What are you listening to in 2021 and why might anyone be interested

George Benson + Earl Klugh Collaboration / 2014 Warner / EU version of Japan CD / 8122795720

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Annie Lennox, nostalgia. Different from her Eurythmics days and just as if not more enjoyable. :relaxed:

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Rolling Stones - Still Life

Vinyl.

A happy memory of a hot, London afternoon and evening in 1982.

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Some angry chaps on vinyl to start the day off with.

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Gloria Estefan, great hits. I loved her songs so much, her unmistakeable voice so much when I was younger. Feel like listening to this today. :partying_face:

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Snarky Puppy Immigrance / 2019 GroundUP / EU CD / 193483246949

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Bill Callahan Dream River

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Bobbie Gentry, patchwork. My fav Bobbie Gentry album. :smiling_face_with_three_hearts:

I frankly can’t remember from whom I learnt about this album. Thank you everyone for all your suggestions. :wink:

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Curtis Mayfield Curtis

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The Carpenters, now & then. Playing this because drums in most of the tracks are said to be played by Karen. Omg, I really don’t need any reason at all. :relieved:

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Larry Carlton Sleepwalk / 2014 Warner / Japan CD / WPCR 28051

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Streaming…anticipating a forthcoming Acoustic Sounds Series LP

AllMusic Review by Thom Jurek

In 1965 and 1966 tenor giant Sonny Rollins issued three albums for the Impulse label. They would be his last until 1972 when he re-emerged on the scene from a self-imposed retirement. This date is significant for the manner in which Rollins attacks five standards with a quartet that included pianist Ray Bryant, bassist Walter Booker and drummer Mickey Roker. Rollins, who’s been recording for RCA and its Bluebird subsidiary, had spent the previous three years (after emerging from his first retirement) concentrating on standards and focusing deeply on intimate, intricate aspects of melody and harmony. He inverts the approach here, and digs deeply into pulse and rhythm and leaving melody to take care of itself. This is not a “new thing” date but instead focuses on playing according to the dictates of the rhythm section and on interchanging with Booker and Roker, leaving much of the melodic aspect of these tunes to Bryant. Rollins could never quite leave the melody out of anything he played because of his intense gift as a lyrical improviser; he nonetheless stripped his approach back and played tunes like “On Green Dolphin Street” by improvising according to theme rather than strict melody, where his interplay with the rhythm section becomes based on the dynamic and shifting times played by Roker. While things are more intimate and straight on “Everything Happens to Me,” he nonetheless plays the edges, filling the space like a drummer. Melody happens throughout, the tune is recognizable, but it is stretched in his solo to a theme set by the shimmering cymbals and brushed snare work of Roker. The oddest cuts in the set are the last two; spaced out readings of “Blue Room,” and “Three Little Words”; they sound as if he were preparing the listener for a true change in his approach. Melody gets inverted, with spaces and syncopation taking the place of notes. The swing is inherent in everything here, but it’s clear that the saxophonist was hearing something else in his head, the way he squeezes notes tightly into some phrases where they might be placed elsewhere, and substitutes small, lithe lines inside Bryant’s solos which dictate the harmonic intervals more conventionally with his singing approach. And speaking of rhythm, the album’s hinge piece is the burning calypso "Hold “Em Joe.” Here again, as Bryant’s changes play it straight, Rollins shoves his horn inside them and draws out the beat on his horn over and over again. As strange and beautiful as this record sounds, it would have been wonderful if he had chosen to explore this track on his later records, but that restless spirit was already moving onto something else, as evidenced by his next offering, which were his original compositions for the film Alfie with arrangements by Oliver Nelson. If anything, Sonny Rollins on Impulse! feels as if it were a recording Rollins had to get out of his system. But thank goodness for us because it’s a winner through and through.
:heart:

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Marc Bolan & T. Rex - Star King
A Collection of Working and Master Versions and Mixes

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Dua Lipa, future nostalgia (the moonlight edition). Perfect time to share while I pause a little while to install new firmware on my naimie. As promised this morning to @Alley_Cat, I am playing this and may start levitating. :crazy_face:

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