"Marlboro Men have come to the party again, this time doubling down with Dave Talon's signature meaty riffs and foot stomping jungle boogie you been hunting for. Bought it as soon as it dropped, instant eargasm. Favorite track: VANISHING POINT."
" Marlboro Men have come to the party again, this time doubling down with Dave Talon's signature meaty riffs and foot stomping jungle boogie you been hunting for. Bought it as soon as it dropped, instant eargasm. Favorite track: VANISHING POINT."
"Marlboro Men have come to the party again, this time doubling down with Dave Talon's signature meaty riffs and foot stomping jungle boogie you been hunting for. Bought it as soon as it dropped, instant eargasm. Favorite track: VANISHING POINT."
"Marlboro Men have come to the party again, this time doubling down with Dave Talon's signature meaty riffs and foot stomping jungle boogie you been hunting for. Bought it as soon as it dropped, instant eargasm. Favorite track: VANISHING POINT."
Although they're best known as the Ocean, this Berlin, Germany, outfit's original name is perhaps more fitting - the Ocean Collective - as they are a hefty eight members strong. And on the group's 2007 release, Precambrian, the Ocean continue to specialize in a hard-hitting approach that touches upon such similar styles as extreme metal and doom metal. But unlike the majority of groups that fall under either of these two categories, the Ocean are not a one-dimensional band. No siree, as such styles as prog ("Neoarchean") and even Middle Eastern-esque soundscapes ("Siderian") are used to create some much needed shelter - albeit momentary - from all the fury. However, don't be fooled into thinking that Precambrian is all about surprise detours - ditties such as the album-opening "Hadean" and "Paleoachean" are instant headbanging highlights…
In 1990, when most of the original members of Yes were working under the name Anderson Bruford Wakeman Howe for legal reasons, Jon Anderson recorded a batch of demos for what would have been the second ABWH album. When the band reunited with Chris Squire under their original moniker, the ABWH project was abandoned, and the songs fell between the cracks. This collection preserves those demos as a part of Yes history. The arrangements are fairly bare-bones, mostly electronic, but one can imagine the elaborate sonic garments of the Yes men being draped over the skeletons of these songs without too much effort.
In another of those two-fers that are going to tangle discographies for some time to come, this bears the title of a Don Patterson album, The Boss Men, and includes all of the material from that LP. However, this CD, though it's also called The Boss Men, is billed to both Sonny Stitt and Don Patterson, and combines the original Patterson The Boss Men LP with another album cut in 1965, Night Crawler, that was billed to Sonny Stitt, although it featured the exact same lineup (Stitt on alto sax, Patterson on organ, Billy James on drums) as The Boss Men. Not only that, the CD adds two cuts from a Patterson 1964 LP, Patterson's People, also featuring the Stitt-Patterson-James trio. As for the original The Boss Men, it's a respectable straight-ahead jazz-with-organ session…
Men I Trust is proud to bring you their highly anticipated new album titled Oncle Jazz. After a year of extensive touring around the globe, Men I trust are now ready to share Oncle Jazz with Their Fans. 23 warm and intricately crafted tracks Featuring the Singles "Tailwhip", "Norton commander", "Seven" and more. "We took our time to craft it with love and we're very proud of how it came together. This album was mixed quietly so it sounds warmer and more natural. Be sure to turn the volume up!" - Men I Trust
The legendary Four Brothers reed section of Woody Herman's famous "Second Herd" big band of 1947, (Herbie Steward, Zoot Sims, Stan Getz and Serge Chaloff) is reimagined and reinvigorated by jazz icons Harry Allen, Eric Alexander, Grant Stewart and Gary Smulyan on the exciting, swinging and audacious recording of The Candy Men by Harry Allen's All Star New York Saxophone Band. Offering a sensational set of twelve bop-infused tunes containing some hard-driving, mid-tempo swing pieces to breathy and bossa-styled ballads, one sampling of this disc is just not enough. The material and the musicianship is so outstanding, that the late, great bandleader Woody Herman himself, would be proud of the way this group of jazz icons, has so elegantly represented the original Brothers section.