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.

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Weldon Irvine

Liberated Brother

Nodlew

From 1972, taking time out from the Nina Simone band to cut this funky Black-Jazz-style set for his own label, with Horace Silver’s ‘personal seal of approval’. Includes Mr. Clean and Sister Sanctified.

Sun Ra

Universe In Blue

Cosmic Myth

From 1972, with Ra on organ throughout — trading solos with Gilmore and trumpeter Kwame Hadi on the bluesy title cut; duetting with drummer Luqman Ali on In A Blue Mood. June Tyson stars on Blackman.

The Chi-Lites

Give It Away

Brunswick

Gene Chandler

The Girl Don't Care

Brunswick

Hocine Chaoui

Ouechesma

Outre National

Electrifyingly intense Chaoui music from the Aurès region of Algeria, booted into the future, with drum machines, phased gesba flute and reverbed-out vocals.

Bo Diddley

Another Dimension

Chess

Duke Ellington

Anatomy Of A Murder

Columbia / Music On Vinyl

Plenty of thrills and spills in this soundtrack to Otto Preminger’s 1959 film. Steeply evocative dynamic and rhythmic contrasts and quick changes in orchestral density get the job done — with a repeated strain of melody —  and make for highly entertaining listening, with numerous rollicking brass passages in amongst the piano-threaded impressionism, plus terrific soloing by Johnny Hodges, Ray Nance and co. Highlights include the suspenseful opener, the moody Midnight Indigo, the sublimely sad Almost Cried, and the band hard-rocking out-the-door with Upper And Outest, culminating in an amazing stratospheric passage by Cat Anderson, playing for a moment as if the needle is stuck.
Check out the opening of the film, with its title sequence by Saul Bass, and Duke’s music. Class.

DJ Bone

It's Good To Be Differ-Ent

Don't Be Afraid

Gil Evans

The Gil Evans Orchestra Plays The Music Of Jimi Hendrix

RCA

John Lee Hooker

That's My Story

Ace

Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti

Mature Themes

4AD

Emahoy Tsegue-Maryam Guebrou

Spielt Eigene Kompositionen

Mississippi

Utterly beautiful solo-piano explorations in African folk, spiritual meditation, Satie-esque classicism and Tatum-esque jazz, by this Ethiopian nun, making her 1963 LP debut, recorded in Germany. Stunning; highly recommended.

Fela Kuti

Na Poi

Knitting Factory

Josephine Foster

A Wolf In Sheep's Clothing

Fire

Lovely. Classical songs by such exemplars as Schubert and Schumann, re-imagined with heart and soul as bare, doleful folk. Just voice and electric guitar.

Herman Foster

Have You Heard Herman Foster

Epic

Tasty trio date led by the rhythmic piano-playing of the blind Lou Donaldson sideman.

Dave Bailey

Gettin' Into Somethin'

Epic

Peck Morrison, Horace Parlan, Charlie Rouse, Curtis Fuller and Clark Terry. 1961.

Nas

Illmatic

Columbia

A Tribe Called Quest

Midnight Marauders

Jive

That's Why

Jazzman

Norwegian Christian-folk-jazz drawn from the two early-seventies LPs of the Oslo-based group, led by Jan Simonsen and Per Arne Lovold, shepherded by Priest Olaf Hillestad.
No kidding!

Barrington Levy

Robin Hood

Greensleeves

Toulouse Low Trax

Jumping Dead Leafs?

Bureau B

Toyan

How The West Was Won

Greensleeves

Classic LP with the Roots Radics, mixed by Scientist at Tubbys.

Nuke Watch

Worlds Gone M.A.D.

The Trilogy Tapes

Frankie Jones Vs. Midnight Riders

Showdown Volume 9

Digikiller

Tasha and Channel One productions, newly corralled, with three stone exclusives. The highlights are an FJ duet with Michael Palmer retrieved from dubplate duties, and from the Riders a next version of Youthman Invasion and a trigger-happy Illegal Gun. Wonderful photos by Beth Lesser and Syphilia Morgenstierne.

Jacques Thollot

Watch Devil Go

Souffle Continu

‘Four years after a first album on the Futura label in 1971, Jacques Thollot returned, this time on the Palm label of Jef Gilson, still with just as much surrealist poetry in his jazz. In thirty-five minutes, the French composer and drummer, who had been on the scene since he was thirteen — recording Gilson LPs when he was just sixteen — established himself as a link between Arnold Schoenberg and Don Cherry. Resistant to any imposed framework and always excessive, Thollot allows himself to do anything and everything: suspended time of an extraordinary delicacy, a stealthy explosion of the brass section, hallucinatory improvisation of the synthesisers, tight writing, teetering on the classical, and in the middle of all that, a hit, the title-track — which Madlib would one day end up hearing and sampling.
‘In a career lasting half a century, centred on freedom, Jacques Thollot played with a roll-call of key experimental musicians (Don Cherry, Sonny Sharrock, Michel Roques, Barney Wilen, Steve Lacy, François Tusques, Michel Portal, Jac Berrocal, Noël Akchoté...) who all heard in him a pulsation coming from another world.’

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