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Maybeshewill - Not for Want of Trying (Full Album)
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Lianne La Havas – Unstoppable
Fantastic track for an easy Sunday morning <3 |
LION BABE - Treat Me Like Fire
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Nao - In the Morning
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PHOX - Noble Heart
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PHOX - Never Lover - North Shore Sessions
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Ray Lamontagne - Jolene
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Ray LaMontagne BBC FOUR Sessions at London
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It's 3 years Tuesday, baby! I love you now more than I ever thought possible. Thank you for being My wife, girl, love of My life and best friend.
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...one of My favourites....
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...when music was music....
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I'm listening to Adele #25 CD
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Miles Davis - Blue Haze, full LP
Taken from YouTube: "Blue Haze" is an album recorded in 1953 and 1954 by Miles Davis for Prestige Records. The first track on the album is from the 3 April 1954 session which resulted in half of the album Walkin' (and was originally included on the 10" LP Miles Davis Quintet (PRLP 185)). The remainder is the result of two sessions on May 19, 1953 and March 15, 1954, the first being a quartet with John Lewis on piano curiously replaced on "Smootch" by its co-composer Charles Mingus Percy Heath, the bassist throughout the album, and Max Roach on drums. On the second session in March 1954 Horace Silver was on piano and Art Blakey on drums. These seven tracks were all originally released on the 10" LP Miles Davis Quartet (PRLP 161). The compositions "Four" and "Tune Up" were always credited to Davis, although both are claimed by Eddie Vinson to be his compositions. Vinson was a known blues singer at that time and had no use for them and gave Davis permission to record them. No one opposed to the false crediting until "recently," as Jack Chambers wrote in Milestones 1983 |
The Planets
Gustav Holst (Composer), Charles Dutoit (Conductor), Montreal Symphony Orchestra (Orchestra) I just got this CD and this is one of the best versions I have had the pleasure to hear- the recording is superb and the interpretation is rousing to say the least |
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Ray LaMontagne & John Mayer - Tears of Rage - Love for Levon
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Ray Lamontagne & Damien Rice - To love somebody
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Días de Septiembre - Nostalgia
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Sílvia Pérez Cruz - Cerca De Tu Casa
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Silvia Perez Cruz - Duermete (Domus)
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Lester Young - Lester Young Trio, full album
Tracklist: 1- Back To The Land 2- I Cover The Waterfront (Take 1) 3- I Cover The Waterfront (Take 2) 4- Somebody Loves Me 5- I've Found a New Baby 6- The Man I Love 7- Peg o' My heart 8- I want To Be Happy 9- Mean to Me 10- Back to the Land 11- I've Found a New Baby 12- Rosetta 13- Sweet Lorraine 14- Blowed and Gone Tracks 1 - 10: Lester Young: ts // Nat King Cole: Piano // Buddy Rich: Drums// Tracks 11-14: Harry Edison: tp // Dexter Gordon: Ts // Nat Cole: Piano // Red Callender or Johnny Miller: b // Buddy Rich: Drums // From www.allmusic.com One of Lester Young's most memorable post-World War II dates came in 1946, when he entered a Los Angeles studio and formed a trio that employed Nat King Cole on piano and Buddy Rich on drums. In 1994, the results of that classic encounter, which Norman Granz produced for his Clef label, were reissued on the CD Lester Young Trio. Unfortunately, the sound is pretty scratchy, and one wishes that Verve had used digital remastering to reduce the noise. But the performances themselves are outstanding. From the blues "Back to the Land" to the soulful ballad statements of "The Man I Love" and "I Cover the Waterfront," Lester Young Trio explodes the absurd myth that Young's postwar output is of little or no value -- a myth that many jazz critics have been all too happy to promote. The CD's four bonus tracks (which include "Sweet Lorraine," "Rosetta" and "I've Found a New Baby") come from a 1943 or 1944 session that didn't employ Young at all, but rather, was led by tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon and features trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison and Cole, among others. Listeners might ask what that session, which was Gordon's first as a leader, has to do with Young, and the answer is that it illustrates Young's tremendous influence on Gordon. At that point, Gordon still sounded a lot like Young, was still playing swing rather than bebop and had yet to develop a recognizable sound of his own, although by 1945, Gordon would become quite distinctive and influential himself. Highly recommended. |
(there's a handy little add on that Firefox offers called proxmate,which can unblock many youtube vids making the better quality recordings accessible)
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