Super funky soul jazz from guitarist O'Donel Levy. In a Phil Upchurch, Boogaloo Joe Jones and Grant Green vibe. Includes the jazz dance Dingwalls classic "Sad, Sad, Simba".
2nd batch six of Super heavyweight Yabby You productions from the mid to late 70s with many having dubs from the master King Tubby. Featuring singers Charlie...
2nd batch six of Super heavyweight Yabby You productions from the mid to late 70s with many having dubs from the master King Tubby. Featuring singers Charlie...
Following Far Out's reissue of Agustin Pereyra Lucena Quartet's La Rana, the label continues its memorialisation of the late, great Argentinian guitarist's...
Colin Curtis is back with another finely curated selection of the best Jazz Dance Fusion records he could find! Volume 4 reflects a combination of new...
Superb dub roots album originally released in 1979 on Warrior records in the U.K. "Harder Na Rass" is the dub counterpart to Prince Lincoln Thompson's...
With some of the best DJs and selectors there is a certain mysterious sound or underlying feeling which unites the music they play, regardless of genre,...
The Fugees rose to fame in the mid-1990s with a lineup featuring rapper/singer/producer Wyclef Jean, rapper/ singer/producer Lauryn Hill, and rapper Pras...
**One of hip-hop’s most anticipated collaborations!** “The chemistry between Earl and Alchemist comes from how naturally their styles blend together,...
É Soul Cultura Vol. 1 seemed to land at exactly the right moment. Post-lockdown, optimism was back on the rise and the dance floors swelled again. For...
Chaka's first solo record after Rufus, produced by Arif Mardin, and what a stormer! From the anthemic "I'm Every Woman" to a faithful rendition of Charles...
Drummer and Composer David Lee Jr.’s stunning and rare album Evolution (1974) blends the deep experimentalism of John Coltrane and Sun Ra with the pulsating...
The American trumpeter and multi-instrumentalist Jon Hassell, who died in 2021, was an international legend despite never having managed a popular breakthrough,...
‘Why Black Man Dey Suffer’, recorded in 1971, was originally deemed too controversial for release by EMI, his label at the time. Having recently been...
Not much needs to be written here, one of reggae's all time anthems, one of the baddest tunes of the '80s. Finally back out on a crisp booming 45, rock...
**Killer South African disco from '77!** Two tracks taken from the "Sweetie" LP by South-African group, The Headquarters. Originally released in 1977 and...