Tag: Mystery Train

  • Bill Evans and Jim Hall, Intermodulation, 1966 on Verve

    Bill Evans and Jim Hall, Intermodulation, 1966 on Verve

    This was a follow-up to 1962’s Undercurrent, which also featured Hall and Evans. Produced by Creed Taylor and recorded by Rudy Van Gelder in two sessions in April and May 1966. It’s just Evans on piano and Hall on guitar, starting with two standards (“I’ve Got You Under My Skin” and “My Man’s Gone Now”)…

  • Washboard Sam, with Big Bill Broonzy and Memphis Slim, Feeling Lowdown, 1971 on RCA Victor

    Washboard Sam, with Big Bill Broonzy and Memphis Slim, Feeling Lowdown, 1971 on RCA Victor

    Released as part of the RCA Victor Vintage Series, “created to bring you selected reissued performances, unavailable for some years, by great personalities of the popular, jazz and folk music worlds.” Washboard Sam, aka Robert Brown, recorded for Victor and Bluebird between 1935 and 1949 – these recordings all come from sessions in 1941 and…

  • Stephane Grappelli, with The Hot Club of London, I Got Rhythm, 1974 on Black Lion

    Stephane Grappelli, with The Hot Club of London, I Got Rhythm, 1974 on Black Lion

    Recorded at the Queen Elizabeth Hall in London November 1973, and featuring Diz Disley, Denny Wright, and Len Skeat along with Grappelli. Liner notes by Alan Morgan. My copy via Mystery Train Records in Gloucester MA, which has a pretty impressive Jazz selection

  • Stephane Grappelli, Just One of Those Things: Recorded Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival, 1973 on Black Lion Records

    Stephane Grappelli, Just One of Those Things: Recorded Live at the Montreux Jazz Festival, 1973 on Black Lion Records

    Recorded July 4th, 1973, this is Grappelli with Jack Sewing, Daniel Humair, and Marc Hemmeier. My copy via Mystery Train records in Gloucester MA. Black Lion was a label Alan Bates created in 1968 – in 1973 they started to have distribution through Audiofidelity (the AFE logo on the rear cover here). Lots of great…

  • Brinsley Schwarz, Silver Pistol, 1971 on United Artists

    Brinsley Schwarz, Silver Pistol, 1971 on United Artists

    Brinsley Schwarz is one of those acts that challenges discogs users, because there is both an individual named Brinsley Schwarz, bottom right photo on the rear jacket, and a band that released albums under that name. So does it get filed under Schwarz, Brinsley (as I would for the individual artist) or Brinsley Schwarz as…

  • John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, Bare Wires, 1968 on Decca

    John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers, Bare Wires, 1968 on Decca

    French pressing from 1968. This was the fourth Bluesbreaker’s LP, and the last of the peak 60s era (the name was used again for other releases in the 80s, 90s, and 2000s) with a lineup including Mick Taylor, Mayall, Tony Reeves, and Jon Hiseman – a bit more jazz influenced than some of the earlier…

  • Bob Dylan, Desire, 1976 on Columbia.

    Bob Dylan, Desire, 1976 on Columbia.

    Bob Dylan, Desire, 1976 on Columbia. Love this LP. Hurricane and One More Cup of Coffee are faves. Scarlet Rivera on violin, Dom Cortese on Mandolin, Vincent Bell on Bellzouku, EmmyLou Harris on backing vocals. Via Mystery Train Records in Gloucester MA

  • Lou Rawls and Les McCann Ltd., Stormy Monday, 1962 on Capitol.

    Lou Rawls and Les McCann Ltd., Stormy Monday, 1962 on Capitol.

    Lou Rawls and Les McCann Ltd., Stormy Monday, 1962 on Capitol. Maybe ought to be “Lou Rawls Sings and Les McCann Ltd Plays Stormy Monday, with Leroy Vinnegar and Ron Jefferson.” Gem of a find – via Mystery Train in Gloucester. Soul / Jazz / R&B.

  • Art Tatum, The Genius of Art Tatum Number Eleven, 1955 on Clef.

    Art Tatum, The Genius of Art Tatum Number Eleven, 1955 on Clef.

    Art Tatum, The Genius of Art Tatum, Number Eleven, 1955 on Clef. The last in an 11 LP series on Clef from 1953-54. This copy is from the Verve reissues between 1958 and 1961 as it has the Verve trumpeter logo but uses MGV not V/V6 as catalog number In pretty good shape for a…

  • Bud Powell, The Genius of Bud Powell, 1976 on Verve.

    Bud Powell, The Genius of Bud Powell, 1976 on Verve.

    Bud Powell, The Genius of Bud Powell, 1976 on Verve. My copy is a later “Polygram Classics” reissue – runout etchings and Polygram Classics markings suggest 1983 or later. The material itself goes back to “The Genius of Powell” and “Bud Powell’s Moods,” both 1957 Verve releases, of sessions from 1950, 1951, and 1956. Via…

  • Erroll Garner, Gone Garner Gonest, 1955 on Columbia.

    Erroll Garner, Gone Garner Gonest, 1955 on Columbia.

    Erroll Garner, Gone Garner Gonest, 1955 on Columbia. My copy is a 1958 pressing with the six-eye red Columbia deep-groove label. Great rendition of Bewitched Via Mystery Train in Gloucester MA

  • Various Artists, History of British Blues (Volume One), 1973 on Sire

    Various Artists, History of British Blues (Volume One), 1973 on Sire

    Various Artists, History of British Blues (Volume One), 1973 on Sire Great compilation I picked up at @mystery_train_records in Gloucester Includes Peter Green and John McVie with John Mayall’s Bluesbreakers but also some lesser known folks

  • U.K. Squeeze, self-titled debut, 1978, A&M.

    U.K. Squeeze, self-titled debut, 1978, A&M.

    U.K. Squeeze, self-titled debut, 1978, A&M. U.K. Squeeze were known in the UK as Squeeze. My copy is on red translucent vinyl with promo labels. Yes, they made colored vinyl back in the 70s as well, it is not just a new hipster thing. Take Me I’m Yours and Strong In Reason are my favorites…

  • David Sylvian, Secrets of the Beehive, 1987 on Virgin

    David Sylvian, Secrets of the Beehive, 1987 on Virgin

    David Sylvian, Secrets of the Beehive, 1987 on Virgin The third in a trio of brilliant post-Japan solo albums with Brilliant Trees (1984) and Gone to Earth (1986) with Ryuichi Sakamoto All three were reissued in 2019 on 180g vinyl (see davidsylvian.com) but this one is a 1987 pressing. Via Mystery Train Records in Gloucester…

  • John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers, A Hard Road, 1967 on London Records

    John Mayall and the Bluesbreakers, A Hard Road, 1967 on London Records

    The first Bluesbreakers album in a post-Clapton world. Best cut I think is the “Someday after a while (you’ll be sorry)” on side 2. Via Mystery Train Records

  • The Suburbs, Dream Hog, 1982 on Twin/Tone, 1983 on Mercury

    The Suburbs, Dream Hog, 1982 on Twin/Tone, 1983 on Mercury

    The PolyGram/Mercury reissue after they signed the band (not the original Twin/Tone). 33 1/3rd on one side 45 on the other. It was as a result of this vinyl that I realized as a teenager how great “Waiting Club Mix” sounds if you play the 45 at 33 1/3rd. As a teenager in Minneapolis in…

  • Lone Justice, Lone Justice, 1985 on Geffen

    Lone Justice, Lone Justice, 1985 on Geffen

    Debut self-titled by Lone Justice 1985. Found this last weekend at in Gloucester