Showing posts with label jazz funk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jazz funk. Show all posts

Monday, July 21, 2025

various artists - Mojo Presents: Heavy Mod

What the hell do I know about the Mods? Not much; something about Vespas and amphetamine and soul music. Youth culture, loving the blues and jazz, preceding the skins. They made a few movies about 'em. I know a lot more about the mod revival (White Trash Soul recently posted some Purple Hearts demos that are just out of sight) due to its proximity to punk and 2 Tone. So I take this 17-year-old compilation's title with a grain of salt. Is this indeed "Heavy Mod"?

Well, look; I have no clue if the 13th Floor Elevators and David Axelrod were getting played on the same turntables as the Small Faces, the Who, and the Yardbirds. But as with all the Mojo freebies I've gotten, this one works for me. I really dig the sequencing here; there's a real flow present that stood out to me as I listened for the first time in a long time. I'd say this one hews closer to the sort of mix CD you aspire to make for a friend than the typical "free with magazine purchase" giveaway.

It's clearly a Phil Alexander joint. You get a good mix AND a really nice explanation why these were grouped together in the liner notes. It's something I've been missing on the few Mojo releases from 2023 & 2024 that I've turned up recently.

Click here to download.

Thursday, June 12, 2025

various artists - Classic Jazz Funk Volume One

The whole point of this blog is to share the out-of-print, the cheaply-acquired, the nearly-forgotten. This, the first of three volumes of MVP/React's Classic Jazz Funk series, falls under the the third category.

And, by that, I don't mean the artists appearing herein. I assume you can stream Herbie Hancock's "Cantaloupe Island" or Roy Ayers' "Running Away" just about anywhere, so the out-of-print part doesn't really apply. As for cheaply acquired? Well, I bit the bullet, having already owned and shared copies of Volumes Two & Three, and plunked down $3.99 plus shipping for this copy. Not quite the dollar bin fare I live to share here, although it's less than I ever spent seeing Fugazi, so there you go.

No, it's the nearly-forgotten that I think best applies here. Are the crate diggers still on the hunt for old Flying Dutchman pressings? What do the kids know about Tom Browne? Ronnie Laws? Shit, do they even fuck with George Benson? Is Groove Holmes just a deep cut Beastie Boys reference to folks today?

Look, it is geting hot as hell out here. Even the PNW was nearing 90 this weekend. But when the darkness comes around 9pm these days, this is the perfect cooldown soundtrack, a perfect play at the pool to get the people amorous and have the trainspotters say, "oh, shit, I know that sample!"

Click here to download.

Thursday, January 30, 2025

David Axelrod - 1968 To 1970: An Anthology

I wrote about David Axelrod last year, a nifty little piece of writing that I'm pretty happy with. So there's no need to revisit how I got to my fandom; just some words to talk about where it's going.

This is the first anthology Stateside put out, back in 1999. Like its successor, it covers Axelrod's three solo records for Capitol, along with tracks from Lou Rawls and Cannonball Adderly. The difference here are a pair of cuts Axelrod produced for South African singer Letta Mbutu, someone who I'd never heard before and whose music probably bears the least amount of production fingerprint on it. There are also two songs from the Electric Prunes, who once had too much to dream last night, but here contribute from their final record on Reprise, 1968's "Release Of An Oath". It's bonkers how great these cuts are; psychedelic liturgies from Christian and Jewish traditions. It's holy music like Coltrane's finest; imaginative, cutting edge, totally unlike anything else happening at the same time.

What can I say? I like it. It never leaves my phone.

Click here to download.

Thursday, May 16, 2024

David Axelrod - Anthology II

You start with Terminator X, with a tape you bought in Quebec City in 1992 and hid the entire trip home from your grandparents, and work within a year backwards to "Grandmaster Flash On The Wheels Of Steel". From there, you jog sideways to Grand Masters Kaz and Theodore on the "Wild Style" soundtrack. You sprint forward to chase everyone on "Masters of the 1s & 2s", and you end up with Coldcut, Invisibl Scratch Piklz, DJ Shadow, which takes you into Solesides/Quannum, Deltron 3030, and the guy whose sound underpins much of it: David Axelrod.

Soul-funk and jazz-funk were, when I was a kid, fucking jokes, the realm of bare-chested hipsters with Fu Manchus and perms, stinking of cologne and dusted with cocaine. But to view both genres through that stereotype is like saying Judaism is all space lasers and blood libels; it just ain't true. They're black as fuk, harder than hell, proto-hip hop that just grooved so hard. And David Axelrod's production fingerprints were all over it. I thought I'd written about him before, but it sure seems not to be the case. In addition to his solo work, most of which has been reissued by Now-Again over the past ten years, he produced so many standout records for Capitol in the 60s and 70s. Lou Rawls, Cannonball and Nat Adderly, Stan Kenton, Willie Tee; these, along with his solo work, make up a body of work that still isn't fully acknowledged by any but the deeper crate diggers.

Alright, I've waxed poetic enough. I like David Axelrod. I like his stuff a lot. It seems like a real miss that so many of his records, even the inconsistent ones, remain out of print. This anthology came out in the UK in 2002, I'm guessing it was to ride off the attention brought by his self-titled record on Mo'Wax that came out the year before. This one has a pair of stone-cold Lou Rawls classics, two from Cannonball Adderly, two from actor David McCallum that are pretty great, and, of course, a bunch of cuts from Axelrod's three Capitol releases. Listen for yourself. I won't fault you for unbuttoning your shirt down to your navel and pouring some brown liquor.

Click here to download.

Tuesday, April 25, 2023

various artists - Classic Jazz Funk Volume Two

I don't love this as much as I do Volume 3, but I do dig this. There's some good-ass Blue Note catalog here (Grant Green, Lou Donaldson, Donald Byrd), an all-time slammer from Roy Ayers, and some early period Kool & The Gang. Esther Phillips leads things off with her version of Gil-Scott Heron's "Home Is Where The Hatred Is"; Ramsey Lewis covers Bob Dylan, and Benny Golson wraps things up with an update to his standard "Killer Joe".

Everything here slaps hard, is what I'm saying.

Discogs


Click here to download.

Friday, December 9, 2022

various artists - Classic Jazz Funk Volume Three

A lesson in cognitive dissonance and prejudice:

"Jazz funk" has always been a bit of a punchline in my house, going back to being a kid, and my mom's best friend's husband being snickered at for his fandom (and prog rock, too). And, to borrow a term from another culture, it has such poncy connotations. It stinks of pipe smoke and open shirts down to the belly button and fart-smelling virtuosity and gatekeeping and every 70s excess, not to mention white dudes co-opting Black and Latin culture. It was damned near the worst, personified (rightly or wrongly) by Ron Burgundy playing jazz flute in "Anchorman". Just fucking obnoxious.

And yet! I got a promo of this, the final volume in a long running series of Polygram/EMI deep catalog comps, when it came out in '97. I held onto it because I knew Alice Coltrane and Pharoah Sanders from their shared association with the Master himself. I'm glad I did, because every track here is a full-blown banger. Drawing from the likes of the Impulse!, Blue Note, A&M, CTI, and Columbia catalogs, there's a wealth of great tracks from great artists, a veritable crate digger's delight of cuts. It's the first chance to hear "Nautilus" outside of a sample, the first time I'd ever experienced Roy Ayers and Donald Byrd, This one is sneaky good if you can get past your own hang-ups.

Discogs


Click here to download.

Read This One

Post #400: Double Dagger - Ragged Rubble

It took from May to August 2000 to go from 100 to 200 posts. Then I hit 300 posts two days before Christmas 2000. And now I'm here, anot...

People Liked These