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/ Search Results for: "where"

Review: Dick Jensen, "Dick Jensen" - A Lost Philadelphia Soul Classic

January 29, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

dick jensen dick jensen

When Dick Jensen was signed to ABC’s Probe Records label in 1969, only one album title seemed appropriate: White Hot Soul.  The Hawaiian-born entertainer’s stage moves earned him comparisons to James Brown and Jackie Wilson, while his voice recalled the booming sonorities of Tom Jones or Engelbert Humperdinck.  Tucked away on Side Two of that Don Costa-produced LP, Jensen included The Soul Survivors’ “Expressway to Your Heart” as part of a medley.  That 1967 Top 5 hit, of course, was written by

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Categories: News, Reviews Formats: CD Genre: R&B/Soul Tags: Dick Jensen, Gamble and Huff, Thom Bell

Big Break Serves Up Soul, Jazz and Funk from Carmen McRae, Billy Paul, Azteca and More

January 29, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

carmen mcrae i am music

Timeless soul music knows no regional boundaries, at least based on the latest quintet of releases from Cherry Red's Big Break Records imprint.  With this group of reissues, you'll travel to Philadelphia by way of Hawaii, Oakland, Harlem and Chicago.  All of the titles previewed below are available now in the U.K. and next Tuesday, February 5, in the U.S.! Two new titles hail from the Philadelphia International Records catalogue.  Perhaps most exciting is the first CD release outside of Japan

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Categories: News Formats: CD Genre: Jazz, Popular Standards/Vocal, R&B/Soul Tags: Azteca, Billy Paul, Carmen McRae, Dick Jensen, Tyrone Davis

Ace Embarks On Final "Sea Cruise" For Concluding Volume of "The Ace Story"

January 28, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

the ace story volume 51

In 1979, Ace Records of London released Volume One of The Ace Story on LP, celebrating the music of its namesake label, Ace Records of Jackson (Mississippi).  Roughly five years later, Ace issued the fifth and final volume in the series.  Fast-forward to 2010.  That was when Ace revisited The Ace Story with a CD reissue of that original 1979 LP, expanded with bonus tracks.  The new and improved Ace Story series has itself just come to a close with the recent release of Volume 5 on CD. The new

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Categories: News

Skydog, Celebrated: Life of Duane Allman Explored in New Career-Spanning Box Set

January 28, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

skydog contents1

Duane Allman was just 24 when he perished on the streets of Macon, Georgia, the victim of an accident involving his motorcycle and a flatbed truck carrying a lumber crane. Yet in a short but intense period of time, the Nashville-born slide guitar virtuoso had established a reputation as a creative and versatile musician with invention to spare.  His distinct tones on a Wilson Pickett recording caught the ear of Atlantic Records’ Jerry Wexler, and while based at Rick Hall’s Muscle Shoals studio,

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Categories: News Formats: Box Sets Tags: The Allman Brothers Band

Call "Echo Valley 2-6809" For 7Ts' Latest Partridge Family Reissues

January 25, 2013 By Joe Marchese 7 Comments

partridge sound magazine and shopping bag1

Even Reuben Kincaid might be happy with two upcoming releases from Cherry Red’s 7Ts label: two-for-one reissues of The Partridge Family’s Sound Magazine and Shopping Bag; and The Partridge Family Notebook and Crossword Puzzle.  Continuing 7Ts’ David Cassidy and Partridge Family reissue series, both two-fers are out now in the U.K. and on February 5 in U.S. stores. 1971’s U.S. Top 10 album Sound Magazine, the third LP from the TV group fronted by David Cassidy and Shirley Jones, followed its two

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Categories: News Tags: The Partridge Family

Numero Unearths Early Hüsker Dü Cuts for Record Store Day

January 24, 2013 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

husker du rsd

Are we talking about Record Store Day already? Even though it's not happening until April 20, The Numero Group has announced plans to issue on vinyl some of the earliest recordings by seminal rockers Hüsker Dü. While the world weeps for relations to improve between primary songwriters Bob Mould and Grant Hart (they won't -Ed., likely sighing wistfully) - at least to the point where Hüsker Dü can get a catalogue upgrade with the quality of, say, the Sugar discography - Numero will press a double

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Categories: News Tags: Record Store Day, Vinyl

Review: Billy Joel, "She's Got a Way: Love Songs"

January 23, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

billy joel love songs7

“She’s got a way about her…I don’t know what it is,” Billy Joel sings on his very first album.  But it isn’t long before the song’s narrator explicates many of those ways about her, like a “smile that heals me” or “a light around her.”  Even if he can’t put his finger on it, he’s confident that “a million dreams of love surround her ev’rywhere.”    Yet rarely (in life or in art) has love been so simple for Billy Joel.  “She’s Got a Way” lends its title to a new compilation subtitled Love Songs

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Categories: News, Reviews Tags: Billy Joel

Review: The Pogues, "The Very Best of The Pogues"

January 23, 2013 By Mike Duquette 1 Comment

Since the birth of the greatest hits album, the preparation of such a product has become a bizarre form of performance art. Do you include only hit singles or sprinkle in favorite album cuts? Do you keep things chronological or craft some sort of fancy playlist for maximum listening pleasure? How intricate do you make the packaging - do you need liner  notes, song-by-song credits and all that? The fires of these debates are further stoked with the release of The Very Best of The Pogues (Shout!

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Categories: Reviews Tags: The Pogues

Big Beat Has "Too Much to Dream" with Two New Psychedelic Sixties Collections

January 23, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

all kinds of highs1

When one thinks of musical psychedelia, the city that most often comes to mind is San Francisco.  That rock epicenter hosted the likes of The Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane, Big Brother and the Holding Company, Blue Cheer and Moby Grape at venues including The Fillmore, The Matrix and the Avalon Ballroom.  But psych-rock exploration wasn’t limited to San Francisco, with New York, Los Angeles, Detroit, Chicago and Austin among the other American spots making major contributions to the genre. 

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Categories: News

Kritzerland's Got the Action with "Butch and Sundance" and Vintage Dean Martin Comedy

January 22, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

butch and sundance1

Kritzerland has just announced its first releases for 2013, and these two rare soundtracks, both of which are making their CD debuts, couldn’t be more different: George Duning’s Who’s Got the Action? and Patrick Williams’ Butch and Sundance: The Early Days. Almost ten years after the runaway success of Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid, 20th Century Fox realized its hopes for a follow-up film with Butch and Sundance: The Early Days.  At the conclusion of the first film, though, raindrops

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks Tags: Patrick Williams

Rare Gems Hidden in New "Playlist" Wave

January 21, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

playlist andy williams1

The latest wave of Playlist releases is almost here from Legacy Recordings, and the series dedicated to collecting “the hits plus the fan favorites” doesn’t look to disappoint.  On January 29, Playlist volumes will be released for an eclectic cadre of artists in a variety of genres: vintage metal (Accept), traditional pop (Andy Williams), blue-eyed soul (The Box Tops), classic rock (Mountain, The Doobie Brothers, Harry Nilsson), country (Sara Evans, The Highwaymen), hip-hop (G. Love and Special

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Categories: News Tags: Mountain, Nas, Sara Evans, The Box Tops, The Doobie Brothers, The Highwaymen

La-La Land Releases "Dave," "The Relic" Scores

January 18, 2013 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

dave lll

Following a strong 2012 release slate, La-La Land Records looks to be keeping the spirit of catalogue soundtracks alive with their first releases of the new year: one an expansion of a score to a modern comedy classic, the other a premiere release of the music to a '90s sci-fi flick. Dave Kovic (Kevin Kline) is a simple businessman with a bizarre trait: he's the spitting image of the President of the United States of America. When that president falls ill, his team decides to use Dave to their

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks

Morning of Their Lives: Bee Gees' Original Australian Albums Reissued on CD by Festival Label

January 18, 2013 By Joe Marchese 1 Comment

bee gees morning of my life1

Though Bee Gees’ First introduced Barry, Robin and Maurice Gibb to the world at large, the album title was actually a misnomer. The Bee Gees’ first album was, in fact, The Bee Gees Sing and Play 14 Barry Gibb Songs, released in Australia in 1965 on Festival Records’ Leedon label.  Two albums were released in Australia before the Gibbs’ international debut, with a third “odds-and-ends” collection having arrived in late 1967 just months after Bee Gees’ First.  The Bee Gees’ Australian output has

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Categories: News

Review: Roger Cook, "Running with the Rat Pack"

January 17, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

roger cook running with the rat pack1

The rules of pop music were changing, and Roger Cook didn't want to be behind the times.  The songwriter of such nuggets as "You've Got Your Troubles," "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing," "My Baby Loves Lovin'" and "Long Cool Woman in a Black Dress" had long balanced his work as a behind-the-scenes songwriter with a singing career.  As one-half of David and Jonathan (with co-writer Roger Greenaway) and a member of Blue Mink, Cook was a familiar vocalist, and as a background singer, he added

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Categories: News, Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Pop Tags: Roger Cook

Numero is (Possibly) Purple on Forthcoming LP Reissue

January 16, 2013 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

lewis connection

Nearly 35 years after the unceremonious release of The Lewis Conection, a local Minneapolis band's sole funk LP, The Numero Group is resurrecting the disc, giving it a premiere release next month. (It's part of an forthcoming phase at Numero to unearth significant and rare recordings from the early days of the Minneapolis sound.) What makes this set so special? According to popular lore, while recording the album at Minneapolis' Sound 80 Studios, The Lewis Connection invited an 18-year-old

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Categories: News Tags: Prince, Vinyl

Say Their Name: "Love Songs" Arrives from Destiny's Child, Includes New Song

January 16, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

destinys child love songs1

The upbeat dance-pop/R&B of Destiny’s Child successfully updated the girl group sound for the late 1990s and early 2000s, and launched the careers of Kelly Rowland, Michelle Williams and Beyoncé Knowles.  In late 2012, Legacy Recordings marked the fifteenth anniversary of the group’s No. 1 debut single with the release of Playlist: The Very Best of Destiny’s Child.  That disc soon became the most successful entry in the Playlist series.  So it might come as no surprise that the label will

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Categories: News

Big Break Goes Disco with KC and the Sunshine Band, George McCrae, Johnnie Taylor

January 16, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

johnnie taylor eargasm1

The Temptations had sunshine on a rainy day, John Denver had it on his shoulders, and the O'Jays took their cue from an old standard to address a loved one as "my sunshine."  But Harry Wayne Casey and Richard Finch, forming Miami's KC and the Sunshine Band, had sunshine both in the band name and in the joyful, exultant brand of music they played.  Big Break Records has recently reissued one title recorded by those disco titans, one title produced by them, and one with another connection to the

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Categories: News, Reviews Formats: CD Genre: R&B/Soul Tags: George McCrae, Johnnie Taylor, KC and the Sunshine Band

Dusty Groove Label Returns From Real Gone Music with Steig, Humphrey, Harris

January 14, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

jeremy steig wayfaring stranger

The venerable Blue Note Records label was founded in 1939, and from the late 1940s onward emphasized what was most modern about jazz.  Blue Note became well known, of course, for the hard bop classics recorded under its aegis.  But the varied influences that created hard bop led Blue Note to explore how the avenues of soul, rock and blues intersected with that of jazz.  Three new releases from Real Gone Music and the reactivated Dusty Groove Records label explore three sonically-diverse titles

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Categories: News, Reviews Formats: CD Genre: Jazz Tags: Bobbi Humphrey, Gene Harris, Jeremy Steig

Intrada Goes Ape, Expands "Congo" and "Cromwell" Scores

January 9, 2013 By Mike Duquette Leave a Comment

congo a600

Expanded scores by iconic composers? Reissues of soundtrack oddities paired with newly-discovered gems? Yes, it's certainly 2013 at Intrada! The label unveiled its first two titles for the new year on Monday: complete presentations of Jerry Goldsmith's score to Congo and Frank Cordell's Cromwell. Released at the height of the mid-'90s post-Jurassic Park frenzy, Congo (which, like JP, was based on a techno-thriller novel by Michael Crichton) was the story of a team of scientists and mercenaries

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks

Little Bit O'Soul: Thelma Houston, Syreeta, Nancy Wilson, Brecker Brothers, George Duke Reissued

January 9, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

brecker back to back1

Soul music was alive and well in 2012, and some of the finest reissues arrived courtesy of Cherry Red's SoulMusic Records label.  With the label already looking forward to 2013 releases from artists including Ronnie Laws, Patti Austin, Stephanie Mills, George Duke, Gwen Guthrie and Freda Payne (more on those soon), the time is right to revisit some of the year-end titles that might have fallen under the radar! In addition to celebrating the post-Motown recordings of Mary Wells at 20th Century

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Categories: News Formats: CD Genre: Jazz, Pop, R&B/Soul Tags: Nancy Wilson, Syreeta Wright, The Brecker Brothers, Thelma Houston

Mad Season's "Above" Rediscovered for Expansive Deluxe Edition

January 8, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

mad season above1

Though the group isn’t often spoken of in the same breath as Crosby, Stills and Nash or The Traveling Wilburys, Mad Season was a bona fide supergroup for the 1990s.  The Seattle-based group of musicians - Layne Staley of Alice in Chains, guitarist Mike McCready of Pearl Jam, drummer/percussionist Barrett Martin of Screaming Trees, and bassist John Baker Saunders of The Walkabouts and The Lamont Cranston Band - joined together in 1994 and released just one album, 1995’s Columbia Records release

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Categories: News Tags: Mad Season

In Case You Missed It: Norah Jones' "Covers" Gets Domestic CD Release

January 4, 2013 By Mike Duquette 1 Comment

norah jones covers

Norah Jones sure is everywhere. The singer/songwriter with the smoky voice and a deep musical bloodline (being the daughter of Ravi Shankar) exploded onto the scene with 2002's Come Away with Me, a deft fusion of pop, jazz and country that topped the charts in nearly a dozen countries, won eight Grammy Awards and remains one of only 11 albums in this century to be certified diamond by the Recording Industry Association of America for over 10 million units shipped. She's also a reliable guest

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Categories: News Tags: Norah Jones

Nearly Human, Completely Rundgren: Todd's 1990 San Francisco Concert Revisited

January 4, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

todd rundgren warfield

Todd Rundgren’s 1989 album Nearly Human was conceived with a simple mandate by the artist: record a set of songs that could be performed live in an “R&B revue”-style setting. To that end, it was recorded live with few overdubs. Rundgren intuitively knew that these songs needed to be strong enough to stand on their own; stand they did, and do.  The album itself was reissued earlier this year by Edsel, and now the Esoteric Recordings label (part of the Cherry Red Group) has premiered a

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Categories: News Tags: Todd Rundgren

Some Nice Things We've Missed: Quartet Records' Trio of Sondheim and Double Mancini

January 3, 2013 By Joe Marchese Leave a Comment

revenge of the pink panther1

As 2012 yielded to 2013, more than a few noteworthy releases may have been lost in the shuffle.  Some of the most impressive of those December releases came from Spain's Quartet Records.  The label closed out the year with three particularly spectacular titles that no film score buff will want to miss. Two came from the prolific pen of Henry Mancini, perhaps the most-represented soundtrack composer in terms of 2012’s releases.  Having previously issued the complete score to Curse of the Pink

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Categories: News Genre: Soundtracks Tags: Stephen Sondheim

Four Tickets to Paradise: Rock Candy Remasters Eddie Money's First Columbia LPs

January 3, 2013 By Mike Duquette 8 Comments

eddie money

Pack your bags, we'll leave tonight: U.K. label Rock Candy Records is releasing brand new remasters of four albums by the one and only Eddie Money. The Brooklyn-born Edward Mahoney was a New York cop in the 1960s, but he ultimately decided to chase a more artistic muse. Working his way through the club circuit in California, he was signed to Columbia Records, where he enjoyed a healthy run of hit singles and albums. His self-titled debut featured the smash hits "Baby Hold On" and "Two Tickets

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