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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Asha Puthli

She Loves To Hear The Music

CBS

Lyn Collins

Think

People / Get On Down

Lonnie Liston Smith

Cosmic Funk

Real Gone

CD from BGP.

Hysear Don Walker

Complete Expressions Vol 2

Brunswick

Fred Wesley And The J.B.'s

Damn Right I Am Somebody

People / Get On Down

The great boneman’s 1974 masterwork, with highlights like the ten-minute work-out I’m Payin’ Taxes, What Am I Buyin’, the party-hearty If You Don’t Get It The First Time, the grooving, fist-in-the-air Same Beat (with that sample of Jesse Jackson), and the stunning out-funk of Blow Your Head.

With a 22” x 22” poster featuring the original cover art, as well as a 7-inch flexidisc of the rare Unrubbed Version (without Moog) of Blow Your Head, only available previously on the compilation James Brown’s Funky People Part 3.

The Electric Prunes

Mass In F Minor

Jackpot Records

Crucial, preposterous David Axelrod!
Composed and arranged by the maestro, a psychedelic garage-rock opera, sung in Latin, with Gregorian chant, pipe organ, lashings of fuzz guitar, strings and horns.
A version of the opener Kyrie Eleison famously featured in the soundtrack for Easy Rider, accompanying several scenes.
This definitive reissue was mastered by Kevin Gray using the original tapes.

Pharoah Sanders

Black Unity

Impulse!

Heavy, grooving, excursive, Afro-Latin jazz to usher in the seventies, with two bassists — Cecil McBee and Stanley Clarke — and three drummers, in Norman Connors, Billy Hart, and Lawrence Killian. Fronting alongside Hannibal Marvin Peterson and Carlos Garnett, Sanders solos magnificently.
‘Verve By Request.’ Crucial Pharoah.

Erkin Koray

Mechul (Singles And Rarities)

Sublime Frequencies

Matteo Stella

Anello Del Monte D'Aria

Miniera

Excursions and meditations on an eighteenth century organ tuned to pure thirds, entailing a slightly harsh intonation exploited here to evoke the hostile climate of the Potenza valley during winter and autumn.
‘The sound of the organ with the register of the flute returns a particularly sweet and penetrating sound but, at the same time, a very complex timbre with intricate harmonic texture, given the numerous fluctuations and beats. The warm tones of the organ reflect the good and welcoming souls of the people who inhabit these lands. The absence of dynamics inside the instrument allows the listener to focus and understand the harmonic texture and timbral differences between the various notes more clearly.’
With trombone, trumpet, saxophone, and effects.

Yusef Lateef

Psychicemotus

Impulse!

A lovely set from 1965 — taking its own path away from Fire Music, but forwards nonetheless — featuring the under-rated pianist Georges Arvanitas, and the drummer James Black, trumping his brilliant contributions to the Live At Pep’s sessions.
Bamboo Flute Blues and Satie’s First Gymnopedie are ravishing stand-outs.
‘Verve By Request.’

Art Blakey

Mosaic

Blue Note

Hell Up In Harlem

Motown

Music by Freddie Perren and Fonce Mizell; songs performed by Edwin Starr.
With Easin’ In.

Kenny Cox And The Contemporary Jazz Quintet

Introducing

Blue Note

Nina Simone

I Put A Spell On You

Philips

Wayne Shorter

Speak No Evil

Blue Note

1964 masterwork with Freddie Hubbard, Herbie, Elvin Jones and Ron Carter, tersely melding avant, modal and bop. ‘Wild flowers and strange, dimly-seen shapes… I was thinking of things like witch burnings, too.’

Eric Dolphy

Eric Dolphy at the Five Spot

New Jazz

Lou Donaldson

Midnight Creeper

Blue Note / Tone Poet

Bringing the funk in 1968, with George Benson, Lonnie Smith, Blue Mitchell, and Leo Morris (who became Idris Muhammed)... not forgetting Dapper Dan.

Bert Jansch

Nicola

Sanctuary

Nathan Davis Sextet

Peace Treaty

Sam Records

Recorded in Paris, 1965, at the time of the Vietnam peace talks. ‘Donald Byrd occasionally played with us at the Blue Note, so he came in and helped produce the record.’

Fela Kuti

V.I.P. (Vagabonds in Power)

Knitting Factory

Fela Kuti

Coffin for Head of State

Knitting Factory

Fela Kuti

No Agreement

Knitting Factory

Fela Kuti

He Miss Road

Knitting Factory

Fela Kuti

Everything Scatter

Knitting Factory

Tony Allen

Home Cooking

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