"Harlem Sessions" sounds like your favorite mix tape you made many years ago; the one that you keep playing over and over because it has all your favorite, desert-island songs. It's a groovilicious compilation of killer soul cuts from the 1970s, with blaxploitation films as the main theme. Of course, you can't realistically include EVERY great soul joint from the 1970s on two CDs, but this compilation does a great job trying. A collection of this nature has some of the usual cast of characters like Curtis Mayfield ("Superfly" and "Little Child Running Wild" from his must-have soundtrack to "Superfly") and Isaac Hayes ("Shaft"), but we also get unexpected nuggets from Cuban jazz legend Mongo Santamaria ("We Got Latin Soul"), Gil Scott-Heron's "The Bottle," Shirley Brown's sassy "Woman to Woman," Bob James' "Night Crawler," and Bootsy Collins' hugely influential and oft-sampled "I'd Rather Be With You." This collection gets it right in so many ways that's impossible to pass this winner up. All that's missing are the bell-bottoms and an Afro wig.
For the latest installment of the boundary-blurring, mind-expanding Jazz Dispensary series, the homegrown label’s highly discerning sound sommeliers have curated an irresistibly funky selection of songs from midnight movies of the ’60s and ’70s. A movie marathon’s worth of wildly infectious grooves, Jazz Dispensary: At The Movies features can’t-miss classics and deep cuts from Melvin Van Peebles, Isaac Hayes, Booker T. & The M.G.’s, and many more of the soul, funk, and R&B legends behind the soundtracks to a multitude of seminal cult favorites.
All the classics are here, Booker T, Otis Redding, Sam and Dave, Eddie Floyd, you know the score. All the tracks you associate with the label too. 60 tracks in total over three discs.