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| Clifford Jordan Quartet: Live At Ethell's |
| Stereophile calls this CD, “Simply one of the most natural-sounding jazz discs I have heard.” The crystal clear ambience (a squeak of the hi-hat, the clink of a wine glass, the audience’s chuckles of delight) make this CD a pristine vignette of jazz as it was meant to be heard: live. |
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| 09532
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| 12732
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| 05632
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| Patience Higgins: Live In Harlem |
| If you like your jazz uptempo and overflowing with vitality, look no farther. Patience is
a cooking, muscular-toned tenorman somewhere between Coleman Hawkins and Sonny Rollins—a musician great enough to have toured with Ellington, David Murray and Stevie Wonder. |
| Special Pricing Available |
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| 01832
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| Drink Small: The Electric Blues Doctor Live! |
| Bound For Sound writes: “...red hot southern blues with some of the best sonics this side of perfection. Recording of Exceptional Merit.” From the heart of South Carolina, Drink Small has an amazingly deep bass voice, perfectly recorded here. His sound falls right in between B.B. King and Bo Diddley, but with a little extra deviltry. |
| Special Pricing Available |
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| 03152
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| Bad Influence: Live At The Bad Habits Cafe |
Stereophile applauds, “…a recording to die for…R&B and early rock, but with a totally modern sensibility…one hell of a performance.” Whop Frazier's Motown-steeped, bluesy vocals are backed by a vividly raw blues/rock quartet led by wailing electric guitar and raunchy tenor sax.
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| 01532
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| Ted Nash Quartet: Out Of This World |
| If you’re into Coltrane, you’ll really dig Ted’s powerful, burning tenor sound. This, one of our top live recordings, captured the quartet on the last and best night of a great tour. The CD nails the gorgeously intimate ambience of that perfect, little concert hall and the raw dynamic impact of sitting three feet from those fiery young lions knocking the walls down. |
| Special Pricing Available |
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| 11132
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| Sunnyland Slim and John Dee Holeman: Blues Legends Live |
| “Superbly recorded blues from the genuine article,” says Hi Fi News. First row seats at live concerts starring two powerful pillars of blues history. Disc 1 features big-voiced Sunnyland Slim, Muddy Waters’ legendary pianist ’40s and a founding father of Chicago barrelhouse. Disc 2 stars John Dee’s relaxed drawl and folksy pickin’, honed for over six decades in the Carolina hills. |
| Special Pricing Available |
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| 08032
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| The Celtic Jazz Collective: Aislinn |
| Irish America describes: “The Celtic Jazz Collective is stylish, sophisticated, and most importantly, swinging. This album is a must-have for jazz buffs who wish to explore music, for Irish music aficionados looking for a toe-hold onto jazz…ah, flip it: it’s a must-have, period.” Some of Ireland’s finest plus a smoking jazz rhythm section created a historic first. And, they made fun music. |
| Special Pricing Available |
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| 07932
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| The Angels: Live and Joyful in Charleston |
| Here’s the gospel that will make a lifelong fan: the sweet, pure, close harmony of a great Southern a capella choir. When Pierre heard about South Carolina’s finest, the Angels, he grabbed the chance and flew to Charleston to record them live. His tapes caught an inspired performance. |
| Special Pricing Available |
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| 03232
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| Clifford Jordan Big Band: Play What You Feel |
| Clifford’s big band was a warm and swinging group with great jazz soloists, akin to Dizzy’s big band from the late ’40s. JazzTimes says Clifford is “…clearly inspired throughout…he caresses the ballads with long wisps of smoky-toned lyricism, and ignites the cookers with his fiery amalgam of blues and bop.” |
| Special Pricing Available |
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