| | Joe Henderson Power To The People CD Joe Henderson Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
This album (which has been included in Joe Henderson's complete, eight-CD Milestone Years box set) has quite a few classic moments. At that point in time, tenor saxophonist Henderson was a sideman with Herbie Hancock's Sextet, so Hancock was happy to perform as a sideman, doubling on piano and electric piano, with the all-star group, which also includes trumpeter Mike Lawrence, bassist Ron Carter and drummer Jack DeJohnette. Highlights are many and include the original version of "Black Narcissus," "Isotope," a lyrical rendition of "Lazy Afternoon," and the free-form "Foresight and Afterthought." ~ Scott Yanow
Personnel: Joe Henderson (tenor saxophone); Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, Jack De Johnette, Mike Lawrence.
Personnel: Joe Henderson (tenor saxophone); Mike Lawrence (trumpet); Herbie Hancock (piano, electric piano); Ron Carter (bass instrument, electric bass); Jack DeJohnette (drum).
Power To The People Music Joe Henderson Power To The People Songs Power To The People Music Power To The People Music Review Buy Power To The People CD Purchase Power To The People CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Andrew Hill Dance With Death CD (1968) Remastered
Power To The People album
$9.69 Andrew Hill's Dance of Death, recorded in 1968 with a stellar band, was not issued until 1980. In the late 1960s, Blue Note was no longer the most adventurous of jazz labels. While certain titles managed to scrape through -- Eddie Gale's Ghetto Music did but only because Francis Wollf personally financed it -- many didn't. The label was firmly in the soul-jazz groove by then, and Hill's music, always on the edge, was deemed too outside for the label's roster. Musically, this is Hill at his most visionary. From hard- and post bop frames come modal and tonal inquiries of staggering complexity. Accompanied by trumpeter Charles Tolliver, ...
| | Bobby Hutcherson Oblique CD (1967) Remastered
Power To The People CD music
$8.45 Bobby Hutcherson's second quartet session, Oblique, shares both pianist Herbie Hancock and drummer Joe Chambers with his first, Happenings (bassist Albert Stinson is a newcomer). However, the approach is somewhat different this time around. For starters, there's less emphasis on Hutcherson originals; he contributes only three of the ...
| | Bill Evans Complete Village Vanguard Recordings, 1961 CDs (2005) Remastered
Power To The People music CDs
$20.09
| | Thelonious Monk At Carnegie Hall CD (2005)
Power To The People songs
$13.75
| | Lee Morgan Gigolo CD (1965) Bonus Track; Remastered
Power To The People album
$8.99 More quintessential hard bop from one of the genre's leading figures at the height of his considerable powers as a composer and trumpeter. Morgan had just returned to solo work a year earlier after his second stint with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers; in 1965 the trumpeter also released CORNBREAD and THE RUMPROLLER and did numerous sessions as a sideman. Morgan composed the title track, and three others including the Coots/Gillespie ballad "You Go To My Head" round things out.
"Yes I Can, No You Can't" opens with the rhythm ...
| | Kenny Dorham Jazz Contrasts CD (1957) Remastered
Power To The People CD music
$9.65
| | David Wilcox Underneath CD (1999)
Power To The People music CDs
$15.05 "I know compassion is all out of fashion/And anger is all the rage." So begins singer/songwriter David Wilcox' 13-part story of coming out from under and making it in the modern world. From the daily cynicism of the Alison Krauss-assisted title track to financial struggles ("Never Enough"), human loss ("Prisoner of War"), and the frustrations of the recording industry ("Sex and Music"), Wilcox deals with ...
| | Chris Buzzelli What Goes Around CD (1997)
Power To The People songs
$14.29
| | Artie Shaw Evensong CD (2001)
Power To The People album
$13.49
| | T Rex Electric Warrior CD (1971) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Power To The People CD music
$16.15 Includes liner notes by Nikki Sudden, Cliff McLenehen & Bill Legend.
Includes liner notes by Nikki Sudden, Cliff McLenehan and Bill Legend.
Marc Bolan/Marc Bolan & T. Rex/T. Rex: Marc Bolan (vocals, guitar); Mickey Finn (vocals, percussion).
Prior to ELECTRIC WARRIOR's release, T. Rex (or, as it had mostly been known, Tyrannosaurus Rex) was a folk-rock duo that played acoustic guitar and bongos augmented by the occasional electric and full drum kit. While some of the hippie-prophet philosophy that dominated Tyrannosaurus Rex's music can still be heard here (especially on the dreamy geneology of "Cosmic Dancer"), ELECTRIC WARRIOR, for the most part, represents a revolution in attitude and approach. Singer/songwriter/guitarist ...
| | So You Want To Jive CDs (2005) (Import)
Power To The People music CDs
$15.59
| | Log Cabin Favorites: Vintage Bluegrass & Mountain Ballads CD (2006)
Power To The People songs
$8.99
| | Cootie Stark Raw Sugar CD (2003)
Power To The People album
$18.99 Cootie StarkCootie Stark is one of the last authentic Piedmont blues guitarist/singers alive today. He learned his songs at the feet of the originators of Piedmont Blues - Baby Tate, Pink Anderson, Walter Phelps, Peg Leg Sam and Blind Sammy Doolie. Cootie Stark has a repertoire of 100's of Blues and Gospel songs, making him one of the last direct links to a South long gone. "I've been playing guitar for 50 years," reports Stark, "I started beating on cans before I got a guitar and my mother told me I was singing since I was a baby."Although music was always in the forefront, the life of a transient bluesman is hard on the body and hard on the pocket - after years on the road, Cootie was left with little money and a dwindling audience for the deep-rooted blues that defined his style. In the 1980's, the blind Stark settled into the Woodland Homes Projects in Greenville, NC."By then, the real Piedmont blues was pretty much gone," he says. "All them guys were dead and gone and I wasn't making no headway"In the spring of 1997, Music Maker founder Tim Duffy heard Cootie Stark playing electric guitar and singing Fats Domino songs. Duffy questioned Stark about his knowledge of the old songs and was blown away to find himself face-to-face with a Piedmont Blues original. Within months of hooking up with Duffy, Cootie had a new acoustic guitar and a promising career. Stark has been universally praised in his first years as an international blues figure. His abrasive, percussive guitar style melds with a vocal arsenal that ranges from a roughhewn gospel shout to a tight, pretty vibrato. Both European and American concert-goers have been held captive by Stark's ...
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