Ahmed Abdul-Malik - Jazz Sound Of Africa

Jazz / Fusion | MP3 | 320Kbps | 102Mb
Tracks:
1. Nights on Saturn (Ahmed Abdul-Malik) 7:34
2. The Hustlers (Ahmed Abdul-Malik) 5:34
3. Oud Blues (Ahmed Abdul-Malik) 4:09
4. La Ibkey (Ahmed Abdul-Malik) 5:52
5. Don't Blame Me (Dorothy Fields/Jimmy McHugh) 7:28
6. Hannibal's Carnivals (Ahmed Abdul-Malik) 4:40
7. Wakida Hena (Ahmed Abdul-Malik) 3:53
8. African Bossa Nova (Ahmed Abdul-Malik) 6:00
9. Nadusilma (Ahmed Abdul-Malik) 4:00
10. Out of Nowhere (Johnny Green/Edward Heyman) 5:00
11. Communication (Ahmed Abdul-Malik) 9:46
12. Suffering (Ahmed Abdul-Malik) 5:12
Personnel:
Ahmed Abdul-Malik (Oud and Double Bass)
Tommy Turrentine (Trumpet)
Andrew Cyrille (Drums)
Rudy Collins (Drums)
Taft Chandler (Tenor Sax)
Chief Bey (African Drum)
Rupert Alleyne (Flute)
Richard Gene Williams (Trumpet)
Eric Dixon (Tenor Sax)
Calo Scott (Violin and Cello)
Montego Joe (Bongos and Congas)
Bilal Abdurrahman (Clarinet, Percussion, Reeds, Darbouka)
http://bin.ge/file/158739/Ahmad-Abdul-Malik.rar.htmlJazz Sounds of Africa compiles the complete contents of two early New Jazz LPs by Ahmed Abdul-Malik, which were originally issued as The Music of Ahmed Abdul-Malik and Sounds of Africa...
The music on this reissue is simply captivating, as the brilliant bassist and oud player of Sudanese descent blends elements of jazz with that of Middle Eastern and African music. While the names of several of the contributing musicians are likely to be unfamiliar to many jazz fans, except for Andrew Cyrille and Tommy Turrentine, the music proves to be fascinating throughout both sessions. Any fan of John Coltrane's composition "India," which was written and performed around the same time frame, will delight in the hypnotic opener, "Nights on Saturn," with an eerie solo by an unidentified Korean reed instrument played by Bilal Abdurrahman. The leader overdubs on oud (the Middle Eastern ancestor of the mandolin) on several tracks, as well as demonstrates his fine arco bass on the old standard "Don't Blame Me." Tommy Turrentine, whose career was unjustly overlooked because he retired from music prematurely, is a compelling soloist on the 1961 session. The latter session is far more percussive, with Abdul-Malik utilizing a larger ensemble. The highlight of this date is the lengthy exploration of the infectious original "Communication," which almost conjures up an African tribal chant with Richard Williams' trumpet as the lead voice, with the percussionists eventually taking over as they play off one another with vocal encouragement from one of the players. The songs on this CD compilation of the two-decades-old albums have stood the test of time very well.
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RamseyLewis-Routes (1980)

1. Whisper Zone
2. High Point
3. Tondelayo
4. Caribbean Blue
5. Looking Glass
6. Come Back Jack
7. Colors In Space
8. Crystals 'N Sequence
9. You Are The Reason
10. Hell On Wheels
Keyboardist Ramsey Lewis delivered this great jazz-funk album in 1980 on CBS, the line-up is very impressive and includes Al McKay - guitar, Byron Miller - bass, Don Myrick - saxophone, Leo Nocentelli - guitar, Louis Satterfield - trombone, Allen Toussaint - keyboards, Warren Weinberg - vocals, Fred White - percussion, Ken Williams - percussion, Kenneth "Afro" Williams - percussion, Michael Davis - trumpet, vocals, Roland Bautista - guitar, David Barard - bass, Keni Burke - bass, Leon "Ndugu" Chancler - drums, Paulinho Da Costa - percussion, Rahmlee Michael Davis - horn, Larry Dunn - keyboards, Herman V. Ernest III - drums, James Gadson - drums, Sampson Henry - guitar, Jon Lind - vocals and Maurice White - vocals.
http://www.alldrives.ge/main/linkform.php?f=6752d41541269a59 * * *
Jimsaku-1990
http://www.link.ge/file/18350/j-100p.rar.htmlFormer Casiopea drummer Akira Jimbo and bassist Tetsuo Sakurai joined forces to form the drum n' bass group Jimsaku. Together they released almost a dozen records.