Showing 529–540 of 1981 results

Randy Travis – Storms of Life – MoFi 180g Vinyl

£49.95
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Mastered From The Original Analog Tapes And Pressed At Rti For Audiophile Sound
1/2″ / 30 IPS analog master to DSD 256 to analog console to lathe Nobody could have predicted the impact Randy Travis’ proper debut would make on country music when it was released in 1986. Recorded by a virtually unknown singer-songwriter who had once been rejected by every major label, and bolstered by production and arrangements that spotlight Travis’ impeccable vocals, Storms of Lifespurred a stylistic sea change that would soon sweep Nashville and place the North Carolina native at the center of the neotraditionalist movement. More than three decades later, the LP’s brilliance looms larger than ever.

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – First Flight To Tokyo: The Lost 1961 Recordings – Blue Note Records 180g Vinyl

£49.95
A previously unreleased live recording of drum legend Art Blakey with a classic line-up of the Jazz Messengers, featuring trumpeter Lee Morgan, tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter, pianist Bobby Timmons, and bassist Jymie Merritt. It was captured on January 14, 1961, at Hibiya Public Hall in Tokyo during the band’s first-ever tour of Japan. Co-produced by Zev Feldman and David Weiss, the audio was newly transferred from the original 1/4″ tape reels.

Joan Baez – Recently – Analogue Productions 180g Vinyl

£49.95
The title track from Recently is a stunning Joan Baez original, where she boldly answers ex-husband David Harris’ downbeat memoir of the ’60s, Dreams Die Hard, as well as other ’80s revisionists. The track ā€œAsimbognagnaā€ was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Folk Recording.

Eric Dolphy – Outward Bound (Stereo) – Analogue Productions 180g Vinyl

£49.95
Eric Dolphy has sometimes been described as an iconoclast, but in Outward Bound, he was not overturning his idol, Charlie Parker; he was building on Bird’s legacy. So deep was Dolphy’s musicianship, so free his imagination, that he enchanted trailblazers like John Coltrane and Charles Mingus. Partnering in this collection with the brilliant trumpeter Freddie Hubbard and a stunning rhythm section, Dolphy is at a peak of energy and creativity on alto saxophone, bass clarinet, and flute. He and Hubbard work with empathy reminiscent of the young Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. Pianist Jaki Byard, bassist George Tucker, and drummer Roy Haynes were ideal accompanists and co-conspirators in this widely influential work.

McCoy Tyner – Time For Tyner Lp (Blue Note Tone Poet Series) – Blue Note Vinyl

£49.95
The great pianist McCoy Tyner made his Blue Note debut withĀ The Real McCoyĀ in 1967 soon after departing John Coltrane’s quartet and returned to the studio months after Coltrane’s death to recordĀ Tender MomentsĀ with an expanded ensemble featuring a 6-piece horn section. For his 3rd Blue Note dateĀ Time For Tyner, recorded in 1968, the pianist went a different direction by assembling a hornless quartet with vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson, bassist Herbie Lewis, and drummer Freddie Waits. Tyner and Hutcherson’s first recorded encounter came on the vibraphonist’s 1966 Blue Note albumĀ Stick-Up, and here their musical comradery deepened even further.

Sonny Rollins – Rollins Plays For Bird – Analogue Productions 180g (Mono) Vinyl

£49.95
As the tenor sax is not in the same key as an alto,Ā Sonny RollinsĀ would have to transpose a lot of music to take a tribute toĀ Charlie ParkerĀ to a high level. InsteadĀ RollinsĀ has chosen standards associated withĀ Parker, and recorded them within a year afterĀ Bird’s passing.

Arnett Cobb – Ballads By Cobb – Analogue Productions 180g Stereo Vinyl

£49.95
Originally released in November 1960, Ballads by Cobb, as its title suggests, is all slow ballads, putting the emphasis on the Texas tenor’s warm tone.
A Texas tenor player in the tradition of Illinois Jacquet, Arnett Cobb’s accessible playing was between swing and early rhythm & blues. His stomping, robust style earned him the title ā€œWild Man of the Tenor Sax.ā€
Ā 

Duke Ellington – Ellington Indigos – Impex Records 180g Stereo Vinyl

£49.95
Winner of a Gruvy Award, chosen by AnalogPlanet’s editor, Michael Fremer, for vinyl records that are musically and sonically outstanding and are also well mastered and pressed.
An all-analog shot of pure Duke at his most soulfully nocturnal. From the cats who brought you Time Further Out and Friday and Saturday Nights At the Blackhawk. Impex Records is making your nights a little cooler.

Duke Pearson – The Right Touch LP (Blue Note Tone Poet Series) – Blue Note Vinyl

£49.95
Perhaps the perfect starting point for a reappraisal of Duke Pearson’s underrated career is his fantastic and aptly titled 1967 albumĀ The Right Touch. The album stands as perhaps the finest in Pearson’s discography and is a showcase of his sublime talents as a pianist, composer, and arranger.Ā The Right TouchĀ is comprised of six memorable Pearson compositions arranged for a dynamic 8-piece band featuring trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, trombonist Garnett Brown, alto saxophonist James Spaulding, alto saxophonist/flutist Jerry Dodgion, tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine, bassist Gene Taylor, and drummer Grady Tate.

Lee Morgan – Infinity LP (Blue Note Tone Poet Series) – Blue Note Vinyl

£49.95
Just two months after recording his exceptional sextet dateĀ Cornbread, the prolific trumpeter Lee Morgan was back in Van Gelder Studio in November 1965 with a slightly slimmed down—but no less robust—quintet line-up to record his next sessionĀ Infinity, which wouldn’t be first released until 1981. Alto saxophonist Jackie McLean and drummer Billy Higgins—both of whom were featured onĀ Cornbread—were at Morgan’s side once again along with pianist Larry Willisand bassist Reggie Workman for a five-song set that ventured to the far reaches of the hard bop tradition and beyond. Four compelling Morgan originals and McLean’s engaging ballad ā€œPortrait of Dollā€ cover a wide expanse of musical terrain including the probing title track, the laid-back 6/8 groove of ā€œMiss Nettie B,ā€ the intricate interlaced lines of ā€œGrowing Pains,ā€ and the hard-charging closer ā€œZip Code.ā€

Tchaikovsky / Monteux / Boston Symphony – Symphony No 4 – Analogue Products 200g Vinyl

£49.95
Analogue Productions’ RCA Living Stereo Reissue Series No. 2, with 25 newly remastered mainstay classical albums, will delight and astound your ears with their clarity and warm, rich tone. As with our first highly-regarded LSC series, shortcomings of previous editions have been improved upon — from the mastering, to the LP pressing, to the sharp-looking glossy heavyweight Stoughton Printing tip-on jackets that faithfully duplicate the original artwork, ā€œLiving Stereoā€ logo, ā€œShaded Dogā€ label and all!

Big John Patton – Let ‘Em Roll – Blue Note (Tone Poet) 180g Vinyl

£49.95
On 1967's Schizophrenia Shorter arrived at the pinnacle of post-bop and gazed out at the horizons around him. A current of the avant-garde already coursed through his music and the next time he would enter the studio for Blue Note would be for his 1969 fusion exploration Super Nova. But in this moment, he produced one of his most complete and stylistically diverse artistic statements with a sextet of like-minded musical adventurers, including James Spaulding on alto saxophone and flute, Curtis Fuller on trombone, Herbie Hancock on piano, Ron Carter on bass, and Joe Chambers on drums. The six-song set of original compositions includes several of Shorter's most enduring themes including the unforgettable groove of "Tom Thumb," the evocative "Go," and the beautiful ballad "Miyako," as well as Spaulding's churning piece "Kryptonite."