New Ep from Scrimshire released as a free download on bandcamp, written and recorded between 2009 and October 2011 this is a collection of songs that came together on the way to finishing The Hollow, his last album released in 2011 on Wah Wah 45s Records, enjoy!
Enjoy the first Myth Syzer experience on Plug Research, with his new “Hyt” EP ! Free download for an email swap at: www.plugresearch.com
“This is the music I love and the sound I want to achieve right now. To picture it, take a slow-motion surfer who on a at midnight tsunami surf. He falls, he’s gonna drown, he drowns. My music on this EP tells about this wave and his fall, in low-fi.” Myth Syzer
Something new from the french label Cascade Records and it’s something really good, this is the new Amin PaYnE‘s album called “Cosmic Disfunktions“, 13 tracks for a good blend of funk, electronic and hip hop. Available NOW on Digital via Bandcamp: cascaderecords.bandcamp.com
New stuff from HHabitat Records, they released new Fulvio Kami‘s EP called “Cerebrum” available now as free download, enjoy! For more info check: www.hhabitatrecords.com
Dday One’s remix of Long Arm’s “Perfect Morning” taken from “The Branches Deluxe” out on December 14th via Project Mooncircle, enjoy! For more info check: www.projectmooncircle.com
New (old) unreleased track from DâM-FunK, enjoy! by the way….. follow him on soundcloud (soundcloud.com/damfunk) he release a lot of demo and unreleased stuff.
An early recording on cassette tape, recorded in Inglewood, California sometime during the very late 90’s. (I forgot what year). But, this is the kind of stuff I was ‘experimenting’ with even back then, while still working odd jobs & holding on to them, in & around L.A. just to pay my small studio apartment rent every 1st of the month + pay for studio time to create & take my lady out every once in a while on the town. *I never gave up on the ‘Funk’ dream.
Bling47 takes you on a journey into samples used by J Dilla, filmed, edited and animated and directed by Waajeed, if you missed past episodes check: youtube.com/user/Bling47music, suggested!
everybodydigs# is a series of posts about Jazz, Funk, Soul & R’n’b albums released from the 20s to the 90s, you can read a brief description/review and listen to a small preview (when it’s possible). everybodydigs# is like when someone tells you “hey you should listen to this album!” and nothing less, enjoy!
Lyric and thoughtful, pianist Bill Evans proved an urbane bridge between the early bop style of Bud Powell and playful funk of Horace Silver, and the later, modern approach of pianists like Herbie Hancock, Chick Corea, and Keith Jarrett (indeed, Jarrett went as far as to record with Evans’s backup band of drummer Paul Motian and bassist Gary Peacock). Evans’s second album as a leader, Portrait in Jazz combines a pair of originals–“Blue in Green” and “Peri’s Scope”–with a handful of show tunes and standards, including a version of “Someday My Prince Will Come” that pre-dates Miles Davis’s adaptation. With a preference for irregular phrasing and a taste for unusual chord spellings, Evans was frequently able to recast old chestnuts and tired warhorses into new gems and spirited charges, as he does here with “Witchcraft,” “Spring Is Here,” and “When I Fall in Love.” And although he recorded in many different formats throughout his career, including duets with himself, the power and beauty of Evans’s trios helped him lay a special claim to that grouping. –Fred Goodman
Personnel: Bill Evans (piano); Scott LaFaro (bass); Paul Motian (drums).
everybodydigs# is a series of posts about Jazz, Funk, Soul & R’n’b albums released from the 20s to the 90s, you can read a brief description/review and listen to a small preview (when it’s possible). everybodydigs# is like when someone tells you “hey you should listen to this album!” and nothing less, enjoy!
This 1954 studio date, a self-titled album recorded for Emarcy, was later reissued as Sarah Vaughan with Clifford Brown to denote the involvement of one of the top trumpeters of the day. Vaughan sings nine intimate standards with a band including Brown on trumpet, Herbie Mann on flute, and Paul Quinichette on tenor, each of which have plenty of space for solos (most of the songs are close to the five-minute mark). Vaughan is arguably in the best voice of her career here, pausing and lingering over notes on the standards “April in Paris,” “Jim,” and “Lullaby of Birdland.” As touching as Vaughan is, however, Brown almost equals her with his solos on “Lullaby of Birdland,” “Jim,” and “September Song,” displaying his incredible bop virtuosity in a restrained setting without sacrificing either the simple feeling of his notes or the extraordinary flair of his choices. Quinichette’s solos are magnificent as well, his feathery tone nearly a perfect match for Vaughan’s voice. Ironically though, neither Brown nor Quinichette or Mann appear on the album’s highlight, “Embraceable You,” which Vaughan performs with close accompaniment from the rhythm section: Jimmy Jones on piano, Joe Benjamin on bass, and Roy Haynes on drums. Vaughan rounds the notes with a smile and even when she’s steeping to reach a few low notes, she never loses the tremendous feeling conveyed by her voice. In whichever incarnation it’s reissued, Sarah Vaughan With Clifford Brown is one of the most important jazz-meets-vocal sessions ever recorded. (allmusic)
Personnel: Sarah Vaughan (vocals); Ernie Wilkins (arranger); Paul Quinichette (tenor saxophone); Clifford Brown (trumpet); Herbie Mann (flute); Jimmy Jomes (piano); Joe Benjamin (bass); Roy Haynes (drums).