Honest Jon's
278 Portobello Road
London
W10 5TE
England

Monday-Saturday 10 till 6; Sunday 11 till 5

Honest Jon's
Unit 115
Lower Stable Street
Coal Drops Yard
London
N1C 4DR

Monday-Saturday 11 till 6; Sunday 11 till 5

+44(0)208 969 9822 mail@honestjons.com

Established 1974.

  • Latest 100 arrivals
  • Blues
  • Dance
  • Folk
  • Jazz
  • Odds
  • Outernational
  • Reggae
  • Soul / Funk

  • Basic Channel
  • Basic Replay
  • Bullwackies
  • Digikiller
  • Dub Store
  • Dug Out
  • Ethiopiques
  • Hive Mind
  • Honest Jon's
  • Maurizio
  • Mississippi
  • Numero
  • Ocora
  • Rhythm & Sound
  • Studio One
  • Sublime Frequencies
  • The Trilogy Tapes
  • One-Off Records
  • Merchandise
Honest Jons logo
  • Label
  • Shop
  • Alphabetically / Latest entry first
  • All formats / Vinyl only
  • List / Gallery

Hank Mobley

Hank

Blue Note / Tone Poet

Kraftwerk

Trans-Europe Express

Klingklang

Jimmy Smith

Back At The Chicken Shack

Blue Note

Unmissable Jimmy Smith. With Stan The Man and Kenny Burrell, the perfect foils, in 1963.
Blue Note Classic Vinyl series: ‘all-analogue’, mastered by Kevin Gray from the original master tapes.

Etta James

Tell Mama

Chess / Acoustic Sounds

Perhaps her greatest LP, recorded at FAME in Muscle Shoals, Alabama, with Rick Hall and the gang, released by Cadet in 1968. A handful of belters, a couple of Don Covay songs, excellent interpretations of Steal Away and Otis’ Security… the marvellously sympathetic musicianship of Carl Banks, Roger Hawkins, Barry Beckett and co… and the almighty I’d Rather Go Blind.

Larry & Alvin

Poor Man A Feel It

Jamaican Art

Larry Marshall and Alvin Leslie, backed by The Revolutionaries and blazing horns, produced by Alvin Ranglin.
Accomplished late-seventies reggae, never properly released till now; shot through with Marshall’s moody intensity and craftsmanship.

Joe Chambers

Double Exposure

Muse / Time Traveler

His startling set of duets with Larry Young in 1977. On the first three, he plays piano, with Larry Young on organ and synthesizer. With a romantic flourish, he does justice to Trane’s After The Rain, alone at the keyboard. Then Young ‘takes over, cranking out hard-driving riffs that owe more to the hard rock of Deep Purple and Atomic Rooster than Jimmy Smith, as Chambers lays down a thundering backbeat full of high-impact tom rolls. Out of print for decades, this wild album’s reemergence is long overdue’ (The Wire).
Check your Bobby Hutcherson Blue Notes from the late-60s — records like Oblique and Spiral — for how Joe Chambers bends them round the wall and into the top corner, with his musicianship and compositions both.
Premier sampled Mind Rain for Nas’ NY State Of Mind (to put you out of your misery).
Very warmly recommended.

Joni Mitchell

Clouds

Rhino

Love

Forever Changes

Elektra

Charlie Haden

Liberation Music Orchestra

Impulse!

A suite of revolutionary anarchist songs from the Spanish Civil War — featuring Don Cherry, Roswell Rudd, Gato Barbieri, Dewey Redman and guitarist Sam Brown — plus Ornette’s War Orphans, three works by Carla Bley (who arranges brilliantly), and two by the great bassist himself, in tributes to Che Guevara and protests against the Vietnam War, on his tumultuous, bracing, expansive first outing as leader, in 1970.

Joe Henderson

The State Of The Tenor: Live At The Village Vanguard Vol 1

Blue Note / Tone Poet

Brigitte Fontaine

Je Ne Connais Pas Cet Homme

Superior Viaduct

From 1973, the first of her recordings as a duo with Areski. ‘Deeply rooted in North African and European folk traditions… evocative vignettes with breezy vocals and minimal accompaniment of classical guitar, strings and woodwinds… One of their best-loved albums, for its remarkable sense of intimacy… beckoning listeners into a strange and beautiful world.’

Van Morrison

Astral Weeks

Warners

The CD is newly remastered — it sounds magnificent —  adding two out-takes and two extended versions. (The ending of Slim Slow Slider is startling.) Surely a must at the price.
Rhino vinyl.

Sonny Clark

Sonny Clark Trio

Blue Note / Tone Poet

The 1957 recording with Paul Chambers and Philly Joe Jones.

Roland Kirk

We Free Kings

Mercury / Acoustic Sounds

Liquid Liquid

Liquid Idiot, Idiot Orchestra

Superior Viaduct

In truth this is just prior to the formation of Liquid Liquid, in 1981. Like a no-wave, Saturnian version of Raymond Scott’s big band. The punks at the London Musicians Collective would have loved them.
LI played various NYC lofts and clubs, including Tier 3, Mudd Club and CBGB. Audience members were encouraged to bring their own instruments along. Idiot Orchestra was an offshoot involving more than a dozen players — clarinet, saxophone, trumpet, violin, cello, synth, bass, marimba and drums.
With a fanzine featuring rare photos and a new interview with Richard McGuire.

Donald Byrd

At The Half Note Cafe Volume 1

Blue Note / Tone Poet

‘One of the most essential hard bop purchases in the canon. The performances by Duke Pearson — four of his own tunes, five by Byrd, and standards — showcase his improvisational acumen at its height. His soloing on studio records pales in comparison. This was a hot quintet, that not only swung hard, but possessed a deep lyricism and an astonishing sense of timing’ (Allmusic).

McCoy Tyner

Expansions

Blue Note / Tone Poet

Mal Waldron

The Quest

New Jazz / Craft

Thrilling, angular hard bop, impatiently itching itself open to the new thing.
Dolphy plays b-flat clarinet and alto; Ron Carter plays cello. Booker Ervin is rawly eloquent as per. The seven compositions are all by Waldron, who centres proceedings with inimitable brilliance.
Feelingly recorded by Van Gelder in the summer of 1961, in the same few weeks as Ron Carter’s Where.
In this iteration — all-analogue remastering from the master-tapes, tip-on sleeve, first-class pressing — it’s a must.

Ilitch

Periodik Mindtrouble

Superior Viaduct

Jackie McLean

Destination Out!

Blue Note

Gabor Szabo

The Sorcerer

Craft

‘Verve By Request.’

The People's Workshop

Houston Talent Expo '82

BBE

Horace Parlan

Up And Down

Blue Note / Tone Poet

Charles Mingus

Oh Yeah

Atlantic / Speakers Corner

Thrillingly uncontainable, uproarious, wildly creative music, teeming with passion, protest, sex, orality, dread, blues, and the gospel truth. With Roland Kirk newly enrolled, Mingus passes his bass to Watkins… and it all kicks off. We can’t recommend this record strongly enough. It will do you good.

Steve Reich

Four Organs, Phase Patterns

Superior Viaduct

‘If it is the radical edge of uncompromising hardcore minimalism that you are after, this reissue of Four Organs and Phase Patterns delivers two key examples.
‘‘I am interested in perceptible processes’ Reich had written in 1968. ‘I want to be able to hear the processes happening throughout the sounding music.’ Four Organs is a radical realisation of this goal. Against the steady rattle of maracas, individual tones within a single chord are gradually lengthened. No changes of pitch or timbre occur, and the drawn out nature of the process provoked outrage at some early performances, when audiences found themselves caught up in a decelerating loop, being dragged towards stasis. Phase Patterns, composed a month later, relies on a phasing technique developed during Reich’s earlier experiments with magnetic tape recordings, which he allowed to drift out of sync. Identical figures initially in unison shift out of phase, generating unexpected patterns.’
‘Obviously music should put all within listening range into a state of ecstasy’ (Steve Reich).
Vinyl from Aguirre.

158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178205

Your basket is empty