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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Lee Perry

Blackboard Jungle Dub

Clocktower

Lee Perry

The Quest

Clocktower

MV And EE

Liberty Rose

Arbitrary Signs

Omar Khorshid

Giant + Guitar

Wewantsounds

Kenny Clarke - Francy Boland Big Band

At Her Majesty's Pleasure

Rearward

Titles inspired by Johnny Griffin’s sojourn in Pentonville nick (for outstanding income tax) at the start of a Ronnie Scott’s stint earlier in the year. With clarinettist Tony Coe on song; Sahib Shihab and co.

Michael Hurley

First Songs

Cairo

His lovely Folkways LP from 1965, when he was just 22, with classics-in-the-making like Blue Mountain and The Werewolf Song.

Gwigwi Mrwebi

Mbaqanga

Honest Jon's Records

Beautiful, insurgent, fabulously danceable jazz music from South Africa, flowing out of the penny-whistle kwela bands of the 1950s. (Kwela means ‘get moving’, in Xhosa.)
Bra Gwigwi played alto and clarinet alongside Hugh Masekela and Kippie Moeketsi in The Jazz Dazzlers; also in The Jazz Maniacs and The Harlem Swingsters. He came to the UK from Johannesburg as an actor and clarinettist in King Kong — a musical about a Zulu boxer — which opened in London in February 1961.
Recording in January 1967, at Dennis Duerden’s Transcription Centre, he is joined here by Dudu Pukwana, Chris McGregor, Laurie Allan, and Ronnie Beer, all from The Blue Notes. Ladbroke Grove legend, and mainstay of our London Is The Place For Me series, Coleridge Goode plays double bass.

No less than sixteen shots of jubilant, jump-up mbaqanga. Check the Ethiopian vibe of Mra (which became core repertoire of The Brotherhood of Breath). Listen to Nyusamkhaya, and try to get it out of your head. Impossible.
Lovely notes by Steve Beresford, too.

‘The South African folk music that makes people glad to be alive!’

Tony Kinsey

Mr Percussion

Speciality

The house drummer of the Flamingo jazz club throughout the fifties, presenting a 1961 date featuring Tubbs and Jimmy Deuchar. Vibes-player Bill Le Sage leads the gorgeous ballad World Of Blue.

Robedoor

Shapeshifter Slave

Olde English Spelling Bee

Morteza Mahjubi

Selected Improvisations From Golha

Death Is Not The End

Stunning piano improvisations — mostly solo, though peppered with tombak, violin, and scraps of poetry — using his own tuning system, recorded for Iranian national radio between 1956-1965.

Nick Ayoub Quintet

The Montreal Scene

Vox

Sparkling, limber post-bop from 1964 — with touches of modal, bossa, and Eastern Sounds — impeccably reissued in Japan.

The Invaders

Floating Around In The Sun

Invader / Digikiller

Augustus Pablo

Rockers Come East

Greensleeves

Classy digi dub from 1987 — the living, but chilled and de-populated Pablo sound-world — with killer dillers like Raggamuffin Year and Seven Seals on the desk.

The Violinaires

Groovin' With Jesus

Checker

A Gene Barge production from 1967, with a winning mixture of rocking gospel funk and spiritualized ballads. A nice version of Buddy Miles’ We Got To Live Together.

Barrington Levy

Place Too Dark

Jah Life / Digikiller

Prime, early-eighties Barrington, expertly fronting chunky Radics on rhythms like The Russians Are Coming and Get In The Groove, in Scientist mixes. No losing with those cards.

Barrington Levy

Bounty Hunter

Lantern

Big Troubles

Worry

Olde English Spelling Bee

Leroy Hutson

Closer To The Source

Acid Jazz

Fela Kuti

Sorrow, Tears And Blood

Knitting Factory

‘Them leave sorrow, tears and blood, Them regular trademark… My people self dey fear too much, We fear for the thing we no see… We fear to fight for freedom.’
Magnificent defiance from 1977.

Fela Kuti

Fear Not For Man

Knitting Factory

Fela Kuti

Beasts Of No Nation

Knitting Factory

‘Another underground spiritual’, as the opening puts it, about Botha and apartheid,and supporters like Thatcher, Reagan and the Dis-United Nations. (‘One veto vote is equal to 92 or more, or more’).

Fela Kuti

Expensive Shit

Knitting Factory

In 1974 the police raided Fela’s commune. Looking for dope, they threatened to pump his stomach.

Interpol head: ‘I’ll talk to you in my office.’
Fela: ‘You get office? You foolish, stupid bastard, you goat…’

Rufus Harley

Bagpipe Blues

Atlantic

Marvin Gaye

Trouble Man

Motown

Coming between What’s Going On and Let’s Get It On, this 1972 soundtrack is a bonafide masterpiece.

Willie Wright

Telling The Truth

Numero

Feeling, folkey soul from 1977, with Skull Snaps and Jimmy Castor crew.

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