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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Herbie Hancock

Fat Albert Rotunda

Warners / Music On Vinyl

‘A playful, joyous album in which Hancock clearly had a great time, this music was composed for the pilot of a children’s TV show, redirecting the post-bop of his five-year stint with Miles towards new r&b and funk styles. Flying high with three horn players — Joe Henderson, Garrett Brown and Johnny Coles — alongside Hancock’s soaring Fender Rhodes, the group could swing freely on a track like the rousing Fat Mama and emote precisely on the subtle Tell Me A Bedtime Story.’

Cecil McBee

Mutima

Strata-East / Pure Pleasure

Albert Ayler

New Grass

Impulse! / Third Man

Slammed at the time as a sell-out, and what a joke that is. Brimming with raw physical emotion, but reaching out — in the revolutionary year of 1968 —  to soul, rock and gospel.

Also the blues. When he was still at Cleveland High School, Albert spent two summers touring with none other than Little Walter. “The manner of living was quite different for me — drinking real heavy and playing real hard. We’d travel all day, finally arrive, take out our horns and play.”

Roland Kirk

Third Dimension

Bethlehem / Pure Pleasure

Raw, blue, and sensational, with Kirk playing the tenor sax, manzello, and stritch simultaneously. Originally released by King in 1956, entitled Triple Threat.

Prof. James Benson

The Gow-Dow Experience

Jazzman

‘I was a music teacher. I wasn’t trying to make a record to compete, I was trying to make a record so the students would have something to remember the experience that we had… I was doing it for the kids.’
The reissue of a private pressing in 1973 by Prof James Benson and his students at Cal Poly, California, inspired by their recent trip to Africa, blending in the radical jazz idioms of early-seventies black America.
Insurgent music; full of life. Jazzman strikes again.
As originally, in a heavyweight tip-on sleeve.

Horace Tapscott

Live At Lobero Vol.II

Nimbus / Pure Pleasure

Booker Ervin

The Book Cooks

Bethlehem

David Wertman

Earthly Delights

BBE

Beastie Boys

Licensed To Ill

Def Jam

John Coltrane

In The Winner's Circle

Bethlehem

Allen Kwela

Black Beauty

Matsuli

Paradigmatic yet forward-looking township jazz from 1975.
Braiding Wes Montgomery into marabi, the legendary guitarist leads a stellar line-up of musicians including Kippie Moeketsi, Barney Rachabane, Gilbert Matthews, Dennis Mpale, and Sipho Gumede.
The opener glances sideways at the commercial success of Abdullah Ibrahim’s recent Mannenberg — but the real magic follows on, when the players cut loose in their own, new directions.
This is the first vinyl reissue. Sleevenotes by Kwanele Sosibo feature interviews with key musicians, and previously unpublished photos.

Coleman Hawkins

Coleman Hawkins Encounters Ben Webster

Verve Acoustic Sounds

Astrud Gilberto

Look To The Rainbow

Verve

‘Verve By Request.’

Charlie Haden

The Golden Number

Verve

Duets with Don Cherry, Ornette Coleman, Hampton Hawes, and Archie Shepp.
‘Verve By Request.’

Jack Kerouac

Readings On The Beat Generation

Verve

Betty Carter

Out There With Betty Carter

Verve

Miles Davis

Porgy And Bess

Columbia

Mono LP from Music On Vinyl.

Bennie Maupin

Slow Traffic To The Right

Mercury / Third Man

That’s Maupin on Bitches Brew, and Lee Morgan’s Live At The Lighthouse, and Head Hunters. He co-wrote Chameleon. From 1977, this is killer fusion in the same dazzling tradition — as confirmed by transformative readings of two classics by the Mwandishi sextet, Quasar and Water Torture, from the LP Crossings. We’re in the same neck of the woods as Eddie Henderson’s two deadly Blue Notes around this time — Sunburst and Heritage — and the great trumpeter is here. Also Patrice Rushen, who plays a blinder: check her out on the opener. Pat Gleeson, who introduced Herbie to synths, Head Hunters mainstay Paul Jackson, Blackbyrd McKnight, from Flood and Man-Child…

Don Pullen

New Beginnings

Blue Note

Benny Golson

Gone With Golson

Prestige / Craft

Muddy Waters

The Best Of Muddy Waters

Chess / Decca

London Is The Place For Me

3: Ambrose Adekoya Campbell

Honest Jon's Records

Modern Nigerian music starts here.
‘*****’, Mojo; ‘these songs leap out of the past like madeleines soaked in palm wine’, The Observer; ‘impeccably curated and packaged’, The Wire.

The Beatnuts

Street Level

Second Records

A Tribe Called Quest

Beats, Rhymes And Life

Jive

Beginning Of The End

Beginning Of The End

Strut

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