
Nov 17, 2009
new Gil Scott-Heron

Nov 15, 2009
Walter Wanderley - Rain Forest

barabara sounds sez:
Swinging organ grooves from smooth bossa-lounge master Walter Wanderley. This was his first US recording, produced by Creed Taylor for Verve. The back cover of the original album was graced with a 'handwritten' blurb by crooner Tony Bennett: "If you like: Ella, Duke, Count, Sinatra... you'll love Walter Wanderly's music." Not sure about that at all. But the cover with its toucan and exotic pagan statue peering out of tropical foliage — that's classic. So is the wigged-out last half minute of the final track Bossa na Praia.
This certainly wasn't the first appearance of Rain Forest in the blogosphere — but it's a classic of its kind. So, in case anyone's missed it... it's now too late (DMCA takedown notification)
dusty sez:
An album that not only broke the bossa big in the US — but a set that also really helped transform the sound of the organ in jazz! Not only is the record a key meeting of bossa rhythms and jazz organ — transplanted hugely to the US after a big initial Wanderley run in 60s Brazil — but the set also features some of the cleanest organ lines to ever hit these shores -- a big difference from the heavier flutter that some of the US organists were using a few years before, and a sharp shift towards cleaner keyboard sounds for the rest of the decade. Instrumentation's nice and spare — mostly bass and percussion, plus a bit of flute and guitar — and titles include the massive hit "Summer Samba", plus "Rain", "Beach Samba", "Song Of The Jet", "Cried, Cried", and "Girl From Ipanema".
Nov 11, 2009
Changing The Jazz At Buckingham Palace - Tubby Hayes / Dizzy Reece

Nov 9, 2009
Olu Dara - In The World From Natchez to New York

Nov 8, 2009
Grupo Folklorico y Experimental Nuevayorquino - Concepts in Unity

Nov 5, 2009
Soul Fingers ...and Funky Feet - a Blue Note compilation

Nov 2, 2009
Dino Saluzzi - Kultrum
