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
  • Honest Jon's
  • Maurizio
  • Mississippi
  • Numero
  • Ocora
  • Rhythm & Sound
  • Studio One
  • Sublime Frequencies
  • Hugh Tracey
  • The Trilogy Tapes
  • One-Off Records
  • Merchandise
Honest Jons logo
  • Label
  • Shop
  • Alphabetically / Latest entry first
  • All formats / Vinyl only
  • List / Gallery

King Miguel

Forward On The Track

Prophet

Ilue

Hail Ethiopia

Jammy's

General Trees

Jah Run Things

Taurus

The Main Attraction

Jam Up

Mountain

Charles Curtis

Performances & Recordings 1998-2018

Saltern

Shorty The President

Natty Pass His GCE

Crazy Joe

Bojangles

Prophesy Reveal

Errol T

  • 1-OFF 7" SOLD

Audley Rollen & Dennis Brown

All That Glitter Is Not Gold

Matador

  • 1-OFF 7" SOLD

Judas

Bad Boy

Colin Fat

Zumjay / Assassin / Daville

Badman

Master Mind 2.5

Pickney / Spotlight / Queen Paula

Credit Done

Cash Flow

  • 1-OFF 7" SOLD

Wailing Soul

Dungeon

Mafiatone

  • 1-OFF 7" SOLD

Lexxus

Girls Girls

In the Streetz

Ike And The Crystalites

Illya Kuryakin

Island

  • 1-OFF 7" SOLD

John Earl

I Need Someone To Love

Water Lily

Malombo Jazz Makers

Vol. 2

Strut

Recorded a year after the debut, continuing the earthy flow of Malombo’s music. The two albums have since been recognised as unique landmarks of South African jazz. Alongside full original artwork, both albums feature a new interview with Julian Bahula.

Malombo Jazz Makers

Down Lucky’s Way

Tapestry Works

‘Malombo music is an indigenous kind of music,’ says Lucky Ranku. ‘If you listen to it, you can feel that it can heal you, if you’ve got something wrong. It’s healing music.’
Lucky was one of the greatest African guitarists of his generation. The deep and hypnotic Down Lucky’s Way was the Jazz Makers’ third album. Recorded in 1969, it was the first to feature additional instruments, and the first to feature Abbey Cindi on soprano saxophone as well as flute. But more than anything else, Down Lucky’s Way is a transfixing showcase for Lucky Ranku’s sui generis guitar virtuosity.
Quite different from their previous recordings, the album shifted the Jazz Makers’ sound toward mesmerising, extended compositions, layered by organ bass and guitar overdubs. Of all the Malombo Jazz Makers recordings, Down Lucky’s Way is the deepest of mood, and the richest of vision.
The most rare, too: it may not ever have been properly issued. Original copies are outrageously scarce — only a few are known among collectors. Prior to this reissue, Lucky was unaware it had ever been released, and had never seen a copy.

Erik Satie

Art Works 1892-1924

Les Disques Du Crépuscule

Dazzling, seismic works associated with the Dada, Cubist and Surrealist art movements, as well as his celebrated Furniture Music.
The first disc is the truly monumental landmark Vexations. The score is just three lines long, yet a complete performance (840 repetitions) may last for anything between fourteen and twenty-eight hours. First performed under the supervision of John Cage in 1963, by a relay of pianists including John Cale. Pianists who have attempted too many repetitions of the motif are said to have complained of hallucinations, evil thoughts, and an alarming inability to remember the melody. This meditative 70 minute rendition entails forty repetitions.
The second disc is Dadaist, including music used by Francis Picabia, Tristan Tzara, Kurt Schwitters, and Rene Clair.
The third collects his collaborations with Pablo Picasso: music for ballets, and an ‘organ diversion’.
The fourth includes Sports et divertissements. Satie said he put ‘everything I know about Boredom’ into its Bach-style chorale. Also his legendary, rarely spotted Musique d’Ameublement: five disparate pieces Intended to be heard in the background, rather than actually listened to, with inestimable influence on Brian Eno, Steve Reich, Philip Glass, Arvo Pärt, Apex Twin…
‘It’s not a question of Satie’s relevance,’ said Cage. ‘He’s indispensable.’
A tremendous collection, with a 32 page booklet.

Hal Singer

Blues And News

Souffle Continu

Recorded for Futura in the spring of 1971 — soon after the veteran saxophonist arrived in Paris — with his spar Art Taylor and local musicians including Siegfried Kessler.
Singer came up through numerous swing bands, and then team-ups with bop luminaries like Don Byas and Roy Eldridge, before joining Duke Ellington’s orchestra.
A long look back, blues and news, keenly open to the new thing, this is superb, generous, upful jazz — with dashes of modal, r&b, swing, soul jazz — book-ended by tributes to his time with James Brown. It’s My Thing is JB by way of Cannonball; the limber, extended, new version of Malcolm X, with Kessler whipping up a storm, is simply unmissable.
“I get something out of listening to Coltrane, Shepp and Coleman; I’m really pleased that young players are trying to change things. If they go back to the roots and come up with something new, that’s fantastic.”

Kristen Nogues

Marc'h Gouez

Souffle Continu

The Celtic harpist leading a dozen friends — guitar, piano, violins, flutes, zarb, zither — in spell-binding departures from Breton folk-song, originally released in 1976 but fresh and strange as a vermillion hydrangea in full bloom.

Noguès was to collaborate with Rabih Abou-Khalil, amongst others, but ‘we are reminded here of the Meredith Monk of Greensleeves, there the early albums of Brigitte Fontaine / Areski, elsewhere Emmanuelle Parrenin, Pascal Comelade… Noguès’ poetry is ever-changing: airy (Hunvre), cosmopolitan (Pinvidik Eo Va C’hemener), enigmatic (Ar Bugel Koar), profound (Ar Gemenerez), enchanting (Hirness An Devezhiou). And then there is Marc’h Gouez itself, between nursery rhyme and chamber music, weaving a fabulous, transfixing web. “Brittany equals poetry,” said André… Breton; and Kristen Noguès proves it to be true.’

Lovely stuff; dream-like, captivating; quite different. Check it out.

Fr. Richard HoLung & Friends

Unless The Lord Builds The House

Jesuit Music / Common Ground

The Mighty Victim With Fr. Richard HoLung

God And Caesar

Jesuit Music / Common Ground

Horacio Chivo Borraro

Blues Para Un Cosmonauta

Altercat

The Jazz Doctors

Intensive Care - Prescriptions Filled

Cadillac

Frank Lowe, Billy Bang, Rafael Garrett, and the great, unsung drummer Dennis Charles, in 1983.
Book-ended by Jackie Mac’s Little Melonae and Ornette’s Lonely Woman; plus compositions by Bang and Lowe, Rashied Ali and Butch Morris.

Ricardo Dias Gomes

Muito Sol

Hive Mind

‘This third solo album is a deep, widescreen exploration in classic Brazilian song with all the subtlety and delicacy you’d expect from the pioneers of Musica Popular Brasileira, coupled with a thoroughly 21st century sensibility and sonic innovativeness. Layers of intricate instrumentation and arrangement make for spellbound, excavatory listening.
‘Recorded following Gomes’ move from Rio to Lisbon, the album is imbued with a sense of unease and cultural dislocation. A number of songs based on the Samba Ostinato explicitly celebrate Brazil’s musical heritage and culture.
‘Led by Gomes’ gentle and dreamy voice, the music is often reminiscent of mighty trailblazers like Caetano Veloso, João Bosco, or Edu Lobo, though it takes unexpected lines of flight into more experimental territory. An element of drone underpinning the whole album takes full charge on Fllux and Transição; and the finale is molten, raging hardcore.
‘A sun-drenched, balmy dream from start to finish.’

378379380381382383384385386387388389390391392393394395396397398414

Your basket is empty