Whats on your turntable tonight?


For me its the first or very early LP's of:
Allman Brothers - "Allman Joys" "Idyllwild South"
Santana - "Santana" 200 g reissue
Emerson Lake and Palmer - "Emerson Lake and Palmer"
and,
Beethoven - "Piano Concerto No. 4 in G Major" Rudolph Serkin/Ozawa/BSO
slipknot1
Sergio Mendes Trio - "In The Brazilian Bag" [Tower stereo LP '66] Piano trio + guests Wanda de Sah vocals, Rosinha de Valenca guitar (fantastic playing), Bud Shank flute & alto sax. A gorgeous samba record originally released on parent label Capitol the year before.

Edmundo Ros & His Orchestra - "Rhythms Of The South" [London FFSS stereo LP '57]

Sonny Stitt Quartet - "The Hard Swing" [Verve stereo LP '60]

McCoy Tyner - "...Plays Ellington" [Impulse! mono promo LP '64] Trio with the Coltrane rhythm section of Jimmy Garrison and Elvin Jones. What a perfectly mesmerizing album.

Quincy Jones - "The Lost Man" O.M.P. Soundtrack [Uni promo LP '69]

Traffic - "Mr. Fantasy" [U.A. LP '68] Outside of "Dear Mr. Fantasy" and to a lesser extent "Paper Sun", most of the rest of this psyche-foolery really doesn't hold up all that well

The Allman Brothers Band - "At Fillmore East" [Capricorn 2LP '71]

Nilsson - "...Sings Newman" [RCA Victor LP '70] Songs and piano by Randy Newman

Robin Gibb - "Robin's Reign" [Atco LP '70] Probably one of the first, if not the first, art-pop album to make extensive use of an electronic rhythm box as a sonic-seasoning effect

The Bee Gees - "Trafalgar" [Atco LP '71]

Stairsteps - S/T [Buddah LP '70] AKA The 5 Stairsteps as they were formerly (and continued to be best) known, this album included their biggest hit "O-o-h Child" but also leads off with two mystifyingly pointless, though quite okay, Beatles covers (Lennon's "Dear Prudence" and "Getting Better"), in that the original arrangements are barely changed, while the style is hardly the Stairsteps' own.
Beethoven Cello Sonatas, Rostropovich and Richter, Philips 835 182/83

Cat Stevens, Teaser and the Firecat | Tea for the Tillerman (Island)

Paul Simon, Graceland
.
Yello-Flag, Mel Torme-Swings Schubert Alley, Anita O'Day-Make mine the Blues, Clifford Brown -Clifford Brown All Stars.
Prokofiev, Lt. Kije
Stravinsky, Song of the Nightingale (wonderful!)
- Reiner/CSO, RCA LSC 2150-45 (45rpm Classic Records reissue)

Stravinsky, L'Histoire du Soldat, Suite - Markevitch/EnsembleDeSolistes, Jean Cocteau/Peter Ustinov, Philips 6500 321
.
Bobby Jaspar & Herbie Mann - "Flute Flight" [Prestige mono LP '57] With Tommy Flanagan piano, Joe Puma guitar, Doug Watkins or Wendell Marshall bass, Eddie Costa vibes, Bobby Donaldson drums

Terry Gibbs Quartet - "Plays The Duke" [EmArcy mono LP '58] With Pete Jolly accordian, Leroy Vinegar bass, Gary Frommer drums, Gibbs play marimba and xylophone in addition to vibes. Got that big mono sound to love, and I don't believe this has ever been released on CD.

Donald Byrd With Clare Fischer & Strings - "September Afternoon" [Discovery stereo LP '82, orig. rec. '57] Originally done for Warner Brothers but, as per Fischer's liners, "the company started to release the album and then withdrew it and stuck it in the can where it has remained about twenty five years", calling it "...in essence a time-capsule -- made, buried, lost and finally recovered." Then he actually apologizes for the fine early stereo sound, which to me is far preferable to the sound of most albums recorded at the time of his writing. Now of course long since OOP and I don't believe has ever been made available on CD.

Gary McFarland - "Soft Samba" [Verve mono LP '64] This is good for a disbelieving chuckle: Inside the gatefold liners where producer credit is listed, Creed Taylor's familiar trademark signature appears on a small sticker placed over where his name presumably is also printed underneath sans script, which I guess must not have been good enough, maybe even violated terms of his contract, meaning Verve must've had to go to this retroactive trouble for every copy shipped

Freddie McCoy - "Peas'n'Rice" [Prestige stereo LP '67]

The Challengers - "California Kicks" [GNP Crescendo promo mono LP '66]

Charlie Rich - "Sings Country & Western" [Hi promo stereo LP '67]

Deep Purple - "Shade Of..." [Tetragrammaton LP '68]

Julian Bream & George Malcolm - "Sonatas For Lute And Harpsichord" [ RCA Red Seal LP '69] Bach and Vivaldi. It never occured to me before how similar these two instruments can sound.