Miles Davis "Miles In The Sky" 1968
-
With the 1968 album Miles in the Sky, Miles Davis explicitly pushed his
second great quintet away from conventional jazz, pushing them toward the
jazz-rock...
3 hours ago
2 comments:
Thank you so much for this re-post! I've been looking for this for about 7 years (missed it first time around)- it seems impossible to find.
Which I don't understand. This is part of a common series (Sparrow, Kitchener, etc) - why has this one gone the way of hens' teeth?
The old Catch 22 I suppose. Its become unavailable 'cos no-one knows about it and no-one knows about it 'cos its unavailable.
Good on you for spreading its good sounds and historic importance, & 3 cheers for going outside "the regular T&W sort of thing".
I was a little worried when I saw it was only 44Mb, but hey, IT SOUNDS GREAT!
I'm going to tell ALL my friends! (about 3 people) Mick from Oz
Thanks for posting this. When I started listening to old calypso, Lion's tunes quickly became among my favorites.
But I think the post (and the wikipedia link) are incorrect on one point. The Skatalites never recorded Happy For the Rest of Your Life.
When Napster and other .mp3 sharing tools first hit the scene, TONS of mislabeled tracks created much confusion. Harry Chapin tunes were labeled, Cat Stevens; and a myriad of 80's tunes all credited to The Cure. It was a mess.
Every time I would download this supposed Skatalites track, it would turn out to be Johnny Soul. Also, I cannot find any evidence of an official Skatalites release with this song on it.
Even the youtube, featuring a Skatalites logo, is labeled Johnny Soul: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=baRswZawbGo
Post a Comment