Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Sir Edward (Harold Vick) - "The Power Of Feeling" (1973)




'Keep On Movin' On' excerpt
more previews further down

I gave an overview of the career of saxaphonist/flautist Harold Vick when posting "Don't Look Back" a few weeks ago, which led me to track down the album before that one. Vick hadn't put out an album in five years before releasing "The Power of Feeling" in 1973 under the pseudonym "Sir Edward".

The album came out on Bernard Purdie's short-lived Encounter Records in 1973 - see the base of this post for an (almost complete) label discography.

"The Power of Feeling" seems to have been recorded somewhere between the first and second Compost albums, and can perhaps be seen as an attempt to further some of the commercial ambitions and sonic qualities of Jack DeJohnette's project, albeit more in the "composed" vein of the burgeoning CTI style of accessible jazz-related music than the party funk represented on the Compost albums (particularly the first one, on which Vick seems to be just jamming along).

The following year would see Vick return to more "jazz-rooted" soul-jazz projects like Shirley Scott's "One for Me" and Larry Willis' "Inner Crisis", which would in turn lead to the more intimate and acoustic Vick album "Don't Look Back", but for now he wasn't going to let go of his wah-wah pedal.

SO WHO IS "SIR EDWARD" ?

cover detail from "Commitment" album, 1966/74

While there's still conjecture in some online sources as to whether this actually was Harold Vick, the back cover (above) of Vick's "Commitment" release from 1974 confirms that it's him. I'm still unclear as to why Vick released this under a pseudonym, as it's clearly his own production and arrangements. The inner sleeve contains photos of all band members bar Vick, who's in silhouette on the cover.




"Keep On Movin' on' excerpt

THE ALBUM

The opening track "Keep on Moving On" is denser than the version on the Shirley Scott album, with multi-tracked reeds replacing the call-and-answer of organ and sax in the other version, and guitarist George Davis supplying the requisite Wah-Wah Watsonesque "wakka-wakka".

George Davis


'People Make The World Go Round' excerpt

'Stocking Cap' excerpt

As always, Davis is a strong asset, whether switching into Grant Green-style soul jazz and then psych-funk on tracks like Vick's "Stocking Cap" or fronting on flute for an extended version of "People Make The World Go Round". Although his guitar work can be heard on some early 70s Dizzy Gillespie albums and Lonnie Smith's "Mama Wailer" , this appears to be his first flute date since Joe Zawinul's 1970 self-titled album. (More on Davis at the base of the Mike Longo post).

Joe Bonner

The other strong presence here is keyboardist Joe Bonner, fresh off a series of Pharoah Sanders' albums - "Black Unity", "Live at the East" and "Village Of The Pharoahs". This appears to be his first rhodes recording, but he switches to electric with aplomb, instantly understanding the different dynamics and referencing Hancock-like patterns in his solo work.


'Peace K.D.' excerpt

Bonner switches to acoustic piano for what is probably my favourite track, "Peace, K.D.", a dedication to trumpeter Kenny Dorham, who had died in December of 1972. It's a beautiful modal piece that starts out like a "Prince Of Peace" Sanders-style song - if Leon Thomas were to suddenly begin yodelling it wouldn't feel at all out of place. Starting with some textured and panned piano string scrapes, Vick and Davis build melancholy flute harmonies over Bonner's colour swathes, while Vick contributes some of his most sensitive playing here with a soprano sax overdub.


Harold Vick himself is a mixed bag on this album. His best work comes when he's on raw sax or flute and fully in control of his dynamics - few reed players can get such sensitive detail in their phrasing. However, on tracks like "Rocky Mount Willie" he often sets up the main melodies through electric wah-wah sax, and he's not fully at ease with integrating wah-wah rhythms and frequency shifts in his patterns - there's no subtlety to his footwork as he pushes the pedal all the way, every time, on evenly-spaced sixteenth notes or triplets.

Nevertheless, the difficulties of incorporating extra limbs as a musician are not to be under-estimated. Can I tell a funny story?

Eight years ago I was working for a few days in a New York studio, and the producer asked me to play the drumkit so he could check the mics. Although I play keys, guitar and percussion, if you get me to play anything with my feet as well, it falls apart after a few bars. The engineer was on the phone while we were checking, then afterwards he told me that the drummer from the "David Letterman Show" had been on the phone, and had asked "who the f#@k is that on the drums?"

Anyways back to the album - while there's some great stuff here, there are some fairly unimaginative readings of "Where Is The Love" and "Betcha by Golly Wow", in which Vick sticks much too closely to the original melodic/harmonic structures, despite some good solo work from Davis on the former and Bonner on the latter.

Jumma Santos

Vick brought percussionist Jumma Santos from the Compost sessions. Santos, who contributes a variety of instruments here, had also recently worked on albums by Roy Ayers, Larry Young, Marion Brown and Noah Howard. He'd started the decade with two heavy credits : playing percussion on Miles Davis' "Bitches Brew" and appearing with Jimi Hendrix at Woodstock.

Omar Clay

Vick had worked with the other percussionist Omar Clay on Joe Chambers' "The Almoravid" in 1971 and Johnny Hammond's "Wild Horses Rock Steady" in 1972. Clay had also played on albums by Gene Harris and Marlena Shaw the year before.

David Lee

This is turning into a yearbook parade, hey? Drummer David Lee is the head of the school's chess club - no that's not true - he had worked with George Davis on both the "Zawinul" album and Dizzy Gillespie's "The Real Thing", as well as appearing on albums by Sonny Rollins and Lonnie Liston Smith.

Wilbur Bascomb Jr.

Busy bassist Wilbur Bascomb Jr. had just made an album called "Black Grass Music" with his band Bad Bascomb, and a renowned funk 45 called "Just a Groove in G" which was famously sampled in DJ Shadow's "The Number Song" from "Entroducing".

Bascomb had also recently played on Roy Ayers' "Change Up The Groove", Ellerine Harding's "Ellerine", Marlena Shaw's "From the depths of my soul", Lightning Rod's "Hustler's Convention", and Ronnie Foster's "Sweet Revival".

Victor Gaskin

Finally, bassist Victor Gaskin made his name on a series of Cannonball Adderley albums, such as "74 Miles Away", and had worked recently on Hal Galper's "Guerilla Band", Barry Miles' "White Heat" and Oliver Nelson's "Swiss Suite".

Technical note : This is not the best quality piece of vinyl I've ever come across - it's mostly OK, but there's some slight distortion on the flute in a few sections of "People Make The World go Round" which I couldn't clear up.

Anyway I hope you enjoy this one, comments would be appreciated. Check further down for details, and Encounter Records and Harold Vick discographies.

TRACKLIST

Tracks are ordered differently on the covers and on the vinyl/labels.
I've put them in the vinyl/labels order.


01 'Keep On Moving On' - 4:28 - (Harold Vick - not credited here)
02 'Where Is The Love' - 4:04 - (Bill Salter / Ralph McDonald)
03 'People Make The World Go Around' - 6:28 - (Thomas Bell / Linda Creed)
04 'Stocking Cap' - 5:47 - (Sir Edward)
05 'Rocky Mount Willie' - 4:26 - (Sir Edward)
06 'Betcha By Golly Wow' - 6:15 - (Thomas Bell / Linda Creed)
07 'Peace, K.D.' (dedication to the late Kenny Dorham) - 8:22 - (Sir Edward)

MUSICIANS

Sir Edward (Harold Vick) - tenor, soprano and alto saxaphones; electric sax with wah-wah; flute.
Joe Bonner - fender rhodes (1-6); piano (7)
George Davis - guitar (1-7); flute (3,7)
Wilbur Bascomb Jr. - bass (4,7)
Victor Gaskin - bass (1-3, 5-6)
David Lee - drums
Jumma Santos - bongoes (2); conga (1,3,5); percussion (7)
Omar Clay - marimba (3); vibes (1,4); percussion (5); tambourine (6)

PRODUCTION DETAILS

Recorded at Venture Sound Studios, Somerville, New Jersey.
Recorded at Studio 914
Produced and arranged by Sir Edward
Executive Producer - Lloyd Price
Engineer and remix - Edward Stasium
Assistant - Dave Domanich
Engineers - Lewis Lahav and Larry Alexander
Mastering Engineer - Dave Crawford
Mastering at Generation Sound
Mixing Engineer - Tony May
Photographs by Chuck Stewart
Design by Steve Malinchoc for L&S Graphics


Thanks to George Kerr for his help and inspiration.

There's music in the sighting of a reed;
There's music in the gushing of a rill;
There's music in all things, if man had ears
Their earth is but an echo of the spheres.
- Byron, Don Juan, XV


ENCOUNTER RECORDS DISCOGRAPHY

Label run by Bernard Purdie, all releases 1973.

EN 3001 Sands Of Time - "Profile" - donated by Vpex
EN 3002 East Coast - "East Coast" also at Never Enough Rhodes
EN 3003 Frank Owens - "Brown N Serve" donated by Vpex
EN 3004 Sir Edward - "The Power Of Feeling" in comments here

HAROLD VICK -DISCOGRAPHY


1963 "Steppin' Out" at
Ile Oxumaré
1964 rejected Blue Note sessions May 27th
1966 "Straight Up" at
Call It Anything
1966 "The Caribbean Suite" at
Orgy in Rhythm
1967 "Commitment" (released 1974) also at Never Enough Rhodes
1967 "Watch What Happens" also at Never Enough Rhodes
1973 "Power of Feeling" (Vicks as "Sir Edward") in comments here
1974 "Don't Look Back" also at Never Enough Rhodes
1977 "After The Dance" at My Jazz World

HAROLD VICK - SIDEMAN DISCOGRAPHY

The epic sideman discography, with links, can now be found at the "Don't Look Back" post.

POST CREDITS

Vinyl rip n' scans by Simon666

Apart from the albums in the discographies, album links within the post go to :

Orgy in Rhythm, My Jazz World, Ile Oxumaré, Funky Disposition, My Favourite Sound, Oufar Khan, Happy as a Fat rat in a Cheese Factory, The Heat Warps, Pharoah’s Dance, Flying Dutchman, Beeq, The Shad Shack, Baby Grandpa, Everything is on the One, All For the CTI, Nothing Is v 2.0, 4 Brothers Beats, This Is Tomorrow, Jazz & Beyond, Musical Schizophrenia, Blaxploitation Jive, blog–o-blog, TC's Old and New Music, and Here Only Good Music for All.


Please thank and support these bloggers and those in the discographies if you click through and download.


WAV/MP3 in COMMENTS

Sunday, October 26, 2008

India Navigation launches

It's busy DJ day for me today, check back in a day or two for some Harold Vick, but for now a recommendation :

El Goog Ja runs one of the best jazz blogs on the internet and always astounds us with the rare gems he comes up with.

Now he's joined the jazz label madness and launched India Navigation, which you can check out by clicking the pic below, or you can find it anytime in the "jazz labels" section at the right.
Go for it El Goog!


Friday, October 24, 2008

Ahmad Jamal - "Freeflight" (1971) & discography




'Effendi' excerpt


'Manhattan Reflections' excerpt

wav/mp3 in comments

I talked about this album - Ahmad Jamal's first on which he played the fender rhodes - in the context of the "Steppin Out With A Dream" post the other week, so have a read at that link about where it sits in his career. I was a little disappointed with the quality of the available rip that I'd linked to in the discography, so thought I would upload my own copy.

It's recorded live at the Montreux Jazz Festival in July 1971. In the tracks "Effendi" and "Manhattan Reflections", Jamal establishes the main themes on acoustic piano then begins to solo on rhodes. He's somewhat enamoured with the instrument's on-board tremelo/LFO (the "pulsing" effect) and you can hear drummer Frank Gant setting complex snare drum patterns against the effect.

The dense, mid-range clouds of rhodes chords allow space for bassist Jamil Suleiman Nasser to improvise in his upper range. Jamal returns to the piano for more percussive sections and theme reprisals.
Apart from the two rhodes tracks, there's a nice cover of Herbie Hancock's "Dolphin Dance", and an extended version of one of Jamal's best-known tracks, "Poinciana".


Note that the Jamal blog discography (copied again below) has expanded since that last post, thanks to some uploads by Wallofsound from Inconstant Sol, and also reader Art Simon.

TRACKLIST

01 'Introduction' (0:53)
02 'Effendi' (11:27
) - McCoy Tyner
03 'Dolphin Dance' (4:48) - Herbie Hancock
04 'Manhattan Reflections' (10:00)
- Ahmad Jamal
05 'Poinciana' (11:28) -
B. Bernier, M. Lliso, N. Simon

MUSICIANS

Piano, Fender Rhodes - Ahmad Jamal
Bass - Jamil Sulieman
Drums - Frank Gant

PRODUCTION

Impulse AS-9217
Producers - Ed Michel, Ahmad Jamal

Recording Engineers - Stephen Sulke, Carlos Olms
Recorded in performance at the Montreux Jazz Festival. July 1971

AHMAD JAMAL DISCOGRAPHY from Blogopolis

1951-55 "The Legendary Okeh & Epic Sessions" (APE) at
vzdora.net / alternative
1951-55 "Poinciana" (compilation) at farofa moderna

1955 "Chamber music of the New Jazz" donated by Green (thanks!)

1958 "Ahmad's Blues" at Musica desde las antipodas
1958 "The Legendary Ahmad Jamal Trio Live" at
vzdora.net / alternative
1958-61 "Cross Country Tour" (Argo comp, FLAC) at
CIA Contributions #5
1958 "At the Pershing" Vol 1/2 in comp at
My Jazz World
1958 "At The Pershing/But Not for Me" (APE) at
Your Track Music Club
1958 "At the Pershing / But Not For Me" (MP3) at
Musica En Harmonia group / alternative / alternative
1958 "Live at the Pershing and the Spotlight Club" at Musical Moadom
1959 "Jamal At The Penthouse" (MP3) at
Musica Desde Las Antipodas
1959 "Jamal At The Penthouse" (FLAC) at Call It Anything
1961 "Alhambra" at
Musica En Harmonia group
1961 "Ahmad Jamal at the Blackhawk" at
My Jazz World (in comp.)
1962 "Macanudo" at
My Jazz World / alternative / alternative
1963 "Naked City Theme" at
CIA Contributions #3
(both MP3 and FLAC in above thread, two entries)
1965 "Rhapsody" (MP3) at My Favourite Sound
1965 "Rhapsody" (FLAC) at CIA Contributions #4
1965 "Extensions" donated by Trevor
1965 "The Roar of theGreaspaint, the Smell of the Crowd" at Sun Ship
1966 "Heatwave" at My My Jazz World
1967 "Alhambra" at Best of Both Worlds
1967 "Cry Young" at Sun Ship
1967 "Standard Eyes" at My My Jazz World
1968 "Tranquility" (FLAC) at
Call It Anything
1968 "The Bright, The Blue and The Beautiful" at Sun Ship
1969 "At The Top : Poinciana Revisited" at The Musik Lounge
1970 "The Awakening" (MP3) at Oufar Khan / alternative
1970 "The Awakening" (FLAC) at Flaclossless or CIA
1971 "Freeflight" in comments here
1971 "Outertimeinnerspace" (MP3) at My Jazz World
1971 "Outertimeinnerspace" (FLAC) at
Call it Anything
1972 "Inspiration" (comp of 65-68 material) at My Jazz World
1973 "Ahmad Jamal 73" at My Jazz World
1974 "Jamal Plays Jamal" at Baby Grandpa
1974 "Jamalca" rapidshare or mediafire
1976 "Live At Oil Can Larry's" at
Pharoah's Dance
1976 "Steppin out with a Dream" also on this blog

1978 "One" also on this blog
1979 "Intervals" also on this blog
1980 "Night Song" donated by Trevor
1980 "Genetic Walk" at My Jazz World
1980 "Live at Bubba's" (FLAC) at CIA Contributions #4
1985 "Digital Works" at Inconstant Sol
1987 "Crystal" (APE) at
vzdora.net / alternative / alternative
1989 "Pittsburgh" (FLAC) at
Call it Anything
1989 "Pittsburgh" at
Musica En Harmonia group
1992 "Blues Alley" at
Musica Desde Las Antipodas
1992 "Chicago Revisited : Live at Joe Segal's Jazz Showcase" at CIA
1995 "I Remember Duke, Hoagy & Strayhorn" at vzdora.net / alternative
1996 "The Essence, Pt. 1" donated by Art Simon. Thanks!
1998 "Nature : the Essence pt. 3" at Musica En Harmonia group
1998 "Ahmad Jamal With the Assai Quartet" at Inconstant Sol
1999 "Live In Germany" (bootleg) at Bogard's Jazztapes
2000 "Ahmad Jamal Trio and George Coleman" (Zurich) at Ubu Roi
2001 "Live at Jazz Baltica" (bootleg) at Kingcake Krypt
2002 "In Search Of Momentum" MP3 at Musica Desde Las Antipodas
2002 "In Search Of Momentum" FLAC at Call It Anything
2003 'Live In Paris" (APE)
at vzdora.net / alternative / alternative
2008 "It's Magic" at Jazz a Gogo / alternative

MISCELLANEOUS

Ahmad Jamal Samples (4 volumes)
at
T.R.O.Y. or SL Saico
originals and hip hop flips

WAV / MP3 in COMMENTS
(wav #3 in comment #49)

Thursday, October 23, 2008

Roy Ayers - "Coffy" (1973)

WAV / MP3 in COMMENTS

Boomp3.com
Boomp3.com
Boomp3.com



'priscilla's theme' excerpt

(I'll replace the other dead previews later , arrgghhh ... )

I'm posting this album because :

1. I'm really excited that I'm going to see vibraphone player, singer, writer, producer and all-round-legend Roy Ayers perform live tomorrow night. (edit: review in comments)

2. I just helped out the guys over at Blaxploitation Jive/Pride with their Ayers discography, so wanted to alert you to the possibility of another 37 Roy Ayers links.

3. It's really good ...

This is a great film soundtrack that Ayers made with his Ubiquity band and special guests like Cecil Bridgewater and Dee Dee Bridgewater. Arrangements are by Ayers and his regular keyboardist Harry Whitaker (also of "Black Renaissance" fame).

Enjoy!

TRACKLIST
01 Coffy Is The Color (2:58)
02 Priscilla's Theme (3:53)
03 King George (2:55)
04 Aragon (2:52)
05 Coffy Sauna (2:13)
06 King's Last Ride (1:05)
07 Coffy Baby (2:23)
08 Brawling Broads (2:40)
09 Escape (2:14)
10 Shining Symbol (3:49)
11 Exotic Dance (3:14)
12 Making Love (2:45)
13 Vittroni's Theme - King Is Dead (1:58)
14 End Of Sugarman (1:04)

MUSICIANS
Vibraphone, Vocals (1 & 3) - Roy Ayers
Acoustic and Electric Bass - Richard Davis
Drums - Dennis Davis
Flugelhorn - Cecil Bridgewater
Guitar - Billy Nichols , Bob Rose
Electric Piano, Organ, Harpsichord, Piano - Harry Whitaker
Congas, Bongos, Percussion - William King
Strings - Emanuel Vardi , Harry Lookofsky , Irving Spice , Peter Dimitriades
Trombone - Garnett Brown , Wayne Andre
Trumpet - Jon Faddis
Vocals (1 & 7) - Dee Dee (Denise) Bridgewater
Vocals (1 & 10) - Wayne Garfield

PRODUCTION
Producer, conductor, composer - Roy Ayers
Lyrics to 1, 3, 10 by Carl Clay
Lyrics to 7 by Roselle Weaver
Arranged By - Harry Whitaker , Roy Ayers
Recorded at Sound Ideas Studio, NYC
Engineer and Mix Engineer - George Klabin

POST CREDITS

Rip by Simon666
Link in post to "Black Renaissance" @
Blog - O - Blog.

ROY AYERS DISCOGRAPHY
with links at Blaxploitation Jive.


WAV / MP3 links in COMMENTS

Obama interrupts McCain



Local Sydney guy, Hugh Atkin, edits audio and video in his spare time. 1.7 million hits on youtube but I thought I'd spread it around in case you missed it ... I love the reaction shots from McCain and the individual crowd members ...

Perhaps the best yet example of rickrolling.

12 more days ...

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Yusef Lateef - "The African-American Epic Suite" for quintet & orchestra (1993)



A very different Yusef Lateef piece from the last post - a dark conceptual work for quintet and orchestra from 1993. We'll get the composer to explain :

Yusef Lateef said :




1st movement excerpt

1st Movement :
The African as Non American


As this movement opens you are taken back in time, about three hundred years, to the continent of West Africa. You imagine that you are listening to the music of Yoruba, Hausa, Akan, Ewe, Senufa, Benin, Dahomey, Ebo or Ashanti people, etcetera. In other words, you are listening to a music which has its historical roots in the soil of Africa.

In the 20th measure the violins enter on the note of D flat, one octave above high C. Programmatically the violins represent the first slave ships, stealthily approaching the shore of West Africa. The high D flat continues, gradually increasing in volume and intensity. by teh 58th measure the D flat has reached an alarming medium forte. In the 59th measure the slavers land and commence to capture the Africans. At this instant the calmness, serenity and calculated capriciousness of the African music is disturbed.

Now, fright, flight, cacaphony and mayhem can be heard in the music. The rest of the movement reflects the futile efforts of the Africans desperately tying to avoid the chains and shackles of the relentless slavers, ending with the bassoon sounding the nine note motif that signals the unknown future of the captives.


2nd movement excerpt

2nd Movement:
The Middle Passage and Transmutation

This movement opens with a dirge like passage which denotes the captives being stabilised in the bowels of the slave ship, with chains and unyielding leg irons. Sounds of pain are heard at intervals throughout the movement. Physical suffering and thoughts of sadness burdened with bewilderment rack the bodies and tax the minds of the captives during the middle passage, as well, tender thoughts and supplications of prayer for their families left behind pour forth from their tongues and hearts between the frequent moments of anguish and excruciating pain endured during the middle passage.

The motif, in a different context, sounds again near the end of this movement, which are followed by African exclamations, that are neither happy nor sad, at the sight of land - America - the new world, from which comes a new kind of human being (a trans-mutation), the African American.


3rd movement excerpt

3rd Movement
Love For All

Since the Great Awakening of the early nineteenth century it was realized by most of the known world that the African American reflected spirituality, love and a deep sense of compassion in his/her music; therefore, the 3rd movement reflects as deeply as the composer. Conductor and musicians are able to emit through musical sounds : compassion and love for all mankind.


4th movement excerpt

4th Movement
Freedom

The opening nine chords of the 4th movement, accompanied by the side-blown Chinese flute heralds the freedom of the African American academic and artistic expression, which actually began in earnest after the abolition of slavery, and has continued to blossom consistently even to this day, by the grace of God. This movement in essence, reflects this evolution beginning in the early sixties through 1993.
All praise is to god.

Simon adds :

I came across a reference to an essay by David Pope, an ex-student of Lateef, called "Diverse Compositional Techniques in Yusef Lateef's African American Epic Suite "First Movement - The African as Non-American" , from a journal called ex tempore, A Journal of Compositional and Theoretical Research in Music (Vol. IX/2: Spring/Summer 1999). I didn't have any luck getting in without the correct academic passwords, but I did manage to extract the images, three pages from Lateef's score for the first movement :

Cover scans and liner notes are available in the downloads, see the comments.

TRACKLIST

01 1st Movement : The African as Non-American - 6:16
02 2nd Movement : Transmutation - 12:40
03 3rd movement : Love For All - 11:46
04 4th Movement : Freedom - 15:22

Total Playing time 46:08

MUSICIANS

Yusef Lateef - T
enor Saxaphone, Germanic Flute, Alto Flute, Indian Flute, Bamboo Flutes, Indian temple flute, moan flute, Algaita, Shannie

Cologne Radio Orchestra (Kölner Rundfunkorchester) - Group

David de Villiers - Director (orchestra)

Eternal Wind - Performers :

Ralph Jones - Tenor and Soprano saxaphones, Flute, Bass Clarinet, Hichiriki, Bamboo Flutes

Charles Moore - Dumbek, Flugelhorn, Shofar, Conch Shells

Frederico Ramos - Acoustic and Elecric Guitars, Gimbri

Adam Rudolph - small percussion, cymbals, drums, bells, gong, tabla, didjiridoo, whistles, udu clay drums, hand drums, kalgu, kalngu (talking drum)

PRODUCTION

Recorded October 25 - November 3, 1993 at WDR Cologne.
Ulrich Kurth - Producer, Liner Notes
Helmut Büttner - Sound Supervision
Hermann Kaldenhoff - Recording engineer
Greg Calby - Digital Mastering, Sterling Sound New York.
Irene Van Dreyke - Sound Technician
Greg Calby - Digital Mastering, Sterling Sound New York.
Timo Kirves - Photography
MohrDesign, Köln - artwork
Ein Aufnahme des West-deutschen Rundfunks Köln



YUSEF LATEEF blog discography

'Morning - The Savoy Sessions' at Hook's Gems
"The Last Savoy Sessions" (2000) at Lost Soul or Avaxhome
(includes : 'Prayer to the East" (1957); 'Jazz and the Sounds of Nature (1957); 'The Dreamer" (1959); 'The Fabric of jazz" (1959).
1955 'Yusef Lateef with Donald Byrd'
at Musica Desde Las Antipodas
1957 'Before Dawn' at Jazzdisposition or AxaxHome
1957 'Jazz Mood" at AvaxHome
1957 "Jazz For the Thinker"
at Musica Desde Las Antipodas
1957 "Prayer to the East" at Musica Desde Las Antipodas
1957 "Plays for Lovers' at Daytime Lovers
1957 'The Sounds of Yusef" at Taringa or Jazzagogo
1957 "Other Sounds" at KingCake Crypt / alternate
1958 'Lateef at Cranbrook' at Orgy in Rhythm
1959 "Cry! Tender' (FLAC) at CIA
1959 "Cry! Tender" (MP3) at Lakasafunk / alternate
1959 "The Dreamer" at
Musica Desde Las Antipodas
1959 'Beautiful Flowers" at Jazzdisposition
1960 'Three Faces of Yusef Lateef' (MP3) at Jazz En la Web or AvaxHome
1960 'The Three Faces Of Yusef Lateef' (FLAC) at CIA
1960 "The Centaur and the Phoenix" @ Avax
1960 'Lost in Sound' aka 'Outside Blues' @ Hook's Gems
1961 "Eastern Sounds (FLAC) at CIA
1961 "Eastern Sounds" (MP3) at Somewhere I have Never travelled
1961 "with Mingus at Birdland" (radio broadcast) at Inconstant Sol
1963 "Jazz 'Round The World" donated by Trevor
/ alternate / alternate
1964 'Club Date' at Orgy in Rhythm
1964 'Psychicemotus' at seventeen green buicks / alternate
1964 'Live at Peps' Vol 1 at Marramua or Avaxhome or Kingcake Krypt
1964 'Live at Pep's Vol. 2" at Radiodada or Avaxhome
or Kingcake Krypt
1965 'The Golden Flute' (MP3) at Orgy in Rhythm / alternate
1965 'The Golden Flute' (FLAC) at CIA
1965 '1984' donated by Trevor
1966 'A flat, G flat and C' at Daytime Lovers
/ alternate
1968 'The Blue Yusef Lateef' at Voodoo Child / alternate
1969 'Yusef Lateef's Detroit' at Marramua / alternate
1969 "The Diverse Yusef Lateef" at M13.com.ua / alternate
1972 "The Gentle Giant" donated by Corvimax / alternate
1973 'Hush n' Thunder' at My Favourite Sound / alternate
1974 "Part of the Search" at Musica Desde Las Antipodas / alternate
1975 'Ten Years Hence' at Orgy in Rhythm
1976 'The Doctor Is In .. and Out" at My Favourite Sound / alternate
1978 'Autophysiopsychic' at All For the CTI
1979 'In a Temple Garden' at My Jazz World
/ alternate
1993 "The African-American Suite" in comments here
1995 "The World at Peace" (Adam Rudolph and Yusef Lateef)
2005 "Influence" - Belmondo/Lateef donated by Corvimax / alternate

2006 - Festival Jazz de Cully, March 26, Chapiteau, Cully (CH) - at Jazz Bootlegs
2007 "Live In New York" donated by Corvimax (thanks!)


POST CREDITS
CD rip by Simon666