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Music > South Africa
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Hollywood Blues
(CD)
By:
West, Bruce & Laing
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R380
Discovery Miles 3 800
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Departure Dates
(CD)
Paul Pelletier; Performed by Victor Feldman
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R324
Discovery Miles 3 240
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Sapphron
(CD)
Sapphron Obois; Recorded by Sapphron Obois
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R359
Discovery Miles 3 590
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These 24 tracks are prime swing classics from the likes of Harry
James, Tommy Dorsey, Woody Herman, and Count Basie. This
extraordinarily thorough two-disc collection contains every hit
dance tune of the 1940s, and even some that time has forgotten.
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Billie's Blues
(CD)
Billie Holiday; Recorded by Billie Holiday
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R230
Discovery Miles 2 300
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Mutual Respect
(CD)
By:Ken Clark Organ Trio
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R380
Discovery Miles 3 800
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The Singles
(CD)
Basement Jaxx
1
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R324
Discovery Miles 3 240
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Definitive and complete edition of the airshots recorded in the
unforgettable jazz club under the leadership of Miles Davis with
modern jazzmen as Jackie McLean, J.J. Johnson, Sonny Rollins, Kenny
Drew, Charles Mingus, Art Blakey, and others.
This is a hard-edged fusion quartet with guitarist Allan
Holdsworth. ~ Michael G. Nastos
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Little Jazz Giant
(CD)
Teddy Wilson, Coleman Hawkins, Artie Shaw, Barney Kessel, Dick Hyman, …
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R499
R268
Discovery Miles 2 680
Save R231 (46%)
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A three-disc box set from England's Avid Records, Little Jazz Giant
tracks trumpeter Roy Eldridge's career from his early work as part
of the Delta Four in 1935 through his own efforts to front a swing
combo in the late '30s, his work with bandleaders Teddy Hill and
Fletcher Henderson, his brilliant early-'40s sides with Gene Krupa,
his profitable stay with Artie Shaw, his uncertain position with
the modern bop community, and finally, four concluding tracks with
Oscar Peterson. In retrospect, it's interesting how many of the
most striking cuts here were actually written by Eldridge,
including "That Thing," "The Gasser," "Fish Market," "Wild Driver,"
"Yard Dog," and "They Raided the Joint," each of which has a
perceptible modernist edge. Pound for pound, Eldridge was one of
the finest upper-range trumpet players jazz has ever produced, and
this set has countless examples of his jet-propelled solos (check
out his lightning-fast solos in the version of "St. Louis Blues"
that is included here). Avid has released each of the discs from
this set as single packages as well, entitled The Gasser
(1935-1946), Wild Driver (1944-1950), and The Heat's On
(1951-1952). ~ Steve Leggett
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Blues For Falasha CD (1999)
(CD)
Glenn Spearman; Contributions by Robert Schumaker; Produced by Glenn Spearman
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R454
Discovery Miles 4 540
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Greatest Hits
(CD)
David Morales, David Cole, Richard Vission, Eric Miller, Shep Pettibone, …
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R230
Discovery Miles 2 300
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Walking Uptown
(CD)
Papa John Defrancesco
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R439
Discovery Miles 4 390
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Mr. Hands
(CD, Imported)
Herbie Hancock, David Robinson; Performed by Herbie Hancock
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R230
Discovery Miles 2 300
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Herbie Hancock's lackluster string of electric albums around this
period was enhanced by this one shining exception: an incorrigibly
eclectic record that flits freely all over the spectrum. Using
several different rhythm sections, Herbie Hancock is much more the
imaginative hands-on player than at any time since the prime
Headhunters period, overdubbing lots of parts from his ever-growing
collection of keyboards. He has regained a good deal of his ability
to ride in the groove. "Calypso" finds him playing synthesized
steel drums and interacting with customary complexity and
ebullience with V.S.O.P. mates Tony Williams and Ron Carter. Disco
rears its head, but inventively this time on "Just Around the
Corner," and in league with Jaco Pastorius' vibrating, interlacing
bass, Hancock gets off some good, updated jazz-funk on "Spiraling
Prism" and "4 AM." There is even a reunion of the original
Headhunters on a rhythmically tangled remake of "Shiftless
Shuffle"; drummer Harvey Mason sounds like a rhythm machine gone
bonkers. Easily the outstanding track -- and one of Hancock's most
haunting meditations -- is "Textures," where he plays all of the
instruments himself. This would be the last outcropping of
electronic delicacy from Hancock for some time, and it was mostly
-- and unjustly -- overlooked when it came out. ~ Richard S. Ginell
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