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"The Stanley Clarke/George Duke Project is a genre defying soup of electro-funk, rock, r&b, smooth soul and fusion. There are crowd pleasing solos from all concerned and George Duke's smooth vocal stylings on the hits Sweet Baby and Brazilian Love Affair.
$7.00 -
By 1991 the band Santana had evolved from latin organ and percussion grooves through trippy jazz-fusion and arrived at a form of high energy latin soul/rock. It’s a journey few watching them at Woodstock in 1969 would have predicted.
$7.00 -
This is the lost incarnation of Tony Williams Lifetime, formed to tour in support of his 1978 all-star release The Joy Of Flying. A band of young unknowns including guitarist Tod Carver and fretless bassist on-the-rise Bunny Brunel allow Williams' powerhouse grooves and solos to shine.
$15.00 -
"The Chick Corea Band featured here is a high energy quartet plus saxophonist Sadao Watanabe. In fact, the concert feels at times like a showcase for the world's preeminent Japanese jazz musician who was very much a local hero.
$6.00 -
Recording of the Jazz Workshop (Boston, MA) performance broadcast on WBCN-FM radio on January 16, 1973
$7.00 -
By 1973 Sun Ra was established as an important if very strange presence on the jazz scene. His Arkestra had been operating and recording in various forms since the 1950s but their adoption in the late 1960s by the emerging counter-culture had propelled them to new levels of popularity.
$8.00 -
"Thanks to the commercial success of Miles Davis's 'Bitches Brew' there was a lot of fusion music around in the early 1970s. Wayne Shorter and Joe Zawinul were an integral part of Miles's project but unlike most who followed him they managed to leave acoustic jazz behind without embracing rock.
$18.00 -
"Just a month after the release of their second album Birds Of Fire, John McLaughlin's Mahavishnu Orchestra blast through an extraordinary set, demonstrating that they were the supreme jazz-rock group of the day.
$18.00