Tags
Language
Tags
May 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
28 29 30 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31 1

Papa John Creach - Papa John Creach (1971) (Hi-Res)

Posted By: Rtax
Papa John Creach - Papa John Creach (1971) (Hi-Res)

Papa John Creach - Papa John Creach (1971) (Hi-Res)
Vinyl FLAC (tracks) 24bit-96kHz - 747 MB
39:02 | Blues Rock, Rock & Roll, Rhythm & Blues, Soul-Jazz | Label: Grunt

At the time this album was recorded, Jefferson Airplane had expanded from a rock group into something of a San Francisco collective of musicians and launched its own record label, Grunt, necessitating a flow of product. As a result, there was a flurry of releases by the Airplane itself and several offshoots, with each of these records featuring several members of the loose aggregation informally dubbed PERRO (the Planet Earth Rock 'N' Roll Orchestra). Papa John Creach, violinist for the Airplane and its spin-off group, Hot Tuna, was the leader on this set, which featured members of the Airplane (Grace Slick, for example, duets with Creach on the lead-off track, "The Janitor Drives a Cadillac"), Quicksilver Messenger Service, and the Grateful Dead. The result sounds like the Airplane records of the period, with a bit more of Creach's electric violin soaring over the proceedings.

Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of a Man (Remastered) (1971/2022) (Hi-Res)

Posted By: Rtax
Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of a Man (Remastered) (1971/2022) (Hi-Res)

Gil Scott-Heron - Pieces of a Man (Remastered) (1971/2022)
Vinyl FLAC (tracks) 24bit-192kHz - 1.6 GB
47:57 | Soul-Jazz, Jazz-Funk, Political, Poetry | Label: BGP

There is no doubting the importance of Gil Scott-Heron’s “Pieces Of A Man” LP.
It was a landmark album with its bold, poetic lyrical content allied to progressive and melodic music, and it saw producer Bob Thiele help Gil and his musical partner Brian Jackson paint the picture they needed to get their message across. Thiele put Gil and Brian together with Ron Carter, Hubert Laws and Bernard Purdie, giving them the musical heft they wanted.

Nina Simone - 'Nuff Said! (Remastered) (1968/2024) (Hi-Res)

Posted By: Rtax
Nina Simone - 'Nuff Said! (Remastered) (1968/2024) (Hi-Res)

Nina Simone - 'Nuff Said! (Remastered) (1968/2024) (Hi-Res)
Vinyl FLAC (tracks) 24bit-96kHz - 710 MB
33:51 | Jazz, Soul-Jazz | Label: RCA Victor

'Nuff Said! Is an album by Jazz singer/pianist/songwriter Nina Simone. In 1969, the album was placed on peak 44 in R&B Albums Chart. The album received an Emmy nomination and featured one of Nina's biggest hits in Europe: "Ain't Got No, I Got Life". On the album are great songs like "In The Morning", "Please Read Me", "Gin House Blouse", and "Take My Hand, Precious Lord". It was recorded (excluding tracks 1, 8, 11) at Westbury Music Fair on April 7, 1968. This was three days after the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King. The whole program that night was dedicated in his memory.

Duke Pearson - The Right Touch (Remastered) (1967/2023) (Hi-Res)

Posted By: Rtax
Duke Pearson - The Right Touch (Remastered) (1967/2023) (Hi-Res)

Duke Pearson - The Right Touch (1967/2023)
Vinyl FLAC (tracks) 24bit-96kHz - 816 MB
37:58 | Soul-Jazz, Post Bop, Latin Jazz, Contemporary Jazz, Bossa Nova | Label: Blue Note

Perhaps the perfect starting point for a reappraisal of Duke Pearson’s underrated career is his fantastic and aptly titled 1967 album The Right Touch. The album stands as perhaps the finest in Pearson’s discography and is a showcase of his sublime talents as a pianist, composer, and arranger. The Right Touch is comprised of six memorable Pearson compositions arranged for a dynamic 8-piece band featuring trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, trombonist Garnett Brown, alto saxophonist James Spaulding, alto saxophonist/flutist Jerry Dodgion, tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine, bassist Gene Taylor, and drummer Grady Tate. Highlights of the set include the picante opener “Chili Peppers,” the lightly swinging “Make It Good” (a feature for Pearson’s elegant piano stylings), the exquisite bossa nova ballad “My Love Waits (O Meu Amor Espera)” on which Hubbard’s flugelhorn takes the lead, the down-home blues “Scrap Iron” which seems to have been custom made for Turrentine’s soulful tenor, and the whirling album closer “Rotary” which swings round and round as the soloists each make their emphatic closing statements.