School is done for the time being, so back to the records!
Here are a couple of killers from a a small 45 lot I picked up the other day.
Dont have any pics handy but youtube almost always has the tune, so you can hear what im talking about. Mid-60's Jamaica HEAT:
1. Clarendonians - The Jerk (Studio 1 1966) b/w You Won't See Me
-Classic stuff here. Can't you hear it?
2. The Rulers - Too Late (RIO 1966) b/w Copasetic
-This is one of my all time favorite Jamaican music groups. Great melody.
This blog is a forum for my various record finds and other record-related talk. I'm into all kinds of stuff- rare records, beat making, sampling, jazz, afrobeat, reggae, punk, and old Jamaican 45's.
breakfast
Friday, December 10, 2010
Saturday, November 6, 2010
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Jamaica
Lack of activity due to heavy school schedule, hopefully things will chill out soon.
Good news is I got a few shipments from Jamaica recently, TONS of amazing music. So many 45's I want to post, but short on time so here are a couple gems:
1.)The Rulers w/ The Carib Beats - Don't Be Rude b/w Be Good (JJ Records 1967)
What can I say about this record? It's a rocksteady KILLER. Just amazing pre-reggae vocal harmony with a beat that demands action. One of my favorite songs ever period. Desert island material in my opinion. Though the original pressing is on Rio, the JJ version is very much an early, sought-after copy.
2) Phyllis Dillon - Don't Stay Away b/w Lynn Tait with Tommy McCook & The Supersonics - Lara's Theme Instrumental (Original Treasure Isle Pressing 1966? Disregard the Incorrect A-side label, it was common occurrence for small record companies *even Treasure Isle* to run out of labels and use whatever was available.)
It's Dillon, not Diller, big difference there... Another rocksteady THRILLER! Phillis had one of the most distinctive voices in the Jamaican music scene. This is an amazing song and I am seriously worried about wearing the grooves out of this 45. It just gets better with age. Don't ask why, it just does. That said listen to it and see for yourself.
Good news is I got a few shipments from Jamaica recently, TONS of amazing music. So many 45's I want to post, but short on time so here are a couple gems:
1.)The Rulers w/ The Carib Beats - Don't Be Rude b/w Be Good (JJ Records 1967)
What can I say about this record? It's a rocksteady KILLER. Just amazing pre-reggae vocal harmony with a beat that demands action. One of my favorite songs ever period. Desert island material in my opinion. Though the original pressing is on Rio, the JJ version is very much an early, sought-after copy.
2) Phyllis Dillon - Don't Stay Away b/w Lynn Tait with Tommy McCook & The Supersonics - Lara's Theme Instrumental (Original Treasure Isle Pressing 1966? Disregard the Incorrect A-side label, it was common occurrence for small record companies *even Treasure Isle* to run out of labels and use whatever was available.)
It's Dillon, not Diller, big difference there... Another rocksteady THRILLER! Phillis had one of the most distinctive voices in the Jamaican music scene. This is an amazing song and I am seriously worried about wearing the grooves out of this 45. It just gets better with age. Don't ask why, it just does. That said listen to it and see for yourself.
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
One of my personal favorites
Lee Morgan - Cornbread (Blue Note BST-84222)
This is as groovy as music is capable of being. Too much soul in this lineup, people still aren't ready for it.
This is as groovy as music is capable of being. Too much soul in this lineup, people still aren't ready for it.
Thursday, September 30, 2010
Sam the man
Wednesday, September 22, 2010
Beatnik stuff
Ok i've been lazy but summer is officially over, so back to it. Here is a sampling of some of the more interesting records I found in San Francisco:
Kerouac-Poetry for the Beat Generation & Ginsberg - Howl
The cover for Howl is kinda beat, but both records look and sound great. Original Pressings(!)
Another cool Beat Gen record, comlpete with Hip Manual.
Nina Simone's first album. On Bethlehem Records. Yes.
1960's self-hypnosis record. You would think a "doctor" could afford a better hair piece...
John Coltrane live at the Village Vanguard. Coming across an original John Coltrane record in a dusty crate is as close to gold mining as i'll ever get. Score!
Only three records from these guys. I read they stopped using the JFK in their name after the assassination. High quality bebop/hardbop Riverside recording with a great cover.
Kerouac-Poetry for the Beat Generation & Ginsberg - Howl
The cover for Howl is kinda beat, but both records look and sound great. Original Pressings(!)
Another cool Beat Gen record, comlpete with Hip Manual.
Nina Simone's first album. On Bethlehem Records. Yes.
1960's self-hypnosis record. You would think a "doctor" could afford a better hair piece...
John Coltrane live at the Village Vanguard. Coming across an original John Coltrane record in a dusty crate is as close to gold mining as i'll ever get. Score!
Only three records from these guys. I read they stopped using the JFK in their name after the assassination. High quality bebop/hardbop Riverside recording with a great cover.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
A real personality
Ok here is my single favorite item from the recent record-hunting trip to San Francisco. Babs Gonzales. Who is this guy? I had no idea either so I did some homework and found out he was a pretty heavy dude, having significant influence in the development of bebop and jazz in general. Babs was hippest of the hipsters and knew anyone who was anyone. He made up words like expoobident. Just look at the picture, the man was cooler 60 years ago than most people could ever hope to be.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Babs_Gonzales
Here is his take on x-mas:
Monday, September 13, 2010
San Francisco Moods
How appropriate for me to have found this record while digging in a basement in San Francisco all weekend. Cal Tjader, one of the grooviest jazz cats to make the scene, shows some San Francisco love while also taking some influence from the beat generation a la 1958. Rare and beautiful, this is the kind of find that keeps me going. It was a very productive trip, so i'll be posting a number of choice items that I managed to find up there, including afro beat, calypso, jazz, and of course a few beat poetry discs.
I couldn't find anything from this album, but the below track was sampled by Gangstarr so some of you might recognize it (and its importance in hip hop):
I couldn't find anything from this album, but the below track was sampled by Gangstarr so some of you might recognize it (and its importance in hip hop):
Tuesday, September 7, 2010
Unexpected score
Here is an example of a great record just falling into my possession. While dropping off some old clothing at a local salvation army, I just happened to see the guy in front of me donate a box of old records. Now there is no way I was leaving before checking out those lp's. SCORE! Found this copy of a damn near impossible to find 1965 "You Never Heard Such Sounds in Your Life" - Milford Graves Percussion Ensemble with Sunny Morgan. I can't tell you how f'ing awesome this record is! The free-est of the free form jazz drummers, Milford goes to town on his homemade drum kit with Sunny backing him up with even more percussion! No horns, strings, melodies, nothing. This is straight up free form drumming at its finest. The only thing better than finding an album as rare as this is finding it by accident! It was meant to be!
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Monday, September 6, 2010
One more thing
from today's excursion. Well, two actually. While digging around in a sea of dusty old 80's pop lp's I found these 2 worn but still very playable Blue Note 45's. The first one is Lou Donaldson - Funky Mama parts 1&2, the other is Lee Morgan - The Sidewinder parts 1&2. Pretty awesome finds considering how people frequent that spot. This is why I keep digging.
Sunday, September 5, 2010
another good day
It was another good day of digging at one of my local spots (1 million+ records in a warehouse).
Amongst a few very interesting pickups today, this one stands out. It is a 1962(i think) 45 of Martin Luther King Jr's speech 'The Negro Dilema: The Old & New Slavery - The Challenge - Dignity and Self Respect' b/w 'Excellence: A Good Job - The Street Sweeper - Be The Best'. From what i've been able to find online, this appears to be a series of sermons/speeches delivered to the Zion Hill Baptist church in Los Angeles around 1962 and produced by the non-profit Public Information Communications Association out of Compton, CA. I just listened to both sides. Seven years deep in the civil rights struggle, you can hear the determination in his voice.
A good day
Not a bad weekend of digging. On Friday I scored an orange King 45 of James Brown's original 1969 Mother Popcorn and yesterday I came across the even more rare 'Answer to Mother Popcorn' (I Got a Mother for You) by the lovely Vicki Anderson. Very cool.
I like records
Hi. My name is Josh, I live in LA, and I collect records. I have always had a fascination with records, so I've decided to create this blog to both catalog my personal collection and share the excitement of discovering those unexpected gems. Pics, vids, etc will be included where possible... Hopefully I will encourage some of you to get out to those garage sales and dig dig dig! I'm always on the lookout for new records and new spots to dig so please feel free to make suggestions. That's it. Enjoy.
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