Jackie O'neil

Jackie McLean - Lights Out (1956) [Analogue Productions 2013] PS3 ISO + DSD64 + Hi-Res FLAC

Jackie McLean - Lights Out (1956) [APO Remaster 2013]
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 Mono > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 46:07 minutes | Scans included | 1,31 GB
or DSD64 2.0 (from SACD-ISO to Tracks.dsf) > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | Scans included | 1,2 GB
or FLAC(carefully converted & encoded to tracks) 24bit/88,2 kHz | Scans included | 931 MB

Altoist Jackie McLean's second session as a leader is reissued on this SACD. The music that he makes with trumpeter Donald Byrd, pianist Elmo Hope, bassist Doug Watkins and drummer Art Taylor is essentially hard bop with fairly simple (or in some cases nonexistent) melody statements preceding two romps through the "I Got Rhythm" chord changes, a pair of blues, a thinly disguised "Embraceable You" and a straightforward version of "A Foggy Day". Enjoyable if not really essential music from the up-and-coming altoist.
Jackie DeShannon - Keep Me In Mind: The Complete Imperial & Liberty Singles Volume 3 (Remastered) (2012)

Jackie DeShannon - Keep Me In Mind: The Complete Imperial & Liberty Singles (2012)
XLD Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log) - 349 MB
1:14:28 | Pop Rock | Label: Ace

UK collection from the Pop singer/songwriter. Keep Me in Mind completes our reissue program of the singles recorded by Jackie DeShannon for the Liberty and affiliated Imperial labels. Jackie spent 10 mostly glorious years at the company, recording everything from folk-rock and R&B to Bacharach sophistication and beyond. The first two volumes of our series covered the years 1960 to 1967 and comprised 100% mono single mixes. This third volume takes US into the stereo era. Tracks 1 to 18 are mono, the rest are stereo, mirroring how the singles were released at the time. The set commences with the endearingly kooky 'Changin' My Mind' and concludes with a previously unissued edit of Jackie's reading of Leonard Cohen's 'Bird on the Wire', a cancelled single from 1970. In between are included such self-penned gems as 'I Keep Wanting You', 'Nicole', 'Laurel Canyon', 'Mediterranean Sky' and Jackie's signature song 'Put a Little Love in Your Heart', plus her versions of the Bands' 'The Weight', Bobby Womack's 'What Is This' and John Sebastian's 'Didn't Want to Have to Do It', another cancelled single. Ace.
Jackie McLean - The Complete Blue Note 1964-1966 Sessions (1993) [4CD Box Set]

Jackie McLean - The Complete Blue Note 1964-1966 Sessions (1993)
EAC | Flac(Image) + Cue + Log & MP3 CBR 320Kbps
Mosaic Records, MD4-150 | ~ 1553 or 621 Mb | Scans(png) -> 206 Mb
Jazz / Post-Bop / Hard Bop

Altoist Jackie McLean has recorded so many fine albums throughout his career, particularly in the '60s for Blue Note, that Mosaic could have reissued his complete output without any loss of quality. This four-CD limited-edition box set contains six complete LPs worth of material plus one "new" alternate take…
Jackie DeShannon - You Won’t Forget Me: The Complete Liberty Singles Volume 1 (Remastered) (2009)

Jackie DeShannon - You Won’t Forget Me: The Complete Liberty Singles Volume 1 (Remastered) (2009)
XLD Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log) - 244 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 144 MB
1:02:44 | Pop Rock | Label: Ace

2009 collection of digitally remastered recordings from the ultra-talented singer and songwriter. With the looks and voice of an angel and the songwriting chops that equaled those of her contemporaries, DeShannon was one of the most talented artists to emerge in the '60s. While her songwriting has been celebrated over the years, her original recordings have often been overlooked. This first volume of her original singles issued on the Liberty label will hopefully set the record straight! 26 tracks including 'When You Walk in the Room', 'Heaven Is Being with You', 'Needles And Pins', '500 Miles' and many more. Ace.
Jackie DeShannon - Come And Get Me: The Complete Liberty And Imperial Singles Volume 2 (Remastered) (2011)

Jackie DeShannon - Come And Get Me: The Complete Liberty And Imperial Singles Volume 2 (Remastered) (2011)
XLD Rip | FLAC (tracks, cue, log) - 266 MB | MP3 CBR 320 kbps - 153 MB
1:06:49 | Pop Rock | Label: Ace

2011 collection from the American singer/songwriter. The success of the Complete Jackie DeShannon Singles Vol. 1 would have prompted a follow-up even if we hadn't already been planning one. Singles Vol. 2 picks up from where that ended. It moves US from the end of 1964 to early 1967, with Jackie moving from Liberty to it's sister label Imperial and expanding her musical horizons in all sorts of ways. 1964-66 was Jackie's most successful period in terms of overall chart profile, and it's during these years that some of her biggest hits like 'What the World Needs Now Is Love' and 'When You Walk in the Room' made their vinyl debuts. They and others of comparable quality are here in this collection of 26 tracks. Ace.

Jackie Wilson - Reet Petite (2009)  Music

Posted by ciklon5 at Aug. 8, 2024
Jackie Wilson - Reet Petite (2009)

Jackie Wilson - Reet Petite (2009)
FLAC (*tracks + .cue,log) | 1:16:41 | 278 Mb
Genre: Soul, RnB

Within the pop music of the 1960s, Jackie Wilson was one of the most important agents of the transition from R&B into soul. In terms of vocal power (especially in the upper register), few could outdo him, and he was an electrifying on-stage showman. Although never a crossover superstar on par with the likes of Ray Charles, James Brown, or Sam Cooke, he was a consistent hitmaker from the mid-'50s through the early '70s. Wilson was well-known on the R&B scene before he went solo in the late '50s. In 1953, he replaced Clyde McPhatter in Billy Ward & the Dominoes, one of the top R&B vocal groups of the time. Commercially, things took a downturn for the Dominoes in the Wilson years, although they did manage a Top 20 hit with "St. Therese of the Roses" in 1956. Elvis Presley was one of those who was mightily impressed by Wilson; he can be heard praising Jackie's on-stage cover of "Don't Be Cruel" in between-song banter during the Million Dollar Quartet session in late 1956. Wilson would score his first big R&B (and small pop) hit in late 1956 with the brassy, stuttering "Reet Petite," which was co-written by an emerging Detroit songwriter named Berry Gordy, Jr. Gordy would also help write a few other hits for Wilson in the late '50s:

Jackie & Roy - The Essential Collection (2011)  Music

Posted by Rtax at Sept. 25, 2021
Jackie & Roy - The Essential Collection (2011)

Jackie & Roy - The Essential Collection (2011)
WEB FLAC (tracks) - 206 MB
1:14:40 | Jazz, Pop, Easy Listening | Label: Master Classics Records

Singer Jackie Cain (born May 22, 1928, Milwaukee, WI) and singer/pianist Roy Kral (born October 10, 1921, Chicago, IL) first joined forces in 1946, and in 1996 they celebrated their 50th anniversary as a vocal duo. Jackie & Roy were with Charlie Ventura's band during 1948-1949 (which gave them a great deal of recognition); Lou Stein's "East of Suez" was an unusual feature for their voices. Shortly after leaving Ventura in June 1949, they were married and worked together on a regular basis ever since. Jackie & Roy had their own television show in Chicago in the early '50s, worked in Las Vegas during 1957-1960, settled in New York in 1963, and appeared on some television commercials. They recorded many spirited jazz performances for a variety of labels through the decades, and performed into the 2000s until Kral's death in August 2002. Roy was the brother of singer Irene Kral.
Jackie DeShannon - Stone Cold Soul: The Complete Capitol Recordings (2018)

Jackie DeShannon - Stone Cold Soul: The Complete Capitol Recordings (2018)
XLD Rip | FLAC (tracks+log+.cue) | 01:18:52 | 502 Mb
Pop, Soul, Female Vocal | Label: Real Gone Music

This exciting set from Real Gone Music gathers all of singer-songwriter Jackie DeShannon's rootsy, soulful material from her short period on the Capitol label from 1970-1971, encompassing her sessions at Chips Moman's American Studios and more, and including five previously unreleased tracks.
Jackie McLean - 4, 5 and 6 (1956) Analogue Productions' Prestige Mono Series, Remastered 2012

Jackie McLean - 4, 5 and 6 (1956)
Mastered by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio, 2012
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 260 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 123 Mb | Scans included
Hard Bop, Saxophone Jazz | Label: Analogue Productions | # CPRJ 7048 SA | Time: 00:45:36

This LP for Prestige helped establish alto sax giant McLean on the jazz scene. He was joined by trumpeter Donald Byrd (who shines with the altoist on Charlie Parker’s “Confirmation”) and tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley (also bopping hard on the tune), in a date solidified by McLean’s rhythm section: Mal Waldron on piano, Doug Watkins on bass and Arthur Taylor on drums. McLean also plays ballads, including Waldron’s sublime tune “Abstraction.” Writing in the original notes, Ira Gitler said, ”Jackie McLean is musically coming of age. His playing, out of Charlie Parker and Sonny Rollins, has become a personalized, more individual voice in 1956 and he has not lost any of the basic emotion, swinging qualities that help his style live up to the second syllable of his last name so well.” Hybrid Mono SACD for sale individually and as part of Analogue Productions’ Prestige Mono Series. Mini "old style" gatefold jacket packaging.
Jackie McLean - New Soil (1959) [Analogue Productions, Remastered 2010]

Jackie McLean - New Soil (1959) [Remastered 2010]
Mastered by Kevin Gray and Steve Hoffman at AcousTech Mastering
EAC | FLAC | Tracks (Cue&Log) ~ 308 Mb | Mp3 (CBR320) ~ 109 Mb | Scans included | 00:45:01
Hard Bop, Post-Bop, Saxophone Jazz | Label: Analogue Productions/Blue Note | # CBNJ 84013 SA

New Soil wasn't the first session Jackie McLean recorded for Blue Note, but it was the first one released, and as the title suggests, the first glimmerings of McLean's desire to push beyond the limits of bop are already apparent. They're subtle, of course, and nowhere near as pronounced as they would be in just a few years' time, but – as with the 1959 material later issued on Jackie's Bag – hints of Ornette Coleman's stream-of-consciousness melodic freedom are beginning to find their way into McLean's improvisations. His playing is just a touch more angular than the ear expects, especially given the very bluesy nature of pieces like McLean's 11-minute vamp "Hip Strut," and pianist Walter Davis, Jr.'s infectious boogie-woogie "Greasy."