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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Albert Ayler

New York Eye And Ear Control

ESP

Trio Da Kali And Kronos Quartet

Ladilikan

World Circuit

Hallelujah Chicken Run Band

Take One

Analog Africa

‘In 1972, the country of Rhodesia — as Zimbabwe was then known — was in the middle of a long-simmering struggle for independence from British colonial rule. In the hotels and nightclubs of the capital, bands could make a living playing a mix of Afro-Rock, Cha-Cha-Cha and Congolese Rumba. But as the desire for independence grew stronger, a number of Zimbabwean musicians began to look to their own culture for inspiration. They began to emulate the staccato sound and looping melodies of the mbira (thumb piano) on their electric guitars, and to replicate the insistent shaker rhythms on the hi-hat; they also started to sing in the Shona language and to add overtly political messages to their lyrics (safe in the knowledge that the predominantly white minority government wouldn’t understand them). From this collision of electric instruments and indigenous traditions, a new style of Zimbabwean popular music — later known as Chimurenga, from the Shona word for ‘struggle’ — was born. And there were few bands more essential to the development of this music than the Hallelujah Chicken Run Band…’
Their biggest hits — along with several rare tracks — recorded between 1974 and 1979.

Pucho & The Latin Soul Brothers

Jungle Fire!

BGP

Their last Prestige, in 1970, trying out a more extended, jamming, funky style of boogaloo on Cloud Nine and a couple of Sonny Phillips’ tunes, out of five. The Pazant Brothers are in full effect on horns; jazz heroes like Seldon Powell and Bernard Purdie sit in.

The Dub Syndicate

The Pounding System

ON U Sound

James Carr

The Best Of James Carr

Kent

Mankunku Quartet

Yakhal' Inkomo

Mr Bongo

Olima Anditi

Where Else Would I Be?

Mississippi

Olima Anditi is a blind guitarist beloved throughout Western Kenya for his old Luo songs about love, morality and politics. This warmly intimate session was recorded in his room in Kisumu, in 2010. Like Usiende Ukualale, it’s lovingly presented, with a colour booklet.

Akira Ishikawa And His Count Buffalos

African Rock

Cinedelic

Funky, psychedelic, spiritual jazz with deep percussion, including marimba, from 1971; tuned into electric Miles but also Kool & the Gang, and keeping an eye on Tony Williams’ Lifetime.
The meditative opener is lovely. Heathens liken Animals to Fela.
Remastered from the original tapes.

John Butcher, Rhodri Davies

Drunk On Dreams

Cejero

Joe Henderson

The Elements

Milestone

Water in particular is stunning, with JH chasing the devil across the Sahara like an elemental fury, flashing dubwise effects; alongside the magnificent, dread droning and piping of Alice Coltrane , r-r-r-rough Charlie Haden, and Michael White on tablas and percussion.
Totally killer, no-holds-barred… proper World Music… a must.

P.E. Hewitt Jazz Ensemble

Jawbones

Now Again

P.E. Hewitt Jazz Ensemble

Since Washington

Now Again

The Small Crowd

Sing A Song Fighter

Marisa Anderson

Traditional And Public Domain Songs

Mississippi

Kan Mikami

Live At Cafe Oto

OTOroku

Hubert Porter With The Jamaican Calypsonians

Calypsos From Jamaica

Dub Store

Irresistible 1950s mento — singalong tunes, ebulliently performed, over-spilling with scandal, smut and impudence, sex, dancing and booze, word-play, jokes and up-to-the minute social commentary, and general love for life.

Barrington Levy

Sweet Reggae Music, 1979-1984

VP

Aretha Franklin

Aretha Arrives

Atlantic

Mono.

Aksak Maboul

Un Peu L'Ame Des Bandits

Crammed Discs

The second of Marc Hollander’s LPs under the alias Aksak Maboul, from 1979, with Fred Frith and Chris Cutler amongst the guests. ‘Sets the imagination reeling through a sequence of phantasmagorical scenarios, transporting listeners to a cafe in Montmartre, a bazaar in Istanbul, a tango bar, a punk rock venue or maybe an exotic location in a Tintin cartoon. Eclectic, inventive, inquisitively playful and surreal… it remains simply indispensable’ (The Wire).

Daniel Carter, Matthew Shipp, William Parker, Gerald Cleaver

Welcome Adventure! Vol. 1

577 Records

The Fall

Slates

Superior Viaduct

Leave The Capitol… Prole Art Threat…
The six tracks comprising the original 10” plus their contemporaneous session for John Peel in March 1981.

Butcher Brown

Live At Vagabond

Gearbox

A quintet, with DJ Harrison from Stones Throw on keyboards, drummer Corey Fonville (Christian Scott, Nicholas Payton), bassist Andrew Randazzo, Marcus Tenney on trumpet and Morgan Burr on guitar. Freaking, hiphop-inflected jazz-funk, with its roots in Weather Report, Return To Forever and early Earth Wind And Fire.

Mark Murphy

A Beautiful Friendship: Remembering Shirley Horn

Gearbox

A no-frills, loving tribute — with Shirley’s longtime drummer Steve Williams and double bassist Curtis Lundy (brother of Carmen), formerly of Betty Carter’s group; also the fine pianist Alex Minasian and trumpeter Till Brönner.

The Pazant Brothers

Skunk Juice: Dirty Funk From The Big Apple

BGP

No-messing funk with whiffs of reefer, hooch and baize.
Eddie and Al Pazant came through with Lionel Hampton and Pucho. These are their locked-down, brassy, smoking, streetwise blends of R&B, soul, latin and jazz, from the late 1960s and early 70s.
Fab.

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