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Tag: 1967

  • Bill Evans Trio, Bill Evans at Town Hall Volume One,  1967 on Verve

    Bill Evans Trio, Bill Evans at Town Hall Volume One, 1967 on Verve

    Recorded at Town Hall on February 21st, 1966. The trio here includes Chuck Isreals and Arnold Wise – this being the only commercial recording with Wise on drums. The second side includes the 13 minute “Solo -In Memory of His Father, Harry L. Evans” who had died in 1966. My copy—via private sale—is the 2022…

  • Love, Forever Changes, 1967 on Elektra

    Love, Forever Changes, 1967 on Elektra

    Iconic later sixties album from Arthur Lee and co. This would be their third and final album in the original lineup. The track “Alone Again Or” (with the refrain “And I will be alone again tonight my dear”) has been used in a number of films and was covered by The Damned on 1986’s Anything.…

  • Chet Baker, Chet Baker Sings & Plays, 1967 on Joker

    Chet Baker, Chet Baker Sings & Plays, 1967 on Joker

    Recorded in 1959 in Milan, this was first issued in Italy as Angel Eyes on Celson, and in the US as Chet Baker With Fifty Italian Strings on Jazzland, both in 1960. It was the reissued as Chet Baker Sings and Plays by Joker Hi-Fi Records (Italy) in 1967. It’s also been called Chet Baker…

  • Bill Evans, Live at the Village Vanguard, 1967 on Riverside

    Bill Evans, Live at the Village Vanguard, 1967 on Riverside

    This is actually a reissue of what originally came out in 1961 (also on Riverside) as Sunday at the Village Vanguard, credited to the Bill Evans Trio “featuring Scott La Faro.” La Faro died in a car accident less than two weeks after the gig was recorded. Evans on piano, La Faro on bass, and…

  • Aaron Neville, Like It Is (reissued as Humdinger), 1967 on Minit

    Aaron Neville, Like It Is (reissued as Humdinger), 1967 on Minit

    Although this was released in 1967 on Minit (and Liberty in the UK) as Like It Is, my copy is a 1986 reissue titled as Humdinger, on Stateside (a UK label designed to reissue things from smaller American labels). As John Broven’s sleeve notes (from 1986) put it: This album harks back to Aaron’s first…

  • Nat King Cole, You’re My Everything, 1967 on Pickwick/33

    Nat King Cole, You’re My Everything, 1967 on Pickwick/33

    Somehow this week has turned into posthumous collection week – this compilation was put out by Pickwick/33 in 1967 (Cole died in 1965), drawn from various Capitol Records releases. My copy is a Canadian pressing (see the “Made in Canada” on rim text on the label) via Beatnick Records in Montréal QC

  • Joe Turner, Singing the Blues, 1967 on BluesWay / ABC

    Joe Turner, Singing the Blues, 1967 on BluesWay / ABC

    “Big” Joe Turner here with Buddy Lucas, Patti Bown, Wally Richardson, Thornel Schwartz, Bob Bushnell, Panama Francis, and Herbie Lovelle. This was his debut album on BluesWay though he was already ~30 years into his career. This then is Joe Turner with a voice a little more mellow than of yore, but still uniquely alive…

  • Otis Redding / The Jimi Hendrix Experience – Historic Performances Recorded at the Monterey International Festival, 1970 on Reprise

    Otis Redding / The Jimi Hendrix Experience – Historic Performances Recorded at the Monterey International Festival, 1970 on Reprise

    Perhaps the most unusual split record in my collection, pairing Jimi Hendrix and Otis Redding. Both are live performances captured at Monterey Pop in 1967, and both have since been expanded in more comprehensive releases dedicated to each performer. The Jimi Hendrix Experience (with Hendrix, Mitch Mitchell, and Noel Redding) had not yet performed in…

  • Irma Thomas, Down at Muscle Shoals, 1984 on Chess

    Irma Thomas, Down at Muscle Shoals, 1984 on Chess

    Thomas recorded for Chess in the late sixties, and made this recording at Fame Recording Studios in Muscle Shoals in 1967, but the album was not released until 1984 (in Japan). It’s very hard to find in the Japanese vinyl, though it was reissued on CD in 1991. There are no credits for musicians, though…

  • Nina Simone, Silk & Soul, 1967 on RCA Victor

    Nina Simone, Silk & Soul, 1967 on RCA Victor

    This was Simone’s second album for RCA, following Nina Simone Sings the Blues, and was recorded in RCA Victor Studio B in New York. It includes great renditions of “The Look of Love” and “Cherish” neither of which I thought of as particularly Nina Simone material, along with a brilliant “I Wish I Knew How…

  • The Mar-Keys / Booker T. and the MGs, Back to Back, 1967 on Stax

    The Mar-Keys / Booker T. and the MGs, Back to Back, 1967 on Stax

    The Mar-Keys were the backing band on lots of early Stax records, and had personnel overlap with what became the MGs & The Memphis Horns. Deanie Parker’s liner notes say “Booker T. & The MG’s . . . is the rhythm section of The Mar-Keys.” This album was recorded live on a Stax/Volt tour in…

  • The Rolling Stones, Flowers, 1967 on London Records

    The Rolling Stones, Flowers, 1967 on London Records

    This was the second compilation album for the Stones, collecting some studio cuts that had not been released (or released but not on the US versions of albums). My copy, via Vinyl Destination in Lowell MA, has definitely seen better days The black tape seam repair was the work of a previous owner. Nonetheless it…

  • Nico, Chelsea Girl, 1967 on Verve

    Nico, Chelsea Girl, 1967 on Verve

    This album originally came out in ’67 as Nico’s solo debut, in the same year as the release of The Velvet Underground and Nico on which she sang three songs. I absolutely love these versions of Jackson Browne’s “These Days” and Bob Dylan’s “I’ll Keep It With Mine” My copy is a 2017 reissue by…

  • Aretha Franklin, Aretha Arrives, 1967 on Columbia

    Aretha Franklin, Aretha Arrives, 1967 on Columbia

    Aretha’s 11th album and second for Atlantic – the follow up to I Never Loved a Man. Includings covers of the Rolling Stone’s “Satisfaction” and the ? and the Mysterian’s “96 Tears” as well as “You Are My Sunshine” and “That’s Life.” Sometimes gets dismissed as the weak follow up to her Atlantic debut, but…

  • Nancy Sinatra, Movin’ With Nancy, 1967 on Reprise

    Nancy Sinatra, Movin’ With Nancy, 1967 on Reprise

    Full subtitle: The Soundtrack from Her Television Special with Special Guests Dean Martin, Lee Hazlewood, and a very close Relative. The “very close relative,” of course, would be dad (and Reprise label CEO) Frank – perhaps not credited by name for legal reasons? Dean Martin takes a duet on “Things” and Frank takes “Younger Than…

  • Jelly Roll Morton, Mr. Jelly Lord, RCA Victor, 1967

    Jelly Roll Morton, Mr. Jelly Lord, RCA Victor, 1967

    My copy is a slightly later pressing – 1973 – but this compilation first came out in 1967 as part of the RCA Victor Vintage Series. These tracks were originally recorded between 1927 and 1930. Yes, this is the Jelly Roll of “stoned me just like Jelly Roll” in Van Morrison’s “And It Stoned Me.”…

  • Clark Terry, It’s What’s Happenin’: The Varitone Sound of Clark Terry, 1967 on Impulse

    Clark Terry, It’s What’s Happenin’: The Varitone Sound of Clark Terry, 1967 on Impulse

    Clark Terry with George Duvivier, Dave Bailey, and Don Friedman. Liner notes by Nat Hentoff, produced by Bob Thiele. Impulse was an imprint of ABC Records: “The New Wave in Jazz . . . Feel It On Impulse!” Love this: What’s happening with Clark Terry is what some have called the life force. He digs…

  • Aretha Franklin, I Never Loved A Man The Way I Love You, 1967 on Atlantic

    Aretha Franklin, I Never Loved A Man The Way I Love You, 1967 on Atlantic

    My copy is a 2022 reissue by Vinyl Me, Please as a part of their Essentials track. It was actually Franklin’s tenth studio album but her first release on Atlantic. Imagine having Respect as the lead off track on your debut album at a new label? Not that the nine albums at Columbia aren’t good…