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Search: Used Blue Note

CDs (167) new/usedLPs (182) new/used12-inch (4) new/used7-inch (6)All (359)

Exact matches: 8
Add to Cartsearch match 1.  
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Herbie Hancock, Bobby Hutcherson & others — One Night With Blue Note Preserved Vol 1 ... LP
Blue Note, 1985. Near Mint- .... $4.99
A landmark concert from the mid 80s – one held to honor the resurrection of the Blue Note label, featuring a wealth of some of the best players for the label – from the 80s back to the 50s bebop years. This first volume in the 4 LP series features centered around Herbie Hancock and Bobby Hutcherson, with appearances by Freddie Hubbard, Joe Henderson, Ron Carter, Tony Williams and James Newton. Side one features the group nicely stretching out on a quintet take of "Canteloupe Island" and a sextet reading of "Record A Me", and side two has a quintet take of "Little B's Poem", a trio take of "Bouquet" and a quartet take of "Hat & Beard".
(Cover has light wear.)

Add to Cartsearch match 2.  
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Art Hodes — Hot Jazz At Blue Note (10 inch LP) ... LP
Blue Note, Late 40s. Very Good+ .... $29.99
Features Sidney Bechet on clarinet and Wild Bill Davison on trumpet!
(In wonderful shape!)

Add to Cartsearch match 3.  
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Clifford Jordan — Clifford Jordan (Blue Note 1565) ... LP
Blue Note, 1957. Very Good+ .... $38.99
One of the great lost ones from Blue Note – hard to find in any pressing, and a killer hardbop session from the days when the label could crank them out with a quality unmatched by other labels! Clifford Jordan's leading an unusual group here – a septet, which is a bit of a change from his smaller combos – with Lee Morgan on trumpet, Curtis Fuller on trombone, John Jenkins on alto, Ray Bryant on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, and Art Taylor on drums! At first glance, the lineup might look like more of an unstructured blowing session – but there's a lot more cohesion here than you'd guess – kind of an under-recognized chapter of Jordan's early musical vision, and one that marks him right away as a visionary leader as much as the tenor talent he was known for. Titles include "Not Guilty", "St. John", "Blue Shoes", and "Ju-Ba".
(United Artists pressing – nice and clean. Cover has a small cut corner, and some light aging – but this is a nice copy overall.)

Add to Cartsearch match 4.  
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Fats Navarro — Prime Source – Complete Blue Note Recordings ... LP
Blue Note, Late 40s/1975. Very Good+ 2LP Gatefold .... $8.99
A great collection of work by Fats Navarro – his complete Blue Note recordings, and a masterful collection of trumpet-based bop! There's are a total of 26 songs on this 2 LP set and several groups that Navarro played with are represented – The Tadd Dameron Sextet & Septet, The McGhee/Navarro Boptet and Bud Powell's Modernists. Other members of these groups included Charlie Rouse, Wardell Gray, Kenny Clarke, Milt Jackson and many more. Titles include "Our Delight", "The Chase", "Dameronia", "Lady Bird", "Double Talk", "The Skunk", "Dance Of The Infidels", and "Wail".
(Cover has a cut corner, some aging, a split top seam, and a bit of pen on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 5.  
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Dave Valentin — Live At The Blue Note ... LP
GRP, 1988. Near Mint- .... $2.99

search match 6.  
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new Frank Foster — Manhattan Fever (Blue Note) ... LP
Blue Note, 1968. Used .... $14.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
Lean, righteous blowing from the legendary Frank Foster – one of a handful of extremely hip sessions he cut in the 60s under his own name! The album's the only record Foster ever did for Blue Note – and we dare say it's even better than his previous 60s work on Prestige and Impulse – with a quality that's even darker, even deeper, even more advanced from his earlier years with Basie. There's a rolling, joyous groove to many numbers – that late 60s take on soul jazz that made for so many great tracks on albums by Hank Mobley or Lee Morgan near the end of the decade. Foster keeps things tight, but he's also got an expansive vision too – an edge in the horns that points the way towards some of the chances he'd take in the 70s, but which is still wrapped around a leanly leaping soul jazz groove! Foster wrote 5 of the 6 tracks on the album, and he's working here with a sextet that includes Garnett Brown on trombone, Marvin Stamm on trumpet, and Richard Wyands on piano, who brings in some offbeat notes and colors throughout. Rhythm is by the excellent team of Bob Cranshaw on bass and Mickey Roker on drums – and titles include "Seventh Avenue Bill", "Stammpede", "Little Miss No Nose", "Manhattan Fever", and "Loneliness".
(Original Liberty stereo pressing.)

search match 7.  
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new Edmond Hall/Art Hodes — Original Blue Note Jazz Vol 1 ... LP
Blue Note, Early 40s. Used Gatefold .... $1.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
(Liberty pressing. Cover has some wear, light waviness on the gatefold flap, and some staining inside the gatefold.)

search match 8.  
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new Lee Morgan — Lee Morgan Sextet – Lee Morgan Vol 2 (Blue Note 1541) ... LP
Blue Note, 1956. Used .... $299.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
One of Lee Morgan's beautiful early sets for Blue Note – and proof that he was emerging as a youthful lyricist even in his hardbop days! The group on the session is a sextet – with rock-solid Hank Mobley on tenor, Horace Silver on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, Charlie Persip on drums – plus the highly obscure Kenny Rodgers on alto – making his only Blue Note appearance ever! As on Morgan's third album for Blue Note, most of the tracks are composed by Benny Golson – perfectly penned numbers that maintain a hardbop swing, but which let Morgan explore things with a bit more depth than on some of his sessions for Savoy! Titles include "Slightly Hep", "D's Fink", "Whisper Not", and "Latin Hangover".
(Lexington Ave pressing – nice and clean, with some light surface marks! Label does not have an "r", wax has RVG in script, no ear. Cover has splitting on top and bottom seams, and light wear.)
 
Close matches: 122
Add to Cartsearch match 9.  
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Cannonball Adderley — Somethin' Else ... LP
Blue Note, 1958. Good+ .... $38.99
A landmark album – even if it was the only session that Cannonball Adderley ever cut for Blue Note! The album was recorded at a time when Adderley was working with Miles Davis – and as such, the session features a group that includes Miles, blowing in a cool tone that's a perfect offset to Cannonball's more soulful style. The rest of the group includes Hank Jones, Sam Jones, and Art Blakey – and like John Coltrane's Blue Train, the record's more of an "special session" than the usual Blue Note album, but the strength of the players make it one of the more memorable records of its day! Titles include "Somethin' Else", "One For Daddy-O", and a nice moody take on "Dancing In The Dark".
(63rd St pressing, with deep groove, RVG stamp, and "ear". Cover has some wear, aging on the back, a partially split top seam, and a worn corner. Labels have a few small stickers.)
Also available:
Somethin' Else (with bonus track) ... CD $4.99
Somethin' Else ... CD $2.99

Add to Cartsearch match 10.  
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Donald Byrd — Blackjack ... LP
Blue Note, 1967. Very Good .... $14.99
An incredible album from Donald Byrd – hard, funky, and with more of an edge than most of his other Blue Note work! The sound on the album's incredibly sinister – really concerned with downward chord turns in moody rhythms – played with a real sense of soul by a frontline that features Byrd, Hank Mobley, and Sonny Red. Cedar Walton drives most of the tunes with hypnotic lines on piano – and the rest of the rhythm's cooked up by Walter Booker on bass and Billy Higgins on drums. Includes the massively hard funky title cut, "Blackjack", plus "Beale Street", "Loki", and some other nice groovers. Red and Mobley are amazing, and Byrd's solos are some of his cleanest and leanest of the 60s!
(70s pressing. Cover has light wear, some splitting on the top seam, and a couple of very light stains on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 11.  
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Donald Byrd — Cat Walk ... LP
Blue Note, 1961. Very Good .... $14.99
Classic soul jazz material from trumpeter Donald Byrd – one of his most sinister (and most rare) albums for Blue Note! The group's a quintet, with frequent bandmate Pepper Adams on baritone, Duke Pearson on piano, and Philly Joe Jones on drums – all grooving with some of the tightness heard on other Adams/Byrd dates, but also a warmer, more open-ended approach to the music, especially on the solos! The tracks slink along with a dark little groove – and although Pearson's piano is often sweetly lyrical, it also has a nice hard sound that works well with the sharp-edged horn lines of Byrd and Adams. The album's very much in the vein of the pair's work on the Warwick label during the same time – and with excellent compositions that include "Say You're Mine", "Duke's Mixture", "The Cat Walk", and "Hello Bright Sunflower".
(70s pressing. Cover has a cut corner, some ring & edge wear, and some discoloration from age.)
Also available:
Cat Walk ... LP $9.99
Cat Walk (RVG remaster edition) ... CD $4.99

Add to Cartsearch match 12.  
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Donald Byrd — Donald Byrd's Best ... LP
Blue Note, Early 70s/1975. Very Good+ .... $5.99
A tasty collection of goodies that Donald recorded with the great Larry Mizell during the early 70s. Certainly not his all-inclusive best, but some of our favorite material by this legendary soul jazz trumpeter. The tracks have a sparkling electric jazz funk sound, with amazing production that keeps them drifting along with a very soulful vibe. Titles include "Sky High", "Street Lady", "Change", "Stepping Into Tomorrow", "Black Byrd", and "Flight Time".
(Cover has a cutout hole, light wear, and a name in pen.)

Add to Cartsearch match 13.  
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Donald Byrd — I'm Tryin' To Get Home ... LP
Blue Note, 1965. Very Good- .... $34.99
Donald Byrd's second foray into the "with voices" genre – done with the same arranging talents of Coleridge Perkinson, the lyrical modernist who made Donald's A New Perspective such a success! The group that plays with Byrd is excellent, and includes Freddie Roach, Herbie Hancock, Stanley Turrentine, and Grant Green – all of whom blend beautifully with the choir, and know when to lay back, and when to come out strong with hard rhythm playing and good solos. Donald Byrd and Duke Pearson wrote all of the tunes, and the set's got some beautiful shimmering solos by Byrd which just float dreamily over the album's gorgeous orchestrations. With the tracks "Pearly Gates", "March Children", "Brother Isaac", and "I'm Tryin' To Get Home".
(New York mono pressing. Cover has some wear, a sticker on the back, a split spine, and some splitting on the other seams.)

Add to Cartsearch match 14.  
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Donald Byrd — Mustang! ... LP
Blue Note, 1966. Very Good- .... $24.99
One of Byrd's most fantastic records for Blue Note, and one of the three that he recorded with Sonny Red on alto sax. Byrd and Red work magnificently together, and the two of them play with a tightness and funkiness that's missing from a lot of their other records as leaders. Hank Mobley joins the group on tenor, Walter Booker is on bass, McCoy Tyner's on piano, and Freddie Waits is on drums. The groove is tight and funky, with a mix of hard bop soloing and funkier Blue Note rhythm playing. Red burns throughout, especially on his own "Mustang", and on the cut "Dixie Lee". Other tracks include "Fly Little Bird Fly", "On The Trail", and "I'm So Excited By You".
(Liberty pressing. Cover has light wear, some stains, the remnants of a sticker, and a piece of tape on the top seam.)

Add to Cartsearch match 15.  
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new Donald Byrd — New Perspective ... LP
Blue Note, 1963. Very Good .... $29.99
A classic album that mixes trumpet and voices in a swirling soulful sound that worked very well for Byrd's career! Byrd's sparkling trumpet fronts a tight septet that includes Hank Mobley, Herbie Hancock, and Kenny Burrell – and which is backed by arrangements by Coleridge Perkinson and Duke Pearson. The sound is beautiful and spiritual, with a sound that mixes Blue Note hardbop with a style that would later show up on labels like Strata East, or in the experiments of Max Roach and Billy Harper. The tracks are long and moody, and the vocal group never gets in the way, but instead backs Byrd in a way that lets him hit new heights, and which gives him a stronger sense of voice. Includes the classic "Christo Redentor", plus "Chant", "The Black Disciple", and "Elijah".
(New York stereo pressing, with Van Gelder stamp. Cover has some light wear, a small split on the top seam, and a number written in marker on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 16.  
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Kenny Cox — Introducing Kenny Cox & the Contemporary Jazz Quartet ... LP
Blue Note, 1969. Very Good+ .... $33.99
An overlooked late 60s treasure on Blue Note – one of the few new groups to work on the label at the time, and an up-and-coming modern combo from Detroit! The album's quite unique for a number of reasons – not just because the group was a little-known new signing to the label, but also because the work is quite far-reaching at times – some of the most free-thinking jazz recorded for Blue Note during the time, with a sense of boldness that almost stretches back to Jackie McLean's first few records of the new thing years, or a sense of lyrical invention that's a bit like Wayne Shorter when he made a shift towards the outside. Some numbers are awash in fast colors and changes, while others are a bit more in the pocket, with echoes of soul jazz – but the whole thing's incredibly fresh and free, a wonderful little record that only gets better and better over the years! The group features pianist Kenny Cox as the leader, plus Charles Moore on trumpet, Leon Henderson on tenor, Ron Brooks on bass, and Danny Spencer on drums. Titles include "Mystique", "You", "Trance Dance", "Eclipse", and "Number Four".
(Liberty stereo pressing. Cover has a tiny cut corner.)

Add to Cartsearch match 17.  
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Miles Davis — Miles Davis (United Artists 2LP set) ... LP
Blue Note/United Artists, Early 50s. Very Good 2LP Gatefold .... $4.99
A strange 2LP set – put together in 1971, with a cover and a gatefold format that makes it look like current electric Miles on Columbia, but a track list that features Miles early 50s recordings for Blue Note! The tracks were all recorded by Rudy Van Gelder – and the sessions feature JJ Johnson, Gil Coggins, Art Blakey, Kenny Clarke, Jackie McLean, and Oscar Pettiford. Titles include "Weirdo", "Woody N You", "Lazy Susan", "CTA", "Dear Old Stockholm", "Chance It", "Donna", "Yesterdays", and "The Leap".
(Cover has some wear. Vinyl has a few marks that click.)

Add to Cartsearch match 18.  
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Lou Donaldson — Alligator Bogaloo ... LP
Blue Note, 1967. Good .... $7.99
Excellent funky work from Lou – and a groundbreaking record that was the first to feature him playing on Blue Note with drummer Idris Muhammad – who is listed on the session under his birth name, Leo Morris! Muhammad gives the album that crackling funky bottom sound that instantly defined Lou's later years at Blue Note – a hard and heavy approach to soul jazz that's had incredible repercussions in the world of hip hop, as well as soul and funk. The rest of the group features soul jazz burners Lonnie Smith on organ, Melvin Lastie on trumpet, and George Benson on guitar – and the album includes the highly successful "Alligator Boogaloo", plus hard groovers "The Thang", "Aw Shucks!", and "One Cylinder".
(Liberty stereo pressing with Van Gelder stamp. Cover has some wear, and a split spine & top seam.)
Also available: Alligator Bogaloo ... LP $9.99

Add to Cartsearch match 19.  
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Dexter Gordon — Other Side Of Round Midnight ... LP
Blue Note, 1986. Near Mint- .... $3.99
A variety of groups, some with Dex on tenor. Other players include Bobby Hutcherson on vibes, Freddie Hubbard on trumpet, Wayne Shorter on soprano sax, Cedar Walton and Herbie Hancock on piano, and Billy Higgins and Tony Williams on drums. Titles include "Berangere's Nightmare 2", "Tivoli", "Society Red", "Round Midnight", "It's Only A Paper Moon", and "Call Sheet Blues".
(Cover has a cutout hole.)

Add to Cartsearch match 20.  
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Dexter Gordon — Our Man In Paris ... LP
Blue Note, 1963. Very Good- .... $38.99
One of our favorite Dexter Gordon Blue Notes – a beautiful quartet recording that unites Dex with two other Americans in exile – Bud Powell and Kenny Clarke! The group's completed by French bassist Pierre Michelot, and includes a great take of "Scrapple from the Apple", plus excellent readings of "Stairway to the Stars" and "Night in Tunisia". The format is simple, but the sound is magic – classic Dexter Gordon in a tight Blue Note mode!
(Liberty pressing. Cover has a small split on the top seam, with some staining along the opening.)
Also available:
Our Man In Paris ... CD $4.99
Our Man In Paris (Japanese paper sleeve edition) ... CD $19.99

Add to Cartsearch match 21.  
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Johnny Griffin — Congregation ... LP
Blue Note, 1957. Near Mint- .... $14.99
An early killer from Johnny Griffin – a stripped-down quartet session for Blue Note, done in a format that really gave him plenty of room to open up! The rhythm section is a powerful trio led by Sonny Clark on piano, and featuring bassist Paul Chambers alongside the obscure drummer Kenny Dennis – but it's Griff's tone and conception that dominates the set – really blowing in a style that combines the soulful and the modern with incredible spontaneity, all wrapped up in a beautiful early Andy Warhol cover! Tracks are all longish, and titles include "The Congregation", "Latin Quarter", "I'm Glad There Is You", and "Main Spring".
(Great 180 gram pressing from the 90s!)

Add to Cartsearch match 22.  
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new Herbie Hancock — Prisoner ... LP
Blue Note, 1969. Good+ .... $5.99
A nice late Blue Note change from Herbie Hancock – a very different album than his previous sets for the label – in that it features a slightly larger group, and a sound that really points the way towards his directions in the 70s! There's a slightly ambitious feel to some of these cuts – not in a way that's over-arranged, but just a new sort of thinking for Herbie's kind of groove – a mode that's partially informed by the seriousness of 60s jazz soundtracks, but which also has the beginnings of some more righteous modes of expression too. Players are all great – and include Joe Henderson on tenor and flute, Johnny Coles on flugelhorn, Garnett Brown on trombone, Hubert Laws on flute, Jerome Richardson on bass clarinet, Buster Williams on bass, and Tootie Heath on drums. Herbie plays both acoustic and electric piano – using the latter here in one of his first recordings on the instrument – and titles include "Firewater", "I Have A Dream", "The Prisoner", and "He Who Lives In Fear".
(Liberty/UA pressing. Cover's bottom left corner has been torn off.)

Add to Cartsearch match 23.  
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Art Hodes — Art Hodes & His Chicagoans – Best In 2 Beat (10 inch LP) ... LP
Blue Note, Early 50s. Very Good+ .... $29.99
Art Hodes in on piano and is joined by Max Kaminsky on trumpet, Ray Conniff on trombone, Rod Cless on clarinet, Jack Bland on guitar, Bob Haggard and Sid Jacobs on bass and Danny Alvin on drums. Tracks include "Doctor Jazz", "Yellow Dog Blues", "Changes Made", "Slow Em Down Blues", "Maple Leaf Rag", "Shoe Shiner's Drag", "She's Crying For Me", and "Clark & Randolph".
(In wonderful shape!)

Add to Cartsearch match 24.  
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Freddie Hubbard — Breaking Point! ... LP
Blue Note, 1966. Very Good .... $24.99
Pivotal work from Freddie Hubbard – a tight, edgey quintet side with a sound that approaches the Blue Note "new thing" sound, but which stays just this side of the fence to keep in line with Freddie's other soulful work of the 60s! The group features some great work by James Spaulding, who gets a lot of solo room on alto and flute – and Ronnie Matthews is on piano, effortlessly shifting between rhythmic and soulful lines, and passages that get a bit darker and deeper. The tunes are nearly all Freddie Hubbard originals, except for the classic "Mirrors", written by drummer Joe Chambers. Other tunes include "Breaking Point", "Far Away", "Blue Frenzy", and "D Minor Mint".
(Liberty pressing, nice and clean. Cover has some very light tape traces on the top and bottom seams, but is pretty great overall.)

Add to Cartsearch match 25.  
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Freddie Hubbard — Times Are Changing ... LP
Blue Note, 1989. Near Mint- .... $4.99
(Cover has a cutout hole.)

Add to Cartsearch match 26.  
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new Bobbi Humphrey — Flute-In ... LP
Blue Note, 1971. Good+ .... $9.99
Early Blue Note work from the legendary Bobbi Humphrey – a session cut before she hooked up with producer Larry Mizell, but one that's still got a righteously soulful vibe! The arrangements here are by Wade Marcus, but he still has the great idea of giving Bobbi a bit more expanded sound in the background – a full mix of sounds that lets her flute step out in the lead and find its own soulful space on the solos. Other players here include Lee Morgan, Billy Harper, and Frank Owens and the group hits a larger soaring spiritual sound that's very nice. Titles include a version of Eddie Harris' "Set Us Free", plus "Sad Bag", "Don't Knock My Funk", "Journey To Morocco", and "Ain't No Sunshine".
(Original Liberty pressing. Cover has some wear, splitting on the spine, and some marker in one corner on the front.)

Add to Cartsearch match 27.  
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James P Johnson — Stomps, Rags & Blues (10 inch LP) ... LP
Blue Note, Early 40s. Very Good+ .... $59.99
(Cover has a very small amount of pencil on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 28.  
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new Thad Jones & Mel Lewis — Consummation ... LP
Blue Note, 1970. Very Good- Gatefold .... $4.99
One of the greatest records ever cut by the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra – way way more than a big band jazz session, and a fantastically hip batch of grooves that encompasses a wealth of styles! The Jones/Lewis group could sometimes sound a bit clunky and overhashed – but on this set, they've got a surprisingly lyrical approach – free-thinking and easily grooving, but with room for complicated solos and complex rhythms. All tracks are originals by Thad Jones – and players include Roland Hanna on electric piano, David Spinozza on guitar, and a host of great talents on reeds and brass. Titles include the sweetly funky cuts "Us" and "Ahunk Ahunk", plus the tracks "Dedication", "Consummation", "Tiptoe", and "Fingers".
(Liberty/UA pressing. Cover has light wear, aging, a promo sticker, some pen, and a partially split top seam.)

Add to Cartsearch match 29.  
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Stanley Jordan — Magic Touch ... LP
Blue Note, 1985. Very Good+ .... $1.99
A crucial album for the jazz guitar in the 80s – the debut effort of Stanley Jordan, and a set that exploded with a very fresh sound! Jordan has a really unique way of handling his instrument – playing up and down the fret board with both hands – in ways that are often so lyrically compelling and musically complicated that Blue Note had to package the album with a "warning" that there were no overdubs or production tricks on the set – as you might find from other contemporary players on labels like ECM! Instead, Stanley's got a sound that's surprisingly warm and personal – and which, in a way, is recorded with a style that echoes the legend of his initial discovery by the label, while playing in the subway. Titles include "A Child Is Born", "Fundance", "Angel", "The Lady In My Life", "Round Midnight", and "Eleanor Rigby".

Add to Cartsearch match 30.  
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Stanley Jordan — Standards Vol 1 ... LP
Blue Note, 1986. Very Good+ .... $0.99
Guitarist Stanley Jordan takes on a set of standards – not just older tunes from the American songbook, but also some gorovy soul and pop numbers as well! Jordan plays solo throughout – in that open, lyrical style that we loved on his debut – and titles include "Sunny", "The Sound Of Silence", "Send One Your Love", "Moon River", "Guitar Man", and "My Favorite Things".

Add to Cartsearch match 31.  
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George Lewis — Echoes Of New Orleans – George Lewis & His New Orleans Stompers (10 inch LP) ... LP
Blue Note, Early 50s. Very Good- .... $19.99
(Vinyl is clean, but has light surface marks – one that clicks briefly on one track. Label has some old fading. Cover is nice overall.)

Add to Cartsearch match 32.  
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Jack McDuff — Down Home Style ... LP
Blue Note, 1969. Very Good Gatefold .... $14.99
A really unusual album for Jack McDuff – one that was recorded in Memphis, with a lineup and a feel that's quite different from other Blue Note sessions of the time! There's a lot of electricity bubbling in the record – and although McDuff normally never worked with a bassist on earlier sessions, this one features a unnamed player who really lays out a nice bottom for the whole session – bubbling the tunes with lots of work on the electric, and letting McDuff concentrate on funking things up with the keys of the Hammond! The set features a key recording of Jack's classic "Theme From the Electric Surfboard", plus the funky numbers "Butter (For Yo Popcorn)", "The Vibrator", and "Down Home Style".
(Liberty pressing. Cover has some splitting on the bottom seam, with some staining and peeling along part of the bottom two inches.)
Also available: Down Home Style ... LP $9.99

Add to Cartsearch match 33.  
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new Jimmy McGriff — Electric Funk ... LP
Blue Note, 1970. Very Good+ (reissue).... $7.99
One of Jimmy's funkiest albums ever – a sweeeeet batch of short, hard, and funky cuts – and a record that ranks right up there with the mighty Soul Sugar for sheer funkiness! Jimmy takes an upbeat and easygoing approach to the late 60s funk sound, with a nice, rubbery bass and the organ sound just killer – but would expect less from McGriff on that front? Truly funky and totally irresistible stuff, with sinister, measured moments that bigger and heavier pretty quickly - kind of prefiguring 70s blacksploitation soundtrack vibes in spots! The album's great all the way through – tight arrangements by Horace Ott, who also plays electric piano on the set, making for a clean, cool 2-keys kind of groove. Titles include "Spear for Moondog" (parts 1 & 2), "Tight Times", "Funky Junk", "Bird Wave", and "Back on the Track".
Also available: Electric Funk ... LP $9.99

Add to Cartsearch match 34.  
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Jackie McLean — Consequence ... LP
Blue Note, 1965/1979. Very Good+ .... $8.99
A great slice from Jackie McLean's rare unissued 60s sessions for Blue Note – a rollingly soulful session that stands in stark contrast to some of his more modern sides of the time! The set's got Jackie working with a group that includes Lee Morgan on trumpet and Harold Mabern on piano – in a vamping, soaring vibe that's similar to the feel of contemporaneous Morgan sessions like The Gigolo or Tom Cat – but which has a slight bit of McLean's more modernist edge from time to time. Mabern's piano work is tremendous – filled with life and joy that soar the album effortlessly along – and the lyrical drum work of Billy Higgins and basslines from Herbie Lewis are also very much a key part of this groove. The set was originally recorded in 1965, but only made a first appearance on record in 1979 – and even then, only briefly! Titles include "Vernestune", "Slumber", "Bluesanova", "Consequence", and "Tolypso".
(Cover has a stained corner and a sticker on front.)

Add to Cartsearch match 35.  
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Jackie McLean — Destination Out ... LP
Blue Note, Mid 60s. Very Good .... $33.99
A modernist classic from 60s Blue Note! The album's one of Jackie McLean's greatest from the time – and one of his seminal "new thing" sessions cut with young modernists Grachan Moncur and Bobby Hutcherson. 3 of the 4 long tracks on the record were written by Moncur, and have a similar approach to his own recordings for Blue Note – moody and introspective, in a style that's as concerned with sound and space as it is jazz and rhythm – and Hutcherson's vibes are beyond compare here, with have a sinister metallic quality that he only used briefly in his early career! The whole record's a gem, and one not to pass up! Titles include "Kahlil The Prophet", "Riff Raff", and "Love & Hate".
(Liberty stereo pressing – nice and clean overall. Cover has light masking tape on two seams.)

Add to Cartsearch match 36.  
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Jackie McLean — Jackie's Bag ... LP
Blue Note, 1959/1960. Very Good+ .... $19.99
A real classic by Jackie McLean – a record that's pulled from 2 different sessions, but which stands out with a strikingly unified feel! The album was cut during the height of Jackie's bop years for Blue Note – with one 1959 session that featured Donald Byrd and Sonny Clark, and another from 1960 that featured Blue Mitchell, Kenny Drew, and the great Tina Brooks on tenor. Brooks' appearance on the album is especially great, as the tracks which feature him and McLean together crackle with some of the first modernist energy to show up on one of Jackie's albums – really hitting hard on original compositions that include "A Ballad For Doll", "Appointment in Ghana", and "Isle of Java". One of McLean's best-ever – and filled with great original tracks!
(UA pressing – nice and clean. Cover has a cut corner, and some very light water staining on the bottom seam.)

Add to Cartsearch match 37.  
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Jackie McLean — Right Now ... LP
Blue Note, 1965. Very Good- .... $16.99
Great stuff, and one of Jackie McLean's best for Blue Note from the "new thing" period! The album features Jackie working out a wealth of new ideas, in a quartet that includes Larry Willis on piano, Bob Cranshaw on bass, and Clifford Jarvis on drums. Jackie holds down the frontline himself on alto, and the tracks are nice and long, with one composition by Jackie, and two by Willis – all in the exploratory mode of work on records like One Step Beyond. Tracks include "Eco", "Poor Eric", "Christel's Time", and "Right Now".
(Liberty/UA pressing. Cover has staining along the seams, a few small rips, and a peeled spot on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 38.  
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Blue Mitchell — Bring It Home To Me ... LP
Blue Note, 1966. Very Good- .... $33.99
Genius work from trumpeter Blue Mitchell – one of his most solid sides as a leader from the 60s, and a well-deserved treasure in the Blue Note catalog! The album's quite different than the straight soul jazz of Blue's early days on Riverside – or the more arranged dates of the late 60s – and it features him moving in a soulful, lyrical, modal style – quite similar to Horace Silver in conception, but with a fresh execution that's mighty nice – and which marks Mitchell as one of the fresher trumpet voices of his generation! The whole group's great, too – and the lineup includes Junior Cook on tenor, Blue's old bandmate from Horace Silver's group – plus Harold Mabern on piano, who really helps shape the sound of the record, Gene Taylor on bass and Billy Higgins on drums. Tracks include gems from Mitchell, Jimmy Heath, and Tom McIntosh – titles that include "Bring It Home To Me", "Blues 3 For 1", "Port Rico Rock", and "Ginger Bread Boy".
(New York stereo pressing with Van Gelder stamp. Cover has some wear, some staining, a bit of pen, and some splitting on the top and bottom seams.)

Add to Cartsearch match 39.  
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Hank Mobley — Another Workout ... LP
Blue Note, 1961/1985. Near Mint- .... $14.99
A rare second chapter to Mobley's famous Workout album – recorded in the early 60s, but not issued until the mid 80s – and even then, only momentarily on vinyl! The session's a great one – a quartet outing with a structure that's similar to Hank's classic Soul Station record, but which is a bit more fluid and free-thinking overall! The long tracks give Mobley plenty of room to open up on his solos – really commanding the record with his deeply soulful tone and strong sense of timing. Other players include Wynton Kelly on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, and Philly Joe Jones on drums (plus Grant Green on one track) – and titles include "Out Of Joe's Bag", "I Should Care", "Getting & Jettin", "Hank's Other Soul", and "Three Coins In A Fountain".
(80s DMM pressing.)

Add to Cartsearch match 40.  
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Hank Mobley — Hi Voltage ... LP
Blue Note, 1967. Very Good .... $24.99
An extremely well-titled set from the legendary Hank Mobley – one of his key Blue Notes of the 60s, and an album that glides along with an undeniable sense of joy, life, and soul! Mobley's really opening up his groove at this point – moving way beyond standard hard bop and soul jazz riffs, into a field of complicated rhythms – and a flurry of sound that features his mighty tenor atop a crack sextet that includes Blue Mitchell and Jackie McLean. John Hicks handles piano on the session – and brings in a beautiful range of colors and tones – and rhythm's handled by the skipping drums of Billy Higgins and the always-solid bass of Bob Cranshaw. Titles include "Two & One", "High Voltage", "No More Goodbyes", "Advance Notion", and "Bossa De Luxe".
(Liberty stereo pressing with Van Gelder stamp. Cover has light ring & edge wear, with staining on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 41.  
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Hank Mobley — Soul Station (2nd cover) ... LP
Blue Note, 1960. Very Good .... $19.99
Simply astounding! Soul Station is a deceptively simple album that has tenor giant Hank Mobley playing standards and originals in a quartet with Wynton Kelly on piano, Paul Chambers on bass, and Art Blakey on drums– a spare and simple group, but one with a direct energy that's really amazing – in a way that makes for some of Mobley's best solos on record! The tracks here are all relatively basic in construction, but this territory allows all players to really relax and open up – especially Mobley, who really dominates the proceedings with some well-blown lines on tenor. Blakey's work is great too – nicely restrained, and the date marks one of his last sessions ever as a sideman. Titles include "Soul Station", "Split Feelin's", "Dig Dis", and "This I Dig Of You".
(Liberty pressing. Cover has some wear.)

Add to Cartsearch match 42.  
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Lee Morgan — Cornbread ... LP
Blue Note, 1965. Very Good .... $59.99
A rock-solid sextet session from the mighty Lee Morgan – recorded for Blue Note at the height of his mid 60s powers, and carried off in a beautiful blend of soul jazz and some slight modern touches! The group here is top-shelf all the way through – Jackie McLean on alto, Hank Mobley on tenor, Herbie Hancock on piano, Larry Ridley on bass, and Billy Higgins on drums – the last two of whom do a great job of bringing some complex yet swinging rhythms to the set! The horn soloists are all as sharp as you might expect – and the album's a striking soulful date from McLean at a time when he was mostly going out a bit more. Titles include the funky "Cornbread", the searching "Our Man Higgins", and the lyrical ballad "Ceora" – plus "Most Like Lee" and "Ill Wind".
(New York mono pressing, with Van Gelder stamp. Vinyl has a mark that clicks a bit on "Ill Wind".)
Also available: Cornbread ... LP $9.99

Add to Cartsearch match 43.  
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new Lee Morgan — Lee Morgan Indeed! ... LP
Blue Note, 1956. Very Good+ .... $19.99
A gem of an early album from Lee Morgan – quite different than his work as a leader for the Savoy label during the same period! Although Morgan's only a wee lad at the time, the album's got an incredible sense of warmth and imagination – one that's steeped in lessons learned from Horace Silver and Art Blakey, and played with a style that's as richly expressive as it is soulful – a no-nonsense, no-tricks approach to the trumpet that gave Morgan a voice that was clearly different from predecessors like Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie, and Fats Navarro! The album's got a stellar lineup that includes Horace Silver, Wilbur Ware, and Philly Joe Jones – plus the virtually unknown Clarence Sharpe, who makes a rare appearance on alto on this session! The whole thing's great, and filled with unique titles that include "Reggie Of Chester", "Little T", "Gaza Strip", and "Roccus".
(UA pressing. Cover has a small cut corner and a bit of light wear.)

Add to Cartsearch match 44.  
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Lee Morgan — Sidewinder ... LP
Blue Note, 1964. Good+ .... $24.99
A jazz classic if there ever was one – and the best-selling album ever by Lee Morgan, thanks to the use of the title track in a car commercial! Sure, you've probably heard "The Sidewinder" enough that you think you know the album already – but the rest of the tunes really open up past that groover, into a realm of lyrical, soulful playing that's simply tremendous! The group on the record features Joe Henderson on tenor, Barry Harris on piano, Bob Crenshaw on bass, and Billy Higgins on drums – and the album rolls along with a sense of perfect power that is every bit Blue Note at its best! Titles include "Sidewinder", "Gary's Notebook", "Hocus-Pocus", and "Totem Pole".
(New York mono pressing, with deep groove, Van Gelder stamp, and "ear". Cover has some wear, aging, split top and bottom seams, some splitting on the spine, some light stains, and a sticker on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 45.  
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Lee Morgan — Sixth Sense ... LP
Blue Note, 1967. Very Good .... $14.99
Beautiful late work from Lee Morgan! The last five years of Lee's life saw him really stretching out to do some fantastic writing, playing, and leading – and this record stands today as one of the best examples of that period – a pure act of genius, with a sound that really takes off from Lee's earlier Blue Note albums. The styles are a unique blend of soulful hardbop and the more stretched-out spiritualism that would later emerge in the early 70s soul jazz scene – and players include the lesser-known Frank Mitchell on tenor, plus Jackie McLean on alto, Cedar Walton on piano, Victor Sproles on bass, and Billy Higgins on drums – the last of whom provides an amazingly lyrical approach to rhythm, the sort that was key to some of Lee Morgan's best work of the time! Titles include "Afreaka", "Short Count", "The Cry Of My People", "Anti Climax", and "Psychedelic".
(Liberty/UA pressing.)

Add to Cartsearch match 46.  
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new Fats Navarro — Fabulous Fats Navarro Vol 1 ... LP
Blue Note, Early 50s. Very Good .... $14.99
A full LP issue of material that Navarro recorded for Blue Note during the 78 and 10" LP eras – compiled here with master and alternate takes of tunes that were some of the few that Navarro ever recorded for the label! Some of the work was recorded under groups led by Tadd Dameron and Budd Powell, and a few more under the Howard McGhee-Fats Navarro Boptet name – but all tracks feature Fats at his best – blowing with that sparkling tone that helped transform the sound of bop in the early years! Titles on this first volume include "Wail", "The Chase", "The Squirrel", "Our Delight", and "Dameronia".
(Liberty pressing – nice and clean, and cover is in nice shape.)

Add to Cartsearch match 47.  
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James Newton — African Flower – The Music Of Duke Ellington & Billy Strayhorn ... LP
Blue Note, 1986. Sealed .... $1.99
(Cover has a cutout hole.)

Add to Cartsearch match 48.  
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James Newton — Romance & Revolution ... LP
Blue Note, 1987. Very Good+ .... $4.99
(Cover has a cutout hole and some light creases.)

Add to Cartsearch match 49.  
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Horace Parlan — On The Spur Of The Moment ... LP
Blue Note, 1961. Near Mint- .... $33.99
A darkly-grooving killer from pianist Horace Parlan – and one of our favorite Blue Note albums ever! Although Parlan's always a great player on other sides for the label, this album has him stepping out with an extra edge that's really amazing – working with brothers Tommy and Stanley Turrentine to craft some tunes that roll with the propulsive energy of the best Blue Note hardbop sides, but which also have some edgier moments, and almost point the way towards some of the new thing experiments that would transform the work of Jackie McLean! All players are still quite straight, but they've got a way of putting together tones and textures that's really wonderful – heard to famous effect on the album's early version of Booker Ervin's track "Skoochie" – but soaring all the way through on titles that include "On The Spur Of The Moment", "Ray C", "Al's Tune", and "Pyramid".
(Japanese pressing! Cover has light wear and a name in marker on back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 50.  
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Bud Powell — Bud! – The Amazing Bud Powell Vol 3 ... LP
Blue Note, Late 50s. Very Good .... $19.99
One of the few rare non-trio recordings done by Powell from around this time. He plays with a trio (Paul Chambers bass, Art Taylor drums) on the whole first side of the record, but the group's then joined by Curtis Fuller for all of side 2. Fuller's deep trombone makes for a different twist, and a slightly deeper sound than usual – especially given that the album was recorded live at Birdland. Titles include "Moose The Mooche", "Some Soul", "Blue Pearl", and "Keepin' In The Groove".
(Liberty pressing. Cover has light wear, a bit of sticker residue, and some small stains on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 51.  
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Sam Rivers — Fuchsia Swing Song ... LP
Blue Note, 1964. Very Good .... $39.99
One of the greatest modern moments on Blue Note – ever! From the cover, to the compositions, to the playing on the set – the whole album crackles with an unbelievable fire that was hardly ever matched again. A young Sam Rivers leads a quartet that includes Jaki Byard on piano, Ron Carter on bass, and Anthony Williams on drums – coming together in a sound that's got lots of sharp edges, yet which also beats with an undeniably swinging heart. Rivers blows incredibly on the session – held in check by the rhythm section, and never getting too free (or sloppy, as on some later sides) – and instead hitting these hard tones that really push the envelope of 60s jazz without rewriting the rules entirely. Brilliant all the way through, with tracks that include "Beatrice", "Ellipsis", "Cyclic Episode", and "Downstairs Blues Upstairs".
(70s pressing. Vinyl has cosmetic sleeve marks. Cover has ring & edge wear.)

Add to Cartsearch match 52.  
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Sam Rivers — New Conception ... LP
Blue Note, Mid 60s. Very Good- .... $33.99
A mindblowing moment from the young Sam Rivers – and definitely a set that warrants the "new conception" of the title! Unlike some of Rivers' other material of the time, which often featured original inventive compositions, this set's based around classic standards – but all presented in a way that's wickedly different than any previous readings you might have heard! The set's a great statement from Sam – as it shows his link to a strong jazz tradition, but a willingness to really move things forward – hanging here in a great balance between straight and out that's mighty compelling all the way through. There's a brilliant edge to the record that never lets up – and in addition to tenor, soprano sax, and flute from Rivers, the set also features Hal Galper's piano, Herbie Lewis' bass, and Steve Ellington's drums. Titles include "When I Fall In Love", "That's All", "Detour Ahead", "Temptation", and "Secret Love".
(Liberty/UA pressing. Cover has light wear, some staining along the edges and on the back, a mostly split spine, and some pen and a bit of flaking on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 53.  
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Freddie Roach — Brown Sugar ... LP
Blue Note, 1966. Very Good .... $19.99
Smoking work on Hammond from Freddie Roach – a key player in the Blue Note lineup of the 60s, and a strong link between the label's soul jazz and modern sides! The sound here is a really beautiful one – partly in the organ/tenor mode forged by Baby Face Willette and John Patton in their early recordings for Blue Note, but also stretching out in that way that started to show up in Patton's later work, and in the seminal work from the time by Larry Young. Freddie's touch on the keys is really opening up here – clearly driven by some more original ideas that help push the album past the more R&B influenced sound of some of his earlier work. Players on the set include Joe Henderson on tenor, Eddie Wright on guitar, and Clarence Johnston on drums – and title cuts include "Brown Sugar", plus "All Night Long", "Have You Ever Had The Blues", and "The Right Time".
(Liberty pressing. PLEASE NOTE: Cover has moisture damage on most of the front and back, which has cause a lot of staining and peeling, with some pen on the back. Labels have staining and peeling.)

Add to Cartsearch match 54.  
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Freddie Roach — Good Move ... LP
Blue Note, Mid 60s. Very Good .... $24.99
Freddie Roach always makes a good move on his Blue Note sessions – going for a lean and tight style on the organ that never fails to please! On this set, he's working with a mixed group of hardbop and soul jazz players that include Blue Mitchell, Hank Mobley, Eddie Wright, and Clarence Johnston – all of whom groove with Freddie on a set of short tracks that really go for the punch! Titles include "Wine Wine Wine", "I.Q. Blues", "On Our Way Up", and "Pastel". Classic Blue Note cover, too, with Roach playing chess in a blue-tinted image!
(Liberty/UA pressing. Cover has a split top & bottom seam.)
Also available: Good Move ... LP $9.99

Add to Cartsearch match 55.  
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Sonny Rollins — More From The Vanguard ... LP
Blue Note, 1957/1975. Very Good 2LP Gatefold .... $13.99
Incredible! If you've ever wondered why people think Sonny Rollins is so great, you owe it to yourself to own this album, because it's one that stands as one of the best 5 that Rollins ever cut, and because it features him playing in a stripped-down raw setting that lets his full solo talent come to the forefront. The material was all recorded in 1957 as part of his famous Village Vanguard session for Blue Note, but it was unreleased until 1975, when Blue Note put out this double LP set of the tracks with great notes by Bob Blumenthal. Every cut's a winner, and Rollins plays in two different trio settings – one with Donald Bailey and Pete La Roca, the other with Wilbur Ware and Elvin Jones. It's all great, and will make you a fan of his for life!
(Cover has light wear and some seam splitting on the top.)

Add to Cartsearch match 56.  
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Sal Salvador — Sal Salvador Quintet (10 inch LP) ... LP
Blue Note, 1953. Very Good+ .... $11.99
Sal Salvador was one of the 50's more accomplished modernist talents on jazz guitar – and his work ranks up there with players like Tal Farlow, or Gil Melle's great bandmate Joe Cinderella. This reissue is Salvador's rare first album for Blue Note – only issued in a 10" vinyl format! The record features quartet and quintet material, and includes tenorist Frank Sokolow, an icy-toned genius who's never gotten his just dues. Sokolow and Salvador sound great together, and create a haunting sound that's better than anything we've heard on other Salvador records from his later years. Titles include "My Old Flame", "Gone With The Wind", and "After You've Gone" – and the cover and packaging job is totally cool!
(70s US pressing.)

Add to Cartsearch match 57.  
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Horace Silver — Finger Poppin' With The Horace Silver Quintet ... LP
Blue Note, 1959. Good+ .... $39.99
Classic Blue Note work by Horace Silver – the stuff that soul jazz legends are made of, and an album that showed he was destined to be a huge force away from the Jazz Messengers! Blue Mitchell and Junior Cook hold down the frontline with Horace – playing in a mellifluous style that links the tenor and trumpet magically, dancing in sweetly lyrical lines over the impeccable rhythm team of Gene Taylor on bass and Louis Hayes on drums. Tracks are short, tight, and grooving with a sound that's virtually the blueprint for early soul jazz – and the album includes classic Silver tunes like "Come On Home", "Mellow D", "Finger Poppin", and "Swingin The Samba".
(63rd Street mono pressing, with deep groove, RVG stamp, and "ear". Vinyl has a click on two tracks, but plays surprisingly nicely overall. Cover is heavy and in pretty good shape – save for a bit of marker on the back, and a few inches of spine split.)
Also available: Finger Poppin' With The Horace Silver Quintet (Japanese paper sleeve edition) ... CD $19.99

Add to Cartsearch match 58.  
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new Horace Silver — Serenade To A Soul Sister ... LP
Blue Note, 1968. Good+ Gatefold .... $11.99
The quintessential sound of late 60s Horace Silver – on one hand still very much in the Blue Note soul jazz groove that earned him plenty of jukebox single play, but on the other hand really stretching out with a style that's a bit more righteous than before! Horace shows that he can still pen a hit when he wants – and gave the world the tune "Psychedelic Sally" with this set – but he also displays a penchant for more complicated rhythms and freer horn expressions on beautiful tunes like "Kindred Spirits", "Rain Dance", and "Jungle Juice". The group's filled with great players – from tenor work by Stanley Turrentine and Bennie Maupin, trumpet by Charles Tolliver, and drums by a young Billy Cobham!
(Original Liberty stereo pressing. Cover has some wear, some pen inside the gatefold and on the back, and some marker inside the gatefold.)

Add to Cartsearch match 59.  
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Horace Silver — Silver N Wood ... LP
Blue Note, 1976. Near Mint- .... $4.99
Wonderful work from Horace Silver – part of a great run of late 70s sides for Blue Note that unlock a whole new side of his soulful talents! The vibe here is different than the previous United States trilogy – still very righteous, with an overt message too – but served up in these wonderfully warm tones – with loads of great woodwind passages over these wickedly angular rhythms – grooves that are somewhat like those Silver first started forging on his 27th Man album! The arrangements are sublime – and on some cuts handled by Silver, but orchestrated by Wade Marcus – with players who include Tom Harrell on trumpet, Bob Berg on tenor, Buddy Collette and Fred Jackson on flutes, and Jerome Richardson on soprano sax. The rhythm section is key, too – and features Ron Carter on bass and Al Foster on drums! Side one features "The Tranquilizer Suite" – with passages that icnlude "Keep On Getting Up", "Time & Effort", and "Perseverance & Endurance" – and side two includes the excellent "The Process Of Creation Suite" – with "Motivation", "Activation", and "Assimilation".
(Cover has a cutout hole and some seam splitting.)
Also available: Silver N Wood ... CD $15.99

Add to Cartsearch match 60.  
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Horace Silver — That Healin' Feelin' – United States Of Mind Phase 1 ... LP
Blue Note, 1969. Very Good Gatefold .... $11.99
One of the most righteous Horace Silver albums for Blue Note – and a far-reaching, politically-bent batch of tracks that feature vocals by Andy Bey, in a similar style to the work he did on the Gary Bartz records from the time – very hip, and quite different than other jazz vocal work from other singers! Silver plays electric piano on most of the record – and other musicians include Houston Person on tenor and Idris Muhammad on drums – both of whom figure on cuts that feature singer Jackie Verdell replacing Andy Bey. The groove is pretty great throughout – lots of those offbeat lines that you might hear on other Bey albums, warmed up with some of Silver's more familiar soul jazz – and the album is volume 1 (or "Phase 1") of Horace's trippy United States Of Mind series, a series of records on the state of the then-trashed union (proving once again that what goes around, comes around!) Tracks include "The Happy Medium", "Permit Me To Introduce Myself", "Wipe Away the Evil", and "Love Vibrations".
(70s pressing. Cover has light wear.)
Also available: That Healin' Feelin' – United States Of Mind Phase 1 ... CD $16.99

Add to Cartsearch match 61.  
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Horace Silver — You Gotta Take A Little Love ... LP
Blue Note, 1969. Very Good+ Gatefold .... $6.99
A great late 60s gem from pianist Horace Silver – and a great bridge between his earlier soul jazz for Blue Note, and some of his more righteous work to come in the 70s! At one level, the sound here steps off from classics like Serenade To A Soul Sister or The Jody Grind – but at another level, there's a more open approach to the music – one that has Horace sliding into new tones and colors, with a slightly lyrical undercurrent as well. As on some of his later dates, the mellower moments are often the most compelling – showing a newly mature side of Silver's talents, and a new love of space between the notes that really helps to break the mode of previous recordings! The group here features the great Bennie Maupin on tenor and flute, Randy Brecker on trumpet and flugelhorn, John Williams on bass, and Billy Cobham on drums – and titles include "Lovely's Daughter", "Risin Sun", "You Gotta Take A Little Love", "Down & Out", and "Brain Wave".
(Original Liberty pressing. Cover has a cut corner and light wear.)

Add to Cartsearch match 62.  
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new Horace Silver Quintet — Doin' The Thing (At The Village Gate) ... LP
Blue Note, 1961. Very Good- .... $34.99
One of the few live recordings ever done by Horace Silver during his Blue Note years – a real surprise, considering what a crowd pleaser he was at the time! The set catches Horace working with that great quintet that graced most of his best early Blue Notes – with Blue Mitchell on trumpet, Junior Cook on tenor, Gene Taylor on bass, and the always-amazing Roy Brooks on drums. The groove is tight tight tight, and the live set crackles with the same sort of energy as the live sessions by the Jazz Messengers on Blue Note – rolling soul jazz, but with a bit of a lyrical touch to flesh things out. Because of the live setting, tracks are a bit longer than the usual Silver session – which makes for freer soloing, and a bit of a rougher edge that keeps things lively throughout. Titles include "The Gringo", "Filthy McNasty", and "Doin' The Thing".
(New York mono pressing, with RVG stamp. Vinyl has some marks that click. Cover has some wear, some stains, minor splits top and bottom seams, and a bit of pen on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 63.  
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Jimmy Smith — House Party ... LP
Blue Note, Late 50s. Very Good- .... $5.99
One of the best hard-wailing all-star sessions that Jimmy did so well for Blue Note! The album features an amazing array of top-line players – like Tina Brooks, Lee Morgan, Curtis Fuller, Lou Donaldson, Art Blakey, and Kenny Burrell – and they all play with Smith in differing combinations, all of which have an open-ended groove that sounds very nice, and very much like the kind of material that Smith would have laid down at some small club in the late 50s. Titles include "Blues After All", "Au Private", and "Lover Man".
(80s DMM pressing.)

Add to Cartsearch match 64.  
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Jimmy Smith — Jimmy Smith Plays Fats Waller ... LP
Blue Note, 1962. Very Good- .... $8.99
A surprisingly nice little album – a Jimmy Smith Blue Note session dedicated to Fats Waller, one of the first jazz musicians to work out his skills on the organ! Jimmy's working with a tight trio that includes Quentin Warren on guitar and Donald Bailey on drums – and although Waller never wowed anybody on the instrument in the same way that Smith did, he did come up with a nice way of getting a good sound out of the instrument – one that Jimmy rightly acknowledges here, then takes to the next level! The album features familiar tunes from the Waller songbook, but the performance is definitely prime Jimmy Smith on Blue Note – a set with titles that include "Lulu's Back In Town", "Honeysuckle Rose", "Ain't Misbehavin", "I've Found A New Baby", "Ain't She Sweet", and "Squeeze Me".
(Liberty pressing. Cover has some wear and aging.)

Add to Cartsearch match 65.  
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Jimmy Smith — Plain Talk ... LP
Blue Note, Early 60s. Very Good- .... $8.99
A very nice groover from Jimmy – and a session that was recorded earlier, but not issued by Blue Note until the end of the 60s. The format is hard-wailing sextet – with Blue Mitchell on trumpet, Ike Quebec on tenor, and Jackie McLean on alto. Jimmy's usual trio at the time holds the fort on the rhythm department, and all players groove very nicely on a set of 4 long tracks that includes "Big Fat Mama", "Plain Talk", and "Time After Time". Weird cover, too – with a lady's face in a cup of coffee!
(Liberty pressing. Cover has some wear, some seam splitting, masking tape on the top seam and spine, and a bit of marker on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 66.  
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new Jimmy Smith — Prayer Meetin' ... LP
Blue Note, Early 60s. Very Good- .... $24.99
Jimmy Smith and Stanley Turrentine go head to head in a great little set for Blue Note – spare quartet grooving, with lots of room for soulful solos! Turrentine's simply great at this point – playing with a raspy edge on the bottom of his tone, sounding dark and mysterious – not nearly as sweet as in later years. Smith is wonderful too – still with traces of the rough experimental approach to the Hammond that he used in his first few Blue Note sides, but with a bit more of a defined and swinging sound. Titles include "Stone Cold Dead in the Market", "Red Top", and "Picknickin'".
(New York mono pressing, with Van Gelder stamp & "ear". Cover has waviness, wear, and heavy staining on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 67.  
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Jimmy Smith — Rockin' The Boat ... LP
Blue Note, Early 60s. Very Good .... $24.99
A nice little set from Jimmy – often overlooked amidst the flurry of early 60s Blue Notes, but a really strong session! The group on the set is Jimmy's trio with Quentin Warren on guitar and Don Bailey on drums – but they're augmented here by Lou Donaldson, whose crafty work on alto really opens the set up. Tracks are shortish and mostly familiar, but done with a laidback and easy groove that brings out the best in Jimmy's late Blue Note Hammond stylings. Titles include "Matilda Matilda", "Pork Chop", "Can Heat", and "Trust In Me".
(New York mono pressing with Van Gelder stamp and "ear". Cover has light wear, some light stains on the back, and a partially split top seam.)

Add to Cartsearch match 68.  
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Jimmy Smith — Sermon! ... LP
Blue Note, Early 60s. Very Good- .... $24.99
One of the Jimmy Smith "jam session" Blue Notes, with a large group that includes Lee Morgan, Lou Donaldson, George Coleman, Tina Brooks, and Art Blakey – nearly all of whom take long solos and dig deep to compete with each other. 3 long tracks, "The Sermon", "JOS", and "Flamingo" – and a hard-wailing, jam session, cutting contest, blowing session feel all the way through!
(New York pressing, with a 4011 mono catalog number on the label and runout, but a "RVG Stereo" stamp in the runout. Vinyl has a couple of marks that play with clicks. Cover has a "stereo" sticker on the front and a small sticker on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 69.  
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Lonnie Smith — Turning Point ... LP
Blue Note, Late 60s. Very Good+ Gatefold .... $38.99
A stone killer from organist Lonnie Smith – one of his completely cooking early albums for Blue Note, and a hard-burner all the way through! Smith's working here with a really great group that includes Idris Muhammad on drums and Melvin Sparks on guitar – both of whom give the album a really heavy bottom, and almost make the set feel like one of those classic Prestige jammers from the same time. But added to them is a great horn section of Lee Morgan on trumpet, Julian Preister on trombone, and Bennie Maupin on tenor – all of whom give the record a slightly hipper, more modern feel – in keeping with the Blue Note groove of the time. Tracks are all nice and long – and titles include the originals "Turning Point" and "Slow High" – plus versions of "See Saw", "People Sure Act Funny", and "Eleanor Rigby".
(Original Liberty pressing. Cover has some light wear, but vinyl is nice.)

Add to Cartsearch match 70.  
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Cecil Taylor — Unit Structures ... LP
Blue Note, 1966. Good .... $13.99
One of Cecil's 2 Blue Note recordings, and a large group session that includes Eddie Gale, Jimmy Lyons, Ken McIntyre, Henry Grimes, and Andrew Cyrille. The record's probably one of the most out recordings ever on the label, and tracks are based on a system of energy and impulses described by Taylor in the notes. The tracks are long, and titles include "Steps", "Enter, Evening", and "Tales (8 Whisps)".
(New York mono pressing! NOTE: Vinyl is nice and clean overall, but there is a pressing flaw that causes a wobble on the first track for a bit. Two other tracks have a mark that clicks.)

Add to Cartsearch match 71.  
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new Stanley Turrentine — Rough & Tumble ... LP
Blue Note, Late 60s. Very Good .... $11.99
A great album – with a really swinging groove! Stanley's soulful horn is set in a slightly larger group, in the style that would dominate his later years for the Blue Note label. Duke Pearson arranged the set, and players include James Spaulding, Blue Mitchell, Grant Green, Pepper Adams, and McCoy Tyner. Tracks are of medium length, with Stan blowing some nicely-pinched solos on titles like "Shake", "Walk On By", and "And Satisfy" – all with tight arrangements by Pearson.
(Liberty stereo pressing with Van Gelder stamp.)

Add to Cartsearch match 72.  
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Stanley Turrentine with The Three Sounds — Blue Hour ... LP
Blue Note, 1960. Very Good .... $9.99
During the early 60s, Blue Note wisely cut a number of sessions that took advantage of their soulful in-house rhythm trio The Three Sounds. The group recorded more than a few successful albums under their own name – but they also did a few great records that feature them backing up a more famous soloist. Such is the case with this one, in which Gene Harris and crew back up Stanley Turrentine for a beautifully mellow set of late nite tracks, played with an easy rolling groove missing from some of Turrentine's other, more full-on sessions at the time. Titles include "Blue Riff", "I Want A Little Girl", and "Willow Weep For Me".
(80s DMM pressing.)

Add to Cartsearch match 73.  
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McCoy Tyner — Expansions ... LP
Blue Note, Late 60s. Very Good- .... $5.99
A really mindblowing session from McCoy Tyner – perfectly titled "Expansions" to showcase the change in his style at the time! The record is one of Tyner's first larger group efforts – and is a brilliant example of the expansion of his talents in the post-Coltrane years – a searing, soaring batch of longer tunes that dance with joy, life, and a new sense of energy in jazz – carried off perfectly by a lineup that includes excellent contributions from Gary Bartz, Woody Shaw, and Wayne Shorter. The album is as spiritual and swinging as you'd expect from those players – with a sound that's more Strata East than Blue Note – and titles include "Visions", "Song of Happiness", "Smitty's Place", and "Peresina".
(Liberty/UA pressing. Cover has wear, a split top seam and a partially split spine. Vinyl has a mark that clicks a bit on side 2 tracks one and two.)

Add to Cartsearch match 74.  
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McCoy Tyner — Time For Tyner ... LP
Blue Note, 1969. Very Good+ .... $6.99
Brilliant work by McCoy Tyner – an album that has him firmly stepping out of the shadow of Coltrane with a sound influenced by the rising Afro-centric style of soul jazz to emerge in the 70s! The group on the set is a quartet with Bobby Hutcherson on vibes – and the mixture of Hutcherson's vibes and Tyner's piano is extremely compelling – stretching out in long, rhythmic, modal lines that dance and light the groove no matter what the tune. The rest of the group features Herbie Lewis on bass and Freddie Waits on drums – and titles include the great original compositions "African Village", "May Street", and "Little Madimba".
(70s pressing. Cover has a cut corner, edge wear, and a half split top seam.)

Add to Cartsearch match 75.  
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War — Platinum Jazz ... LP
Blue Note, 1977. Very Good+ 2LP Gatefold .... $1.99
A repackaging of tracks put together in the late 70s, collecting some of War's "jazzier" moments. Although it was War's more succinct, funkier numbers and singles that we dug most about the band at first, it's these numbers where the group opens up a bit more that they really shine, if you ask us. There's still a great groove, with more than a little Latin influence creeping in here and there underneath, and all of the members of the group are more than respectable soloists, with solid playing throughout this collection. Titles include "LA Sunshine", "Platinum Jazz", "Slowly We Walk Together", "River Niger", "H2Overture", "City Country City", and "Deliver The Word".
(Cover has ring & edge wear, the remnants of a sticker on the front, and a small scratch on the back.)

Add to Cartsearch match 76.  
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Tyrone Washington — Natural Essence ... LP
Blue Note, 1967. Very Good- .... $4.99
A rare and unusual chapter in mid 60s Blue Note – the debut of tenorist Tyrone Washington, an up-and-coming talent from the hip New Jersey scene of the time! Washington's name may not have lasted long in the jazz annals, but at this important point in his career, he's working with a young Woody Shaw – also part of the Jersey scene – and together, the pair really make the album cook – stretching out with a soulful, spiritual sound that really points the way towards the indie scene of the 70s! Shaw's voice is a big part of the record, but Tyrone's still definitely in command – blowing his tenor with these quick flurries of notes that are somewhere in the Coltrane school, yet arguably moving already past him too – kind of a post-Coltrane vibe in the year before the great one passed away. Washington also wrote all of the album's 6 tracks – really fresh numbers that burn with intensity, and make the album as creatively inventive as some of the best Jackie McLean Blue Note sides from the time. In addition to Woody Shaw's trumpet, other players include James Spaulding on alto and flute, Kenny Barron on piano, Reggie Workman on bass, and Joe Chambers on drums – a very hip lineup who really make magic on cuts that include "Yearning For Love", "Ethos", "Soul Dance", "Positive Path", and "Song Of Peace".
(Liberty stereo pressing. Cover has some wear and minor seam splitting, with a small stain and a name written in pen on the back.)
Also available: Natural Essence ... LP $9.99

Add to Cartsearch match 77.  
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Joe Williams — Worth Waiting For ... LP
Blue Note, Late 60s. Very Good Gatefold .... $0.99
Joe Williams was really reviving his career as a vocalist at this point – working with the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis big band on a few well-selling records, and on this smoother set with arrangements by Horace Ott. The overall feel is kind of in a swinging Grady Tate mode, with jazziness underneath larger orchestrations that have more of a popish quality to them – and Joe stretches his style to work on songs like Milton Nascimento's "Bridges", plus "Didn't We", "You Send Me", "I Hold No Grudge", "Oh Darling", and "Can't Take My Eyes Off You".
(Liberty/UA pressing. Spine has a spot of tape & a small rip. Top & bottom seams have masking tape.)

Add to Cartsearch match 78.  
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Tony Williams — Civilization ... LP
Blue Note, 1986. Very Good+ .... $4.99
(Cover has a cutout hole and a few stickers.)

Add to Cartsearch match 79.  
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Reuben Wilson — Groovy Situation ... LP
Blue Note, 1970. Good+ .... $7.99
Reuben Wilson changes up the groove from his previous Blue Note sets – and the result is one of his greatest albums to date! This smoking little set has an edge that you really wouldn't expect – rhythms that move past the simple Blue Funk mode – into a more complicated style of funky jazz that really has Reuben hitting the Hammond in a fresh new way – of the sort he'd explore on his later albums for the Groove Merchant label. The group's a simple quartet – with the unusual lineup of Earl Turbington on alto, Eddie Diehl on guitar, and Harold White on drums – but the sound is a lot fuller and richer, thanks to a free-spirited approach to the rhythms of the tunes. And even though a number of the cuts on the set are covers of 60s soul tracks – like "A Groovy Situation", "Happy Together", and "Signed, Sealed, Delivered" – they come off quite differently in Reuben's hands – and sit nicely next to strong original tracks like "Sweet Tooth" and "While The World Lies Waiting". A sweet little funky gem!
(Liberty/UA pressing. Cover is worn, with seam splitting, masking tape on the seams, and some pen and staining on the baack.)

Add to Cartsearch match 80.  
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new Larry Young — Of Love & Peace ... LP
Blue Note, Late 60s. Very Good .... $69.99
The most free-thinking Larry Young album of the 60s – and that's saying a lot, considering the rest of his work! The session's quite an unusual one – with two drummers in the group, grounding a sextet that features Larry on organ, James Spaulding on alto and flute, Herbert Morgan on tenor sax, and the great Eddie Gale on trumpet! The tracks are all quite long, open, and flowing – richly organic, and kind of an extension of the groove first laid down by Young on Unity – pushed into more spiritual, late-Coltrane territory. The sound is amazing – incredibly majestic, and on a par with the most far-reaching jazz on Impulse Records of the late 60s – a real standout for Blue Note, and for Young, who wouldn't record this way again until the 70s! Titles include "Falaq", "Seven Steps To Heaven", "Of Love & Peace", and "Pavanne".
(New York stereo pressing, with a Van Gelder stamp. Label has some light fading, but the whole thing's nice and clean overall.)

search match 81.  
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Herbie Hancock — Maiden Voyage ... LP
Blue Note, 1965. Very Good .... $13.99 Just Sold Out!
A brilliant album – and real turning point for Herbie Hancock! After first coming onto the scene as the soul jazz hero between Blue Note funky classics like "Watermelon Man" or "Blind Man, Blind Man" – Herbie emerges here as a concerned modernist with a strand of spirituality that runs deeper than previously expressed. The key track in this vision is his brilliant modal number "Maiden Voyage" – one of those tunes that sounded totally fresh immediately, and which was picked up by many others as a jazz anthem during the 60s. The rest of the album's equally great – and features George Coleman on tenor, Freddie Hubbard on trumpet, Ron Carter on bass, and Tony Williams on drums – all making for a very hip lineup that really lets Herbie open up stylistically! Other titles include "Dolphin Dance", "Little One", and an original version of "Survival Of The Fittest".
(70s pressing.)

search match 82.  
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new Paul Horn — Paul Horn In India (2 LP set) ... LP
Blue Note, Mid 60s. Sealed 2LP .... $7.99 Just Sold Out!
A 2LP 70s set on Blue Note – one that reissues 2 Paul Horn albums for World Pacific in the 60s – Paul Horn In India and Paul Horn In Kashmir. Both are two of the best of Paul Horn's albums of this nature – largely because at this point, he's still coming off of his jazz years, and manages to make the record still swing a bit! The title tells the story – as Paul records with a host of Indian musicians – adding his flute to tabla, tamboura, and violin to create a set of short and groovy ragas. Titles include "Raga Vibhas", "Raga Tilang", "Alap", "Manj Khamaj", "Arti", "Alap In Raga Bhairav", and "Raga Desh".
(Cover has a cut corner.)

search match 83.  
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new Earl Klugh — Earl Klugh ... LP
Blue Note, 1976. Sealed .... $3.99 Just Sold Out!
The sweet debut from guitarist Earl Klugh – a player whose sound went onto dominate late 70s fusion in a big big way! Klugh's clearly stepping here into a space allowed by George Benson at the time – a blend of jazz and R&B that's warmer and mellower than work previously done on Blue Note in the decade (or on CTI and Kudu for that matter) – one that's less focused on rhythm than it is on tone, and the kind of setting that allows Earl to shine wonderfully. There's a lot less of the cheesiness here that would hurt Klugh's later albums, and the overall presentation is nicely retrained – arranged by Dave Grusin at a time when he still knew how to bring a good deal of soul into a session, avoiding cliche and letting the soloist step forth unmarred. Other players include Lee Ritenour, Harvey Mason, and Grusin himself – and Klugh plays both electric and acoustic guitar, on tunes that include "Angelina", "Slippin In The Back Door", "Vonetta", "Waltz For Debby", and "Wind & The Sea".
(Shrinkwrap is a bit shopworn. Cover has a small cut corner.)

search match 84.  
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new Herbie Nichols — Third World ... LP
Blue Note, 1956/1975. Sealed 2LP Gatefold .... $19.99 Just Sold Out!
Herbie Nichols was one of the greatest piano players of the 20th Century, and his best work was recorded for Blue Note! You can hear just about every track he recorded for the label in this set (apart from some alternate takes), which is a stunning batch of lively tracks that rank Nichols right up there with Monk, Cecil Taylor, and Randy Weston for sheer modernist inventiveness. Even though we're not the biggest fans of the basic piano trio format, this stuff blows away all other recordings of that genre, and it never ceases to amaze us. Titles include "Step Tempest", "Crisp Day", "2300 Skiddoo", "Query", "Blue Chopsticks", and "Chit Chatting".
(Cover has a cut corner.)

search match 85.  
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new Jean-Luc Ponty — Canteloupe Island (King Kong/Jean-Luc Ponty Experience With The George Duke Trio) ... LP
World Pacific/Blue Note, 1969. Near Mint- 2LP Gatefold .... $7.99 Just Sold Out!
A great double-header – one that features 2 classic Jean-Luc Ponty albums from the 60s! Record one presents the album King Kong – an album that features Ponty, who was working with Frank Zappa at the time, playing a set of electric jazz takes on Zappa tunes – with lots of added help from George Duke, who was also working with Zappa too! The set's almost a "birth of fusion" one – with Zappa arrangements that are clearly in a jazz-rock mode – and lots of electric bass, electric piano, and electric violin in the set. Tracks are long, and riff-heavy – and other players include Ernie Watts, Wilton Felder, Buell Neidlinger, and Ian Underwood. Titles include "America Drinks & Goes Home", "Music For Electric Violin & Low Budget Orchestra", "King Kong", and "Twenty Small Cigars". Record two features The Jean Luc Ponty Experience With The George Duke Trio – a much better album than you'd expect, without any of the noodling of the players' later albums! At the time of this set, Duke and Ponty are breaking out of the hippie weirdness of the Zappa records, and get a bit more serious – working through some long, extended modal grooves that rank with the best MPS work by either player. Duke's on electric piano, ringing out in a weird spacy sound, and Ponty's violin is mostly restrained, used to cast waves of sound over the top of the tracks, in a way that works well with Duke's soulful resonant approach. Titles include "Foosh", "Cantaloupe Island", and "Starlight Starbright".
(Cover has a cut corner.)

search match 86.  
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new Horace Silver — Silver's Serenade ... LP
Blue Note, 1963. Very Good .... $44.99 Just Sold Out!
A bit less well-known than some of the real Horace Silver classics on Blue Note – but an incredible record that shows the Silver Quintet at all its lyrical best! The record is a masterpiece of original voicings from Horace – not just in the unique tunes he penned for the set, but also in the strong direction he gives the group – a well-knit lineup that includes Blue Mitchell on trumpet, Junior Cook on tenor, Gene Taylor on bass, and Roy Brooks on drums – all coming together with some of the most fluid, most intuitive energy of any combo of the time! The melodic themes are structured loosely, so that Mitchell, Cook, and Silver can extrapolate on beautifully-spun solos – and titles include "Sweet Sweetie Dee", "Nineteen Bars", "The Dragon Lady", "Silver's Serenade", and "Let's Get To The Nitty Gritty".
(New York stereo pressing, with RVG stamp and ear – nice and clean!)

search match 87.  
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new Horace Silver — Song For My Father ... LP
Blue Note, 1963. Very Good- .... $24.99 Just Sold Out!
An incredible record – the kind of album that only Blue Note could put out, and an instant classic that will sound wonderful forever! The album's truly one of the great ones – one of those Blue Notes that still makes you stop and pause when you hear it, even though you've heard it a million times in Starbucks and places like that. Horace Silver is working here at the height of his powers – lyrical, free, yet also damn soulful, in a style that makes for some of the most evocative jazz-based grooves cut to wax at the time. Carmell Jones is in the group, and plays some of his best trumpet ever – and Joe Henderson really drives the whole session home with some incredible tenor work. Other group members include Teddy Smith on bass and Roger Humphries on drums – and titles include the instantly famous "Song For My Father", plus "Que Pasa", "The Kicker", and "Calcutta Cutie".
(New York mono pressing with Van Gelder stamp and "ear". Vinyl has some marks that click. Cover has some ring & edge wear, split top and bottom seams, and some stains on the back.)
Also available: Song For My Father ... LP $9.99

search match 88.  
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new Horace Silver — Tokyo Blues ... LP
Blue Note, 1962. Very Good- .... $49.99 Just Sold Out!
One of Horace Silver's greatest records ever – and the album that always makes us remember how many of his tunes are now etched in the memory of modern jazz! The album's got a slightly exotic bent that you might guess from the title – a furthering of the sound that Silver first started on his own after breaking with Art Blakey – a hint of more cosmic modes to come in soul jazz, yet still served up here with more of the punch you might expect from 60s Blue Note. The group is great – with Blue Mitchell on trumpet and Junior Cook on tenor – both super-tight at the start of the tunes, then breaking off into deeply personal territory on their solos. Rhythm is from Gene Taylor on bass and John Harris on drums – the latter a lesser-known compatriot of Silver, but one with a nicely loose sensibility that really adds a lot to the record. The writing is great – and titles include "Sayanara Blues", "Tokyo Blues", "Ah So", "Cherry Blossom", and "Too Much Sake".
(New York mono pressing with a Van Gelder stamp and "ear". Vinyl has a couple of marks that play with light clicks. Back cover has some wear, a few stains, some pen, and a small rip at the top of the paste-on.)
Also available: Tokyo Blues (Japanese paper sleeve edition) ... CD $14.99

search match 89.  
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Bennie Wallace — Twilight Time ... LP
Blue Note, 1985. Sealed .... $4.99 Just Sold Out!
With Bennie Wallace on tenor, Ray Anderson on trombone, Dr John on piano and organ, John Scofield on guitar, and Bernard Purdie on drums.
(Cover has a cutout hole.)

search match 90.  
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new Cannonball Adderley — Somethin' Else (70s pressing) ... LP
Blue Note, 1958. Used .... $6.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
A landmark album – even if it was the only session that Cannonball Adderley ever cut for Blue Note! The album was recorded at a time when Adderley was working with Miles Davis – and as such, the session features a group that includes Miles, blowing in a cool tone that's a perfect offset to Cannonball's more soulful style. The rest of the group includes Hank Jones, Sam Jones, and Art Blakey – and like John Coltrane's Blue Train, the record's more of an "special session" than the usual Blue Note album, but the strength of the players make it one of the more memorable records of its day! Titles include "Somethin' Else", "One For Daddy-O", and a nice moody take on "Dancing In The Dark".

search match 91.  
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new Art Blakey — Free For All ... LP
Blue Note, 1964. Used .... $19.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
Killer material from the 1964 edition of the Jazz Messengers – an incredibly hard-hitting sextet that features Freddie Hubbard, Curtis Fuller, Wayne Shorter, Reggie Workman, and Cedar Walton. The mix of players is amazing, and Walton's warm lyricism is a haunting combination with the sharp-edged solos of Shorter and Hubbard. All tracks are long, and titles include "Free For All" and "Hammer Head" – both written by Shorter – plus "The Core", by Hubbard, and a beautiful version of Clare Fischer's "Pensativa".
(Liberty/UA pressing. Cover has some wear, and a 3 inch spot of staining & peeling on the top right corner.)

search match 92.  
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new Art Blakey — Like Someone In Love ... LP
Blue Note, 1960. Used .... $59.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
One of the greatest Art Blakey albums from the days when the Jazz Messengers lineup included Lee Morgan, Wayne Shorter, and Bobby Timmons! The whole set's a perfect example of the blend of lyricism and fire that Blakey and this group could craft – from the magical poetry of their interpretation of "Like Someone In Love", to the wealth of original tunes like "Noise In The Attic", "Giantis", "Johnny's Blue", and "Sleeping Dancer Sleep On" – all of which went onto be the blueprint for the sound of the second wave of hardbop at Blue Note! Pure magic – and one of the greats!
(New York stereo pressing with Van Gelder stamp. Cover has some wear and staining.)

search match 93.  
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new Art Blakey — Orgy In Rhythm Volume 1 ... LP
Blue Note, 1957. Used .... $14.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
A true orgy in rhythm from Art Blakey – a set that not only features his drums next to the kit of Art Taylor, but which also adds in a bevy of other percussionists – including Sabu Martinez, Patato Valdez, and Jose Valentine! Joe Jones and Specs Wright also bring in additional jazz drums – making for more drummers than you might even find in a high school band – all working together with amazing qualities in sound, sometimes even melodic amidst all of the rhythms. Lighter lyrical touches are provided by Herbie Mann's flute, and Ray Bryant throws in some great lines on piano – underscoring the grooves in a nice way. Titles on this first volume include "Buhaina Chant", "Split Skins", and "Toffi".
(French 80s analogue pressing. Cover has edge wear.)

search match 94.  
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new Art Blakey — Witch Doctor (Applause pressing) ... LP
Blue Note/Applause, 1961. Used .... $9.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
One of the best Art Blakey albums ever! This masterful session was one of two legendary ones that were recorded in 1961, but not released until the end of the 60s. The record features the incredible Morgan/Timmons/Shorter lineup, and it's filled with fantastic material that never saw the light of day elsewhere, like "Those Who Sit & Wait", "The Witch Doctor", and "A Little Busy" (the last of which the great jazz dj Bill Lee has been using as his theme in Chicago for many many years!) The record is an undisputed gem, one of the hardest of all Blakey sessions to find on vinyl, though this is an Applause label reissue of the Blue Note title – with a different cover than the original.
(Cover has some edge wear and a few creases.)

search match 95.  
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new Clifford Brown — Brownie Eyes ... LP
Blue Note, Early 50s/1974. Used .... $4.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
70s album that compiles some of Clifford Brown's best moments for Blue Note – including sides that were recorded under the leadership of JJ Johnson and Lou Donaldson, plus a few from sessions under Brown's own name. Titles include "Wail Bait", "Hymn Of The Orient", "Easy Living", and "De Dah". Some of the best work you'll ever find by Brown on record, too!
(Cover has a cut corner, some seam splitting, and a couple of peeled spots.)

search match 96.  
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new Kenny Burrell — Midnight Blue ... LP
Blue Note, 1963. Used .... $28.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
Great great stuff – and for some folks, THE album by Kenny Burrell! This classic set features the guitarist in a quintet with Stanley Turrentine on tenor, Major Holly on bass, Bill English on drums, and the great Ray Barretto on conga – a really great lineup that sparkles with soulful imagination, and moves with a very rhythmic groove – thanks to Ray's extra percussion contribution on the bottom! Burrell's guitar somehow seems a bit harder and grittier than ever – and titles include the classic groover "Chittlins Con Carne", an early jazz dance classic – plus "Soul Lament", "Wavy Gravy", and "Mule".
(New York mono pressing with Van Gelder stamp and "ear". Cover has some surface & edge wear, with a promo stamp and some small stains on the back.)

search match 97.  
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new Donald Byrd — Byrd In Flight ... LP
Blue Note, 1960. Used .... $19.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
A wonderfully lyrical session from trumpeter Donald Byrd – yet for some reason, the album's one of his most overlooked from the 60s! The session features material by 2 different groups – one that includes Byrd, Hank Mobley, and Duke Pearson; and another which features Byrd, alongside Jackie McLean and Pearson. Donald's playing is really opening up here – hitting some sweeter, more drifting notes, yet still referencing the heavier style of his hardbop years from time to time – and in a way, the record's almost a hint of the solo style that Byrd would take up on 70s recordings with Larry Mizell – still in a deep groove, but with a newfound ability to sail over the top with some nice light notes. Mobley and McLean are superb, as always, and Pearson plays nice and hard – with more of an edge than on his own recordings of the time. Tracks include "Ghana", "Lex", "My Girl Shirl", and "Bo".
(70s pressing.)

search match 98.  
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new Donald Byrd — Stepping Into Tomorrow ... LP
Blue Note, 1975. Used .... $14.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
An essential bit of jazz funk from Donald Byrd and Larry Mizell! The groove's very similar to their classic Places & Spaces LP, and the record's got loads of cool spacey tracks with hot funky trumpet from Donald, and cool waves of synth and sound from Larry. The title cut's a great groover, and other nice ones include "Think Twice" (sampled by Main Source for "Lookin' At the Front Door"), "I Love The Girl", and "You Are The World". Great great great stuff!
(Includes the printed inner sleeve.)
Also available: Stepping Into Tomorrow ... CD $8.99

search match 99.  
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new Sonny Clark — Sonny's Crib ... LP
Blue Note, 1957. Used .... $8.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
Hard-slamming genius from pianist Sonny Clark – one of his greatest albums for Blue Note, and a real cooker that's served up with an all-star group! Clark's vision has never been tighter or fuller than on this album – save, perhaps, for the magnificent Cool Struttin – and his command as a leader is impeccable, effortlessly shaping the horns of Donald Byrd, Curtis Fuller, and John Coltrane to realize his unique vision in music. Rhythm is by Paul Chambers on bass and Art Taylor on drums – and titles include classics like "News for Lulu" and "Sonny's Crib", plus smoking renditions of "Speak Low" and "With a Song in My Heart".
(Recent reissue. Cover has a very light stain on one corner.)
Also available: Sonny's Crib ... LP $9.99

search match 100.  
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new Lou Donaldson — Everything I Play Is Funky ... LP
Blue Note, 1970. Used .... $6.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
The title's no lie – because the album is one of the shining jewels of Lou Donaldson's legendary funk years for Blue Note – that second period when he returned to the label at the end of the 60s, and really helped redefine the sound of soul jazz at the time! The format here is very much the same as other Donaldson classics from the time – like Hot Dog or Possum Head – in that the tracks are long, open, and plenty darn grooving – locked in some funky rhythms that feature Idris Muhammad on some very heavy drums! Other players are great too – and include Blue Mitchell on trumpet, Melvin Sparks on guitar, and Lonnie Smith on Hammond – all cooking things up nicely on tracks that include "West Indian Daddy", "Donkey Walk", "Everything I Do Gonh Be Funky", and "Hamp's Hump".
(PLEASE NOTE: This is a reissue pressing.)
Also available: Everything I Play Is Funky ... LP $9.99
 
 
 

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