only for your information.
Please delete it from your HDD after listening to. If you like the music, buy the CD.

(Via Into the Rhythm.)

African Head Charge – Off The Beaten Track * (Re-up Request)

African Head Charge – Off The Beaten Track * (Re-up Request): “
African Head Charge – Off The Beaten Track
Label – On-U Sound
Recorded – 1986
Style – Electronic, Dub, Reggae, Lee Library, World Music
Additional Musicians – Skip McDonald, Jah Wobble

(review by Steve Barker)
Off The Beaten Track

In the intervening years between the 1986 release of ‘Off The Beaten Track’ and its immediate predecessor 1983’s ‘Drastic Season’, African Head Charge had been moulded into a live blood-pumping band by its main man Bonjo lyabinghi Noah, who had truly come out of the shadows where percussion usually resides, fuelled by a righteous desire to occupy that front-of-stage position. Also during that time producer Adrian Sherwood had volunteered to be fed through the funk-mangle by Messrs.

(Skip) McDonald, (Doug) Wimbish and (Keith) Le Blanc, had come out the other end more disciplined and focused on what fresh sounds might be possibly created through the blatant use and abuse of state of the art technology, where he had previously generated samples as a ‘captured sound’ by-product of the studio hardware or bled all over the old Studer decks as a result of a thousand razored edits. The result of this ‘great leap forward’ was the fourth actual, but first ‘modern’, African Head Charge album – ‘Off The Beaten Track’ – which sounded like nothing else around at the time, and whose combination of fat beats and ethnic chants was to provide the template, which many lesser lights were to attempt to emulate over the ensuing years.

Compared to previous efforts the ‘new’ AHC rhythms were less abstract and more direct, with continuous and flowing percussion lines and more managed tempo shifts. The application of loops and samples of increased time duration made all the difference when combined with the more fluid and confident approach of the musicians involved in the build of the tracks. Sherwood shows up once more under his by now redundant guise as ‘The Prisoner’. Skip McDonald makes an early non-funk entry and the reappearance of Jah Wobble makes clear his creative commitment to his old friends at On-U. But most remarkably, and making his debut as a recording artist, is the twentieth centuries most radical scientist – the super-cool Albert Einstein, laying down a sweet rap with the most conscious of lyrics in ‘Language And Mentality’. Of course, Albert was in the studio in spirit only and the exercise, to my knowledge, has never been repeated.

The title ‘Off The Beaten Track’ was not just an example of a great piece of wordplay, but also incredibly apt as the music was not only a departure for On-U Sound, but also a landmark album for what was to become the whole new ethno-beat strand within the commercial category of what we now know as ‘World Music’. – Steve Barker

Tracklist:
1 Off The Beaten Track (5:02)
2 Some Bizarre (5:05)
3 Belinda (3:40)
4 Language & Mentality (4:22)
5 Throw It Away (3:35)
6 Conspiring (4:38)
7 Release The Doctor (3:32)
8 Down Under Again (3:05)
9 Over The Sky (3:15)

download
info

**Pretty cool re-up request, even though the requester was ‘anonymous’… usually anonymous requests are prioritized least @ ICOOYS – but interesting, unpredictable or bizarre requests trump blogger anonymity. So – hope you enjoy!**

Curious Music for Curious People. Rare, obscure and ‘under the radar’ variety Funk, Dub, Industrial, Electronic, Acid, OST/Library music and beyond. It’s coming out of your speaker.

(Via It’s Coming Out Of Your Speaker.)

The Residents – The Third Reich ‘n Roll

The Residents – The Third Reich ‘n Roll: “

Ralph Records, 1976

About The Third Reich ‘n Roll

Download

(Via Kill Yr. Idols.)

LEMS, HAZZY, Soundguage – The 3 Designs -2009-

LEMS, HAZZY, Soundguage – The 3 Designs -2009-: “

Genre: Hip Hop
Preview/Buy

Tracks:

01. B-Boy / Crown City Rockers (Sounguage Remix)
02. Do You Believe / The Beatnuts (HAZZY Remix)
03. Strive / Apani B-fly Emcee (LEMS Remix)
04. Go / Common (Sounguage Remix)
05. Number One / John Legend (Sounguage Remix)
06. High Fidelity / Jurassic 5 (LEMS Remix)
07. Love / Sounguage
08. The Look Of Love / J-88 (Sounguage Remix)
09. Keep In The Pocket / Talib Kweli (HAZZY Remix)
10. We Run Things / Da Bush Babees (LEMS Remix)
11. Make You Feel That Way / Blackalicious (Sounguage Remix)
12. Wish / HAZZY


Download

(Via Musical Schizophrenia.)

New! Wale – “Fly Away”

New! Wale – "Fly Away": “
Wale just dropped a new track on Twitter. Olubowale brings it.

Wale – Fly Away | YouSendIt

Pigeons and Planes

(Via Pigeons and Planes.)

Memory Tapes – Seek Magic + Bonus CD

Memory Tapes – Seek Magic + Bonus CD: “

320kbps / 147mb
Year: 2009
Label: Acéphale
myspace.com/memorytapes

Similar artists: Studio, YACHT, M83, Washed Out, Neon Indian

Pitchfork: 8.3

‘More than a few singles came from Philadelphia’s Dayve Hawk in the guise of either Memory Cassette, Weird Tapes, or Memory Tapes. To this point, he’d served as something of a microcosm for this sound, which has created intriguingly hazy, wistful but beat-informed one-offs and EPs, but nothing weighty enough to get it past ‘something we did that one summer,’ as if it were a road trip or ill-fated romance recalled years later. That was before Seek Magic, a record of achingly gorgeous dance-pop that captures both the joy of nostalgia and the melancholic sense that we’re grasping for good times increasingly out of reach.’

(Via RADIOBUTT.)