Flyt - Soul Mentality (2008)

Artist: Flyt
Title Of Album: Soul Mentality
Year Of Release: 2008
Label: Refine Recordings
Genre: Lo-Fi / Soul / Nu Jazz
Quality: Mp3
Bitrate: ~160 kbps VBR
Total Time: 52:06 min
Total Size: 60 Mb
Tracklist:
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01. Flyt - Free (4:03)
02. Flyt - So Easy (3:49)
03. Flyt - Stay A Little Longer (5:08)
04. Flyt - Beautiful Love (3:26)
05. Flyt - Lay Back (4:25)
06. Flyt - Undercurrents (2:06)
07. Flyt - Pushin' On (4:32)
08. Flyt - Falling Deeper (3:44)
09. Flyt - Untold (1:55)
10. Flyt - Higher (4:44)
11. Flyt - The Journey's Over (3:29)
12. Flyt - Free (Simon S Remix) (5:53)
13. Flyt - Free (Kira Neris Remix) (4:57)
http://www.link.ge/file/218480/Flyt---Soul...-2008-.rar.htmlCharlie Haden (with Don Cherry and Ed Blackwell) - The Montreal Tapes

Track Listing:
1. The Sphinx
2. Art Deco
3. Happy House
4. Lonely Woman
5. Mopti
6. The Blessing
7. When Will the Blues Leave?
8. Law Years
Personnel:
Charlie Haden – bass
Don Cherry – pocket trumpet
Ed Blackwell – drums
http://www.link.ge/file/218620/Charlie-Had...es-320.rar.htmlWalt Dickerson - To My Queen

1. To My Queen
2. How Deep Is The Ocean
3. God Bless The Child
Walt Dickerson (vibes)
Andrew Hill (piano)
George Tucker (bass)
Andrew Cyrille (drums)
Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: September 21, 1962
http://www.link.ge/file/218634/Walt-Dicker...-1962-.rar.htmlWalt Dickerson has never enjoyed the kind of critical praise heaped on Bobby Hitcherson's head. While Hutcherson is inquestionably the more innovative player, with a direction that diverges sharply from the orthodoxy laid down in the late '40s and early '50s by Milt Jackson, Dickerson can be seen as the more interesting player, with a style that combines something of Jackson's piano-based approach with Lionel Hampton's exuberently percussive sound and an ear for the tunes that head off in unexpected directions like the wonderful 'Time' and 'Death And Taxes' on This Is.
To My Queen is his best record, not least for the pairing of Hill and Cyrille, and for the beautiful title-track, dedicated to the vibist's wife Elizabeth. A duet with Tucker on 'God Bless The Child' bespeaks a close understanding that is also evident on the title-piece. We resolutely refuse to be put off fine records by the absence of additional material, but this weighs in at just a fraction over half an hour.
This post has been edited by PapaShultz on 26 Feb 2009, 20:26