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LP
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SD 7213HLP
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180 gram exact repro of Aretha Franklin's 1972 album, featuring covers of John Lennon & Paul McCartney's "The Long And Winding Road," Elton John's "Border Song (Holy Moses)" and Nina Simone's "Young, Gifted And Black."
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SD 8204LP
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Houston's Archie Bell & The Drells' "big break came when 'Mountain of Soul' disc jockey Skipper Lee Frazier noticed that they had a habit of winning his talent contests... First Tighten Up and then, I Can't Stop Dancing zoomed up the charts..." Exact repro, manufactured by Rhino; originally released in 1968.
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SC 8181HLP
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180 gram exact repro, manufactured by Rhino; originally released in 1968. Includes the title track, "You're Mine," "Knock On Wood," "In The Midnight Hour" and "When You Left Heartache Began."
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R1 7204HLP
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180 gram Rhino reissue of the solo debut from Crosby, Stills, Nash & Young's Graham Nash, originally released in 1971. David Crosby, Jerry Garcia, Rita Coolidge and Dave Mason all play on this record. Features the hit song "Chicago."
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LP
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SD 1510HLP
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180 gram vinyl version, manufactured by Rhino. "Although Max Roach was very much a product of the be-bop revolution of the 1940s, he proved to be quite receptive to modal post-bop and avant-garde jazz in the 1960s. One of the finest post-bop dates Roach recorded during that decade was 1968's Members, Don't Git Weary, which finds the drummer leading a cohesive modal quintet that employs Gary Bartz on alto sax, Charles Tolliver on trumpet, Stanley Cowell on acoustic and electric piano, and Jymie Merritt on electric bass. Despite the use of electric instruments, this isn't an album that emphasizes rock or funk elements or predicts the fusion explosion that was just around the corner -- Members, Don't Git Weary is very much a straight-ahead effort, and the harmonic richness of modal playing is illustrated by such gems as Cowell's 'Equipoise,' Bartz's 'Libra,' and Merritt's 'Absolutions.' Roach's title song boasts a memorable, gospel-influenced vocal by Andy Bey, but all of the other selections are instrumental." -- All Music Guide
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R1 7203HLP
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Originally released in 1971, David Crosby's If I Could Only Remember My Name is listed second in the Vatican's "Top 10 Pop Albums of All Time." Gatefold 180 gram vinyl reissue, remastered and manufactured by Rhino.
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ATL 1378HLP
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180 gram vinyl version. Originally released in 1962, recorded a month after Free Jazz: A Collective Improvisation. With Don Cherry, Scott LaFaro and Ed Blackwell. "Ornette Coleman's proposition is a very simple one: release me from the bondage of long out-dated harmonic and formal conventions, and I will take you away from the wallpaper-like cliches of my contemporaries and let you hear a world of sound which you have never heard before, which is free, and which is beholden only to its own innermost logic and discipline." Exact repro reissue, manufactured by Rhino.
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SD 18134LP
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1975 album from prolific soul artist Sam Dees. Exact repro, manufactured by Rhino. "When he sings the pangs of unrequited love, it's an emotion with which all of us can identify."
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SD 8281HLP
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After Atlantic released Headless Heroes Of The Apocalypse in 1971, a paranoid Nixon administration demanded that further recordings by Eugene McDaniels not be released -- and Atlantic complied. A fiercely political funk album, featuring outstanding performances from Alphonse Mouzon (drums), Harry Whitaker (piano) and Gary King (bass), among others, Headless Heroes Of The Apocalypse went on to be heavily sampled by Tribe Called Quest, De La Soul and Beastie Boys. 180 gram reissue, manufactured by Rhino.
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ATL 8057LP
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"Thomas' first album was built around the huge title hit, and also included her follow-up single, 'A Love of My Own,' which reached the R&B Top 20, although it wasn't nearly as popular as 'Gee Whiz (Look at His Eyes).' The record is far more pop-oriented than the sound for which Stax would become known, with both the material and the arrangements showing substantial influences from pop standards, doo wop, and even (particularly in the songs with backup vocals by the Anita Kerr Singers) Nashville country." --All Music Guide
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