My Bloody Valentine - Loveless play album
Rock
Electronic / Hip-hop / Jazz / Rock / Blues / Creative music
Nation Time (1970) Personnel: Joe McPhee (Tenor Saxophone, Trumpet) Otis Greene (Alto Saxophone) Tyrone Crabb (Double Bass, Bass, Trumpet) Dave Jones.
Music Video Distributors (от лица компании "Unheard Music Series, Atavistic"); LatinAutor, LatinAutor - Warner Chappell, Warner Chappell, UBEM" и другие авторские общества (2).
Joe McPhee 컬렉션을 완성하세요. 음 참조: Nation Time, LP, Album, CJR-2. I cannot understand why Bo'Weavil Recordings or whatever other record label do not repress this. 2013년 11월 12일. 신고. 다음 참조: Nation Time, LP, Album, CJR-2. I think it is time for a re-issue on vinyl!
Underground Railroad is a live album by saxophonist and composer Joe McPhee recorded in 1969 at the Holy Cross Monastery and originally released on the CjR label, then reissued by Atavistic in 2001 with a bonus concert from the same venue.
Joe McPhee-tenor and soprano saxophone, trumpet Mike Kull-piano, electric piano Tyrone Crabb-bass, electric bass, trumpet Bruce Thompson-drums, percussion Ernest Bostic-drums, percussion Otis Greene-alto saxophone Herbie Lehman-organ Dave Jones-electric guitar.
Nation Time - Joe McPhee. 2. Shakey Jake - Joe McPhee. 3. Scorpio's Dance - Joe McPhee. The first track ("Nation Time") sets up the listener for whats to come. When I was younger, I first heard this album. Now that I am older, I have new found respect for what has been created. Even today it still has a wonderful freshness that I truely enjoy.
Listen to Nation Time now. Listen to Nation Time in full in the this site app. Play on this site. 2000 Unheard Music Series, Atavistic.
Ernest Bostic, Tyrone Crabb, Mike Kull, Joe McPhee, Bruce Thompson. Track Listing - Disc 2.
CD 16-bit 44,1 kHz. CD 16-bit 44,1 kHz. 01 - Nation Time.
Joe McPhee is often in danger of being at the other pole of what happens to influence without depth and impact without complete understanding of why the paradigmatic expression emerged in the first place. It is ironic that the title of this CD, Nation Time, and the first piece carry a phrase that I first introduced as a political statement animated by the Black Liberation Movement. McPhee, past the cry of Nation Time, tries to stretch his essentially rhythm-and-blues shaped mainstream musical approach into the frenzy and force he identifies with that first call. Still, when he blue screams our old call What Time Is It? which was to be answered by the album’s title, it does put me in mind of more dynamic times. Would that they were more completely expressed in this music.
Jazz
Jazz
Electronic / Jazz
Jazz
Jazz
Jazz
Jazz
Jazz
Jazz
Rock / Blues