William D. Drake - Miaow Miaow
The self titled 2003 album first released on All My Eye and Betty Martin Music record label Lovingly produced by Dr Tim Smith
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The self titled 2003 album first released on All My Eye and Betty Martin Music record label Lovingly produced by Dr Tim Smith
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When William D. Drake and Sharron Fortnam became friends in 1987, it was obvious they would have to make music together, even if they didn’t know it yet.They were riding the same wave…
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Insanely brilliant South African Jazz L.P. from 1974
Available from Bandcamp here
Continue...1975 facsimile reissue of Mary Lou Williams’s magnum opus of religious jazz: Mary Lou’s Mass. Newsweek called the score “an encyclopedia of black music, richly represented from spirituals to bop to rock.” This is Williams’s “Music for Peace,” a landmark recording which addressed many of the social ills of the 1960s and 70s. It is perhaps the most openly religious jazz recording made at that time. In her own words, it is “Music for the Soul.”
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This remarkable album, originally released in 1979 features an all-star lineup of artists brought together by talent of Mother Gong’s Gilli Smyth. Renowned for her work with Gong, Smyth’s unique vocal stylings—the ethereal “space whisper”—lead the way on this otherworldly journey.
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Everything has changed, and it is changing still. The early days of 2025 (an already baleful year, vis-a-vis America’s darkening political horizon) have wrought heretofore unimaginable destruction in the land we now call Los Angeles. The wildfires that began on the morning of Tuesday, January 7th—and which are still raging—are, in scope and intensity, unlike any other disaster, natural or manmade, in the city’s living memory. Thousands of homes destroyed. Twenty four lives lost at the time of writing (that number will almost certainly rise), and innumerable lives forever altered. The devastation arrived suddenly, and has persisted over the course of a punishing and surreal week.
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