quarta-feira, 25 de fevereiro de 2026
Marvin Gaye - Let's Get It On 1973
Alice Coltrane - Universal Consciousness 1971
First Aid - Nostradamus 1977
First Aid were an English symphonic-rock band that released the album Nostradamus on Decca in 1976. The album was based on prophesies of the famed seer, including his prediction that the world would end in 1986, ten years on from the album’s release. First Aid featured drummer Dave Freeman, who played in the 1969 jazz-rock one-off ‘Igginbottom with a young Allan Holdsworth. The other members of First Aid — guitarist/singer Alan Wormald, bassist Norrie Tennet, and keyboardist Keith Parkinson — were relative newcomers. Working with conceptualist and producer Jimmy Parsons, Wormald and Parkinson composed an album of material based on 16th century French seer Nostradamus.
Nostradamus was released in 1976 on Decca (UK, Portugal) and the following year on London Records (Japan). Original vinyl copies are housed in a gatefold sleeve with Dada visuals by one Paul Redway. The album was recorded at Decca Studios and engineered by Alan Leeming (Caravan, Spriguns, Wolf, Patrick Moraz) and Martin Haskell, who also worked on the 1977 children’s narration album The Sly Cormorant by Brian Patten.
listen hereSteely Dan - Pretzel Logic 1974
Chuck Senrick - Dreamin' 1976
Singer, Songwriter, & Pianist/Keyboardist from Minnesota. He grew up in Farmington and showed an interested towards the family piano at an early age. Learning by ear and from instructors prepared him for his first professional gig at the age of 15 where he joined forces with a local band known as John Zimmer and The C4 and performed covers of songs from The Allman Brothers Band, Blind Faith, & Cream for audiences at The Sea Girt Inn in Lake Orchard, Minnesota. After graduating from Farmington High School, Senrick moved to The Twin Cities at age 20 in order to pursue his musical career further by borrowing equipment and living in friend's apartments to record with only a Fender Rhodes Piano & Donca Matic Mini Pops drumc machine. He released his sole album, Chuck Senrick - Dreamin' independently to a mere 200 copies each which were handed out personally at live shows. Senrick's wife at the time, Lesli Senrick illustrated the cover art for the album which featured a potrait of her husband against the Minneapolis skyline. After years of playing and singing in Minessota, Chuck would move to Peoria, Illinois to perform for guests at Jim's Steak House in the early 1980s, a gig that he has held for over 4 decades until his retirement in October 2024.
He also spent a few years entertaining folks at a restaraunt in Anna Maria Island, Florida before returning to Jim's at their new location in Bloomington during the mid 1990s. He currently resides in La Vista, Nebraska and continues to create & make music.
listen hereJoe Walsh - You Can't Argue With A Sick Mind 1976
Freddie Hubbard - Red Clay 1970
The Awakening - Hear, Sense and Feel 1972
Geysir - Hljomsveitin 1973
sexta-feira, 13 de fevereiro de 2026
The 31st of February - The 31st of February 1968
Van Duren - Are You Serious 1978
Volker Kriegel - Spectrum 1971
Vinicius De Moraes, Marilia Medalha, Toquinho - Como Dizia o Poeta 1971
Anthony 'Reebop' Kwaku Bah - Anthony 'Reebop' Kwaku Bah 1973
Raices - Raices 1975
Raices was a Puerto Rican Latin-jazz/rock band that released a self-titled album on Nemperor in 1975. The band were a local supergroup comprising ex-members of Kaleidoscope, Space, and Cortijo & His Time Machine.
The members of Raice were Juan Melendez (flute, soprano saxophone, clarinet), Amaury Lopez (fender rhodes, grand piano, clavinet, moog, acoustic guitar, percussion, vocal), Carlos ‘Kiko’ Melendez (guitars, cuatro, vocal), Roberto Puras (bass), Gonchi Sifre (drums, percussion, harmonica), Rafael Cruz (manjira, [clay] drums, goblet drum, cuica, bells, berimbau, cabasa, caxixi, flexatone), Sammy Figueroa (congas, triangle, flexatone, kalimba, vocals).
Raices comprised some of the island’s most accomplished musicians. Percussionist Rafael Cruz hailed from psych-rockers Kaleidoscope, which issued an eponymous album in Mexico in 1969. Keyboardist Amaury Lopez and bassist Roberto Puras played in Latin-rockers Space, which self-released the album Music to the People in 1970. Drummer Gonchi Sifre played on the popular 1973 release Y su Maquina del Tiempo by Cortijo & His Time Machine. The band’s singular album, Raices, was released on Nemperor/Atlantic in 1975. Of the eight tracks, seven are originals, including the brisk reed-riff gallop “Lenguas,” the chirping samba whirlwind “Parata Gua Gua,” the interrupted cocktail moonlighter “Parallax,” and the clavinet/clarinet groove of “Bluegarian Funk Dance.” Writing credits are mostly divided between Lopez and bothers Juan (reeds, voice) and Carlos Melendez (guitar). A seven-minute rendition of the Oscar Castro Neves/Sebastiano Neto composition “After Sunrise” is the sole cover. Musically, the band’s hallmarks include reed/keyboard trade-offs, abrupt tempo shifts, and frequent percussive spray.
The members of Raices were all multi-instrumentalists. Cruz’s arsenal included sardarflute, manjira (finger cymbals), dumbagi, quika, berimbau, cabassa, chickera, caxixi, quedo, flexitone, and coconut shells. Raices was produced by Bruce Botnick (The Doors, Love, Ben Sidran, James Vincent, Ross, Tony Williams Lifetime) and recorded at Miami’s Criteria Recording Studios. Its cover depicts a large poinciana illustrated by Haruo Miyauchi, who’s other visual credits include covers for Utopia (Todd Rundgren’s Utopia) and Roy Ayer’s Ubiquity (Virgo Red).
Guitarist Carlos “Kiko” Melendez recorded a pair of 1976/77 albums with the Rice and Beans Orchestra. He also played on albums by Art Webb, Eladio Torres, and Celi Bee & The Buzzy Bunch. He reunited with Lopez and Puras on Titti Sotto’s 1978 album Salsisimo!, billed as T.T.S. & The Banana Boat Co. and released on one-press Banana Records.
Cruz’s list of post-Raices credits includes albums from the worlds of rock (Tommy Bolin, Ray Gomez) jazz (Don Cherry, Herbie Mann, Kenny Barron, Steve Grossman, Sonny Fortune), jazz-funk (Art Webb, Brecker Brothers, Kilimanjaro), pop (Bette Midler, Carly Simon), soul (Chaka Khan, Narada Michael Walden), and international fusion (Chris Hinze Combination, Morrissey Mullen, Passport). Cruz also partook in the jazz all-star conglomerate the Atlantic Family, which performed at the 1977 Montreux International Festival: an event chronicled on the 1978 Atlantic double-album Live at Montreux.
Sifre played on Roy Buchanan’s 1976 album A Street Called Straight. He also appeared, with Kiko and Cruz, on Art Webb’s 1977 release Mr. Flute. JazzRock Soul.
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