Posts Tagged ‘Heavenly Sweetness’

Don’t Stress, it’s Distro Time! Bobby Hutcherson’s NOW!

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010

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New distro titles in this week from the angelic Heavenly Sweetness (Paris, France) label. First up, a great reissue of Bobby Hutcherson’s 1969 classic Now! LP on Blue Note.

Now! stands as one of Bobby Hutcherson’s most adventurous recordings. The LP was cut with the Harold Land Quintet and Hutcherson beefed up the lineup with vocalist Right Reverend Eugene McDaniels (who at the time of the LP was known as Gene McDaniels) and a chorus at the height of Black Power consciousness. This reissue is part of the Blue Note series from Heavenly Sweetness and comes pressed on 180 gram vinyl and sports a deluxe “Jazz” sleeve!

Check out the video from NEA Jazz Masters below for a taste of Hutcherson’s story:

More “Heavenly” DISTROction!

Wednesday, December 1st, 2010

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Two more titles in this week from Heavenly Sweetness! First up is Robert Aaron’s Trouble Man, a beautifully LP in a timeless soul jazz inspired mode. Keys, smooth, but lively saxes and and some great percussion are usually at play in these tunes — which bears the influences of greats from Pharoah Sanders to Gato Barbieri in spirit and instrumentation. LP comes with a bonus 7″, so pick this one up quick!

Order Robert Aaron Trouble Man HERE!

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Next up is Bad Bad Things, the first album from Blundetto, a hotpot of gently simmering soul-reggae spices with a few bubbles of emotion rising delicately to the surface. Featuring : Buddos Band, Shawn Lee, Lateef, Tommy Guerrero (my 13 year-old-skater-self freaks out over this!), Chicoman, General Electrics, Hindi Zarha. Both CD & LP releases sport deluxe packaging!

To order Blundetto Bad Bad Things click HERE!

Just a Sweet Taste! Our Favorite Distro Reissues of 2010!

Monday, December 27th, 2010

Here at Light In The Attic, we’re not the only ones digging deep to bring you killer wax. And luckily for us many of our favorite reissues and rediscoveries over the year come in as distro titles, so we get to drool all over them right when they come out of the shipping crate. Hears a little list of some of the albums that got us down right feverish in 2010. Here’s to an equally mind blowing 2011!

Charanjit Singh: Synthesizing – Ten Ragas To A Disco Beat (Bombay Connection)

This title came our way back in May and right away, LITA’s Josh Wright (AKA The Dude With The Plan), perked right up. I mean come on, this record is the stuff of legend. Only a few hundred copies known to exist (CHECK!), TB-303 and TR-808 synths/drum machines (CHECK!), Indian disco (CHECK!!!). Bombay Connection really knocked this one out of the park.

El Gusano: Fantasia del Barrio (Heavy Light)

Late ’60s / early 70s Texas psych and chicano soul mixed with heavy Vietnam vibes made this release a real stand-out this year. An instrumental concept album, expertly executed and now, after decades of languishing in obscurity, can sit proudly on all of our shelves. Heavy Light…Dig!?!

Ranil Y Su Conjunto Tropical: Ranil’s Jungle Party (Masstropicas)

Man, the party kept going all year long with this dandy little release from Masstropicas. Mixing deeply funky psychedelic-surf guitar jams with traditional “huayño” dance music, Ranil and Co. get down and dirty Peruvian style. The result is a style mash-up not unlike African “Juju” or “High-Life” music, popularized by the incendiary Stratocaster guitar playing of King Sunny Adé. In fact, think of Ranil’s Jungle Party as King Sunny Adé jamming with some Andes dudes while on vacation in Peru. So good…

Blundetto: Bad Bad Things (Heavenly Sweetness)

This their first full length is a blend of sultry cafe soul, late-night acid jazz, and laid back, umm blunted riddims to make up twelve flavorful, mostly instrumental groovers. But if that wasn’t a hard enough sell, check out the range of guests who flex their muscles to chill: former Bones Brigade ripper-turned-backpack world beat maestro Tommy Guerrero (“Ken Park”); the horn section from Daptone’s fine Budos Band (“Mustang” and “La Carretilla”); East Bay MC Lateef the Truth Speaker (“My One Girl”); and the chameleon-like Shawn Lee (“Nautilus” and “La Carretilla”). Sounds like Heavenly Sweetness to our ears!

Los Saicos: Demolicion! The Complete Recordings (Munster)

We were so excited about this release. I mean, we couldn’t shut up about it. Want proof, click HERE, we dare you!!! But seriously, this rare collection of singles from Los Saicos rocked. All the way back in Peru in 1965/66, Los Saicos were tearin’ shit up and today, thanks to the fine folks at Munster, we have the proof. And boy does it sound good.

Daniel Johnston: The Story Of An Artist (Box Set) (Munster)

And last, but certainly not least, the great Daniel Johnston. And what a god damn sweet release it is. We were literally drooling when this came in. This deluxe and limited edition box set packs in the very early recordings by one of the most gifted songwriters of the last three decades. Includes Daniel’s six cassette-only albums recorded between 1980 & 1983 – 129 recordings straight out of the original cassettes, packaged in individual sleeves. CD or LP box set choices made this release the cat’s pajamas. Essential. Thanks again, Munster!

Distro Dayz – Heavenly Sweetness tackles Blue Note!

Wednesday, February 2nd, 2011

Rolling through the pearly gates of Heavenly Sweetness is a whole batch of essential Blue Note LP-only reissues! The list includes a ton of heavy hitters like Duke Pearson, Art Taylor, Andrew Hill, Curtis Amy, Art Blakey, and more.  Each release gets the usually quality treatment, but here’s a short list of some of our favorites from the past week.

Andrew Hill – Live Every Voice

A rare and beautiful Andrew Hill session, and one of the classic Blue Note entries into the “jazz and voices” sound that the label pioneered with Donald Byrd and Eddie Gale. Hill leads a core jazz group that includes Woody Shaw, Carlos Garnett, Richard Davis, and Freddie Waits — and the group is backed by a vocal ensemble with a very spiritual vibe.

To read more and to order Andrew Hill Live Every Voice, click HERE!

Harold Vick – Steppin’ Out!

Harold Vick’s saxophone and flute paying is just in between hard bop and soul jazz, he is usually very well known for having played as sideman with Grant Green, Jack McDuff, Jimmy Smith or Shirley Scott. But Vick has also played with mainstream legends such as Aretha Franklin, Dizzy Gillespie, Mercer Ellington and Sarah Vaughan. In 1963, he is 27 years old, and Stepping Out is his first album as a leader and the only one recorded for Blue Note as the following albums will be recorded on RCA and Srata East.

To read more and to order Harold Vick - Steppin’ Out!, click HERE!

Duke Pearson – Wahoo!

Wahoo ! is right — as Duke Pearson sets up one of his hippest sessions of the 60s, a lyrical batch of soul jazz tracks, with that slight edge of darkness that he was putting into his best work as the decade progressed! Players include James Spaulding on alto and flute, Joe Henderson on tenor, and Donald Byrd on trumpet. Killer!

To read more and to order Duke Pearson – Wahoo!, click HERE!

Art Taylor – A.T.’s Delight

Although Art Taylor was one of the busiest modern second-generation jazz drummers, working in the studio with Coleman Hawkins, Donald Byrd, John Coltrane and many others, he only released five albums under his own name, of which A.T.‘s Delight was the third. You can wax for days on this baby!

To read more and to order Art Taylor - A.T.’s Delight, click HERE!