Hugh Masekela, live at The Record Plant on 24th February 1974. This legendary South African-born trumpeter became a major star when he appeared at the Monterey Pop Festival in June 1967, and he had a smash hit with Grazing In The Grass the following year. This superb set was originally broadcast on KSAN-FM, and captures him at his infectious best.
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Recorded in 1959 at the height of the Latin Jazz Era, This is Mongo Santamaria's second album for Fantasy Records. A deep and fascinating investigation of Afro-Cuban roots run by the great percussionist and a
quite large group featuring Paul Horn on flute, Emil Richards on vibraphone, Al McKibbons on bass and of course lots of multicolored percussion and vocals split by a bunch of masters players including
Armando Peraza and Willie Bobo.The album opens with the redolent melody of "Afro-Blue" one of his most beautiful compositions which later became a classic Jazz standards with historical renditions by
the likes of John Coltrane, Abbey Lincoln and Oscar Brown Jr.
"US funky drummer Les DeMerle who is one of the representations of rare groove scenes. hisA1st album which was released in 1968 is finally reissued as vinyl for the first time!AMany killer tracks for diggers are included, such as ""A Day In The Life"" which is also known as sampling material of HIP HOP classic OC ""Time's Up"" and the US No.1 hit great funk numberA ""Aquarius"" by Fifth Dimension.A
In addition, great musicians were joinedAfor this great funk album such as Frank Foster, Lew Tabackin,AArnie Lawrence, Charles Sullivan etc...you can find how young Les DeMerle was a talented drummer even though he was just around 20 years old at that time!"
Honeyed harmonies form a girl group turntable turnover! Sugar-dusted girl group confections concocted on impulse of three Staten Island girls who just wanted the attention of some high school boys!
This poly-vinyl pastry collects all the Candy And The Kisses soulful Scepter sides and some originally unissued bonbons! The Scepter Sessions collects them all on LP for the first time, pressed on sweet colored vinyl!
- A1: I've Had My Fun
- A2: Sitting On Top Of The World
- A3: Th' Ego Song
- A4: Late In The Evening Blues
- A5: Baby Let Me Hold Your Hand
- A6: Lonely Boy
- A7: All To Myself
- A8: I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now
- A9: She's On The Ball
- B1: Honey, Honey
- B2: Kissa Me Baby
- B3: I'm Glad For Your Sake
- B4: Baby Won't You Please Come Home
- B5: Hey Now
- B6: Baby Let Me Hear You Call My Name
- B7: Guitar Blues
- B8: Misery In My Heart
- B9: The Snow Is Falling
- A1: Please, Please, Please (James Brown-Johnny Terry)
- A2: Why Do You Do Me (Bobby Byrd-Sylvester Keels)
- A3: I Don't Know (James Brown-Johnny Terry)
- A4: I Feel That Old Feeling Coming On (Nashpendle Knox-Nafloyd Scott)
- A5: No, No, No, No (James Brown)
- A6: Hold My Baby's Hand (James Brown-Wilbert Smith-Nafloyd Scott-Bobby Byrd)
- A7: Chonnie-On-Chon (James Brown-Wilbert Smith-Nafloyd Scott-Bobby Byrd)
- A8: I Won't Plead No More (Bobby Byrd-Sylvester Keels)
- B1: Just Won't Do Right (James Brown)
- B2: Let's Make It (James Brown)
- B3: Gonna Try (James Brown)
- B4: Can't Be The Same (James Brown)
- B5: Messing With The Blues (James Brown)
- B6: Love Or A Game (James Brown)
- B7: You're Mine, You're Mine (James Brown-Nafloyd Scott)
- B8: I Walked Alone (Nashpendle Knox-Nafloyd Scott)
Split in two volumes, here is the sum of James Brown's early five year period 1956 - 1960, when JB (and his Famous Flames) was obsessively searching for his own sound. Selected from a bunch of 19 two-sided singles, and including super hits such as "Please, Please, Please", "Try Me" and "I'll go crazy", this collection represents James Brown's fundamental groundwork for the coming Soul Music revolution.
- A1: That Dood It (Rosemary Mccoy-Rudolph Toombs)
- A2: Baby Cries Over The Ocean (James Brown)
- A3: Begging, Begging (Rudolph Toombs-Julius Dixon)
- A4: That's When I Lost My Heart (James Brown)
- A5: Try Me (James Brown)
- A6: Tell Me What I Did Wrong (James Brown)
- A7: I Want You So Bad (James Brown)
- A8: There Must Be A Reason (James Brown)
- B1: I've Got To Change (James Brown)
- B2: It Hurts To Tell You (James Brown-Albert Shubert)
- B3: It Was You (James Brown)
- B4: Got To Cry (James Brown)
- B5: Good Good Lovin' (James Brown-Albert Shubert)
- B6: Don't Let It Happen To Me (James Brown)
- B7: I'll Go Crazy (James Brown)
- B8: I Know It's True (James Brown)
- A1: I Call It Pretty Music But The Old People Call It The Blues (Part 1)
- A2: I Call It Pretty Music But The Old People Call It The Blues (Part 2)
- A3: La La La La La
- A4: Little Stevie Wonder & Clarence Paul - Little Water Boy
- A5: Little Stevie Wonder & Clarence Paul - Little Water Boy (Promo Version)
- A6: Don’t You Know
- A7: Contract On Love
- A8: Sunset
- B1: Fingertips (Part 1)
- B2: Fingertips (Part 2)
- B3: Work Out Stevie, Work Out
- B4: Monkey Talk
- B5: La La La La La (Live)
- B6: Drown In My Own Tears (Live)
- B7: Hallelujah I Love Her So (Live)
- B8: Soul Bongo (Live)
- A1: Oh Mother Of Mine (W. Stevenson-O. Williams)
- A2: Romance Without Finance (W. Stevenson-E. Kendricks)
- A3: Check Yourself (B. Gordy, Jr.-A. Bryant-M. Franklin-O. Williams)
- A4: Your Wonderful Love (B. Gordy, Jr.)
- A5: Dream Come True (E. Kendricks)
- A6: Isn't She Pretty (E. Kendricks-O. Williams )
- A7: Mind Over Matter (I'm Gonna Make You Mine) (Released As The Pirates) (D. Brown)
- B1: I'll Love You Till I Die (Released As The Pirates) (C. Paul)
- B2: Paradise (B. Gordy, Jr.)
- B3: Slow Down Heart (W. Robinson Jr.)
- B4: I Want A Love I Can See (W. Robinson Jr.)
- B5: The Further You Look, The Less You See (N. Whitfield)
- B6: Farewell My Love (B. Gordy, Jr.)
- B7: May I Have This Dance (N. Whitfield-J. Bradford)
Here's another piece of music history. The Temptations, one of the greatest and influential vocal groups in the history of "Soul" are well represented here through a selection of their early singles. The group's immaculate vocal harmonies stand as a unique sound monument in American music culture and this disc shows us the origins of such a myth.
- 01: Kangundo D Boys - Mpenzi Maggie
- 02: Kyanganga Boys Band - Ivinda Ya Tene
- 03: Nyeri Honey Boys - Ndikwenda Kwanangwo
- 04: Kangundo D Boys - Mbarak Mwinshehe
- 05: Kirurumo Boys - Mwendwa Wama
- 06: Kali Kali Boys - Ungwana Ni Tabia
- 07: Kirurumo Boys - Njeri
- 08: Nyeri Honey Boys - Nowe Wecuka
- 09: Kyanganga Boys Band - Kyalo Kya Sikimu
- 10: Kali Kali Boys - Mchezo Wa Panya
This album is a celebration of benga and rumba music recorded in Nairobi, Kenya in the early 1980s. The five Kenyan groups chosen all feature "Boys" in their band names in one form or another; a common theme in Kenyan music at that time.
The tracks selected were all released as 7" vinyl singles on the Boxer, Lulus and Hit Parade labels, which were all part of Babu Shah's Audio Productions stable. This is the first time they have been released outside of Kenya.
No Wahala Sounds are proud to bring you these lost musical gems and would like to thank Doug Paterson for digital clean up from the original vinyl.
Due for release on 09 April 2021. Interest for airplay from Tom Ravenscroft and Gideon Coe from BBC 6 Music, DJ Ritu from Resonance FM/SOAS Radio, Roger Hill from BBC Merseyside, Steve Barker from BBC Lancashire, and DJ Debbie Golt from Resonance FM.
Bill MacKay and Nathan Bowles’ debut is well titled: keys are what they play
and keys unlock things too. Their trad bonafides are balanced with
inquisitive playing that adds surprise as a formal songwriting and arranging
tool. Spirited 21st Century folk music made of equal parts bluegrass,
classical, country, gospel and improv.
‘Keys’ is, on first blush, a collection of guitar and banjo duets - but from the
opening moment, it is clear that Bill and Nathan’s agreed-upon duo is a
living organism, growing as it goes. Behind the stately figures of ‘Idumea’, a
19th Century southern hymnal played out on their stringed instruments, a
low organ drone hums persistently, signalling that this music, while coming
from traditional places, is asking more of itself, seeking sparks of inspiration
to light the path forward.
Bill and Nathan met a few years back, if time has any meaning. It didn’t
seem to at the time - after the first night they hung out, it seemed as if
they’d known each other for a while already. A year later, in 2018, they
were booked as a duo at Cropped Out. Preparing for the show involved a
correspondence exchanging lots of provisional ideas, thoughts and music
back and forth from Chicago to Durham NC, then dashing through the ideas
again on the festival grounds an hour before the show. From this seemingly
hectic preparation, their playing that night was remarkably serene, a
spiritual treatise clothed in the casual and natural manner of the proverbial
porch, or in this case, riverside-jam, as the stage literally straddled the edge
of the Ohio River. It was a stellar, simpatico first moment that asked for
more moments like it.
After several more sets the following year, they felt ready to roll tape (as the
saying goes) and chose to do so in Chicago, with Nick Broste at The Shape
Shoppe. Again, an easy rapport prevailed, allowing them to work through
their collected ideas quickly and freely, with the moments of spontaneous
decision that can come only with comfort and trust in each other’s presence.
Throughout ‘Keys’, Bill and Nathan propel their power-folk engine with intent
and feeling, joy and solemnity, as images of wariness, wonder, anger,
deliberation, forgiveness, trust and devotion rise up from the music and roll
it forward into the unknown, a place we can sense both players are happy
to go.
Eight of the ten songs featured are originals, with the other two coming
from different centuries to this one. The diversity of song is matched by the
instrumentation: in addition to Bill’s guitar and Nathan’s banjo, they add
voice, piano, percussion, pump organ, requinto and electric organ to the
richness and rusticity, the traditionalism and open space of the
compositions.
The Reverend Peyton's Big Damn Band are the greatest front-porch blues band in the world. They are led by Reverend Peyton, who most consider to be the premier finger picker playing today. He has earned a reputation as both a singularly compelling performer and a persuasive evangelist for the rootsy, country blues styles that captured his imagination early in life and inspired him and his band to make pilgrimages to Clarksdale, Mississippi to study under such blues masters as T-Model Ford, Robert Belfour and David “Honeyboy” Edwards. The band has built through their legendary live shows. Playing as many as 300 shows each year, the band has one of the most dedicated followings out there. This following is sure to eat up the band's latest offering, Dance Songs For Hard Times, a country blues record that was made the right way — two feet on the ground and both hands getting dirty.
- A1: Sleepwalker 3:14
- A2: Milk & Honey #1 1:27
- A3: Loneliness #3 (Night Talking) 3:25
- A4: Divorce Papers 3:14
- A5: Morning Talk / Supersymmetry 4:13
- A6: Some Other Place 3:38
- A7: Song On The Beach 3:35
- B1: Loneliness #4 (Other People's Letters) 0:59
- B2: Owl 2:20
- B3: Photograph 2:25
- B4: Milk & Honey #2 3:19
- B5: We're All Leaving 2:31
- B6: Dimensions
Gentleman’s Dub Club continues to be one of the most exciting acts in the
UK, selling out shows (when they can play live), headlining festival stages,
racking up streams, and often playing to crowds of 10K or more.
The band returns for their newest full-length, following the February 2019
release of ‘Lost In Space’.
’Down To Earth’ brings the band thematically back to basics, with a set of songs
built around the band woodshedding and writing together in the studio, and
working to capture more of the overall, razor tight sound of their live sets.
Much of the record was recorded in London, with the band meeting up whenever the lockdown permitted, managing to write together, record, and mix at Crosstown Studios, which is owned by bassist/producer Toby Davies and drummer Ben McKone (of General Roots, Hollie Cook’s band).
Guest spots by Hollie Cook and Gardna (who also appeared extensively on the very successful ‘Pound For Pound’ album that paired Gentlemans Dub Club with the Nextmen in 2018) add to the magic.
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard return with new album K.G., their sixteenth since forming in 2010. In the wake of a global pandemic, it’s a collection of songs composed and recorded remotely after the six members of the band retreated to their own homes scattered around Melbourne, Australia. K.G. is a pure distillation of the King Gizzard sound, one that cherry picks the best aspects of previous albums and contorts them into new shapes via defiantly non-western rock scales.
A crucial live at Carnegie Hall by the renowned trumpet player, subtitled The Legendary Performances of May 19, 1961. This live performance features Davis with his regular quintet and also accompanied by Gil Evans and his 21-piece orchestra. The orchestra is heard on several selections drawn from Miles Ahead as well as a complete reading of the adagio movement from Concierto de Aranjuez as recorded on Sketches of Spain. The concert begins with the orchestra playing the Gil Evans introduction to "So What", which is performed by the quintet, and then segues directly into the only recording of an Evans arrangement of "Spring is Here".
Mwandishi: one of the most influential combos in the history of electric Jazz. This is Herbie Hancock's creature caught live at the Juan-les-Pins Jazz Festival in France on July 21st, 1971. H. Hancock - piano and Fender Rhodes, Bennie Maupin - saxes, bass cl. and flute, Eddie Henderson - trumpet, Julian Priester - trombone, Buster Williams - bass and Billy Hart - drums. A highly progressive form of modern Jazz based on the mix of different elements. Some sort of Afro-Electric-Funk sound journey where waves of multiple pulsating sounds develop in a continuous alternation between tension and release. A marvelous band for which live performances often show more than studio recordings.
Argentinian producer Thissperso has been living in Barcelona for a good season while producing music that reflects what he experiences in his day to day life. His productions are harsh and violent, but they have a quality and energy that makes them contagious and addictive. This work, edited by NNY Records, compiles some old songs that have been revisited and remastered, which coexist with new compositions that continue to explore the most visceral and dark side of electronics. This is the work of a producer who is not tied to any style and who enjoys setting the dancefloor on fire when one of his songs is played. Producers like Parris Smith have already been able to verify it in the first person with a couple of songs from this new EP in which we find Electro mixed with Industrial, EBM, Acid and a punk and nonconformist attitude.
A gifted animator, writer, performer and producer, he has already seen support from The Sunday Times’ Breaking Act, Dork Magazine, BBC Radio 1’s Huw Stephens and Jack Saunders, BBC Introducing and Radio X.
Inspired by contemporaries like James Blake, Tom Misch and Rex Orange County, George’s music is as innovative as it is feel good, and as unique as his backstory. As one of eight homeschooled siblings raised by parents whose professions included being a collage artist and a honey farmer respectively, he grew up in a fruitful environment that encouraged his artistic side.
In his own words, his music is organic, wholegrain and good for your gut. It’s all these elements that come together to form the quirky world of George Moir, providing a pathway for him to become one of Britain’s most intriguing and hardworking artists




















