Your bag is empty.
Loading...
FREE SHIPPING $49+ | FREE 100-DAY RETURNS
Actual appearance may vary slightly from mockup
GENRE(S): Jazz
STYLE(S): Soul-Jazz, Free Jazz, Modal
Edition: Audiophile
Condition: New & Sealed
Out of stock
Customer Reviews
Packing is top notch! I'm 3 deliveries in and I've never seen a retailer pack their shipments so securely.
I've placed multiple online orders with Comeback and it's been an easy experience every time. Selection has been excellent, communication and shipment have been prompt, and items are well packaged.
All I can say is this is a family run business that truly cares for each and every customer.
These guys are the best! Everything is packed professionally, their prices are fair and their customer service is top notch.
Their customer service is incredible.
Super fast shipping and very sturdy packing.
It’s great to support a local record store when they are in it for the customers. You got a customer for life.
Just a damn good vinyl shop.
Great online selection, fair prices, fast shipping, and my order was packed securely/safely.
Items are shipped quickly and packaged nicely to avoid damage from those not so nice handlers.
Your order will always be packed in a top-of-line box specifically designed to ship vinyl records—made from high quality cardboard built to prevent seam splits & corner bends.
Everything inside your shipment will be bubble wrapped for added bump & drop protection, with as much extra filler material needed for a snug, safe ride to you.
As an additional free service, your records can be opened to have their discs shipped behind the jacket to prevent seam splits. Just tick the box below the add to bag button.
Facts
UPC
Label
Decade Recorded
Format
Speed
Vinyl Weight
Disc Quantity
Vinyl Color
Description
Leon Thomas' debut solo recording after his tenure with Pharoah Sanders is a fine one. Teaming with a cast of musicians that includes bassist Cecil McBee, flutist James Spaulding, Roy Haynes, Lonnie Liston Smith, Richard Davis, and Sanders (listed here as 'Little Rock'), etc. Thomas' patented yodel is in fine shape here, displayed alongside his singular lyric style and scat singing trademark. The set begins with a shorter, more lyrical version of Thomas' signature tune 'The Creator Has a Master Plan,' with the lyric riding easy and smooth alongside the yodel, which bubbles up only in the refrains. It's a different story on his own 'One,' with Davis' piano leading the charge and Spaulding blowing through the center of the track, Thomas alternates scatting and his moaning, yodeling, howling, across the lyrics, through them under them and in spite of them. It's an intense ride and one that sets up the glorious 'Echoes.' This tune is Thomas at his most spiritual and uplifting, carrying the mysterious drift of his tune entwined with Spaulding's flute and a set of Pan pipes, fluttering in and out of the mix before his wail comes to the fore as a solo. The end of side one reaches into Thomas' past (he sang with everyone from Count Basie to Grant Green and Mary Lou Williams) for a highly original read of Horace Silver's classic 'Song for My Father.' Thomas imbues the tune with so much emotion, it's a wonder he can keep it under wraps. Side two is more free from in nature with 'Damn Nam,' a near rant, but one possessed with melodic vision and harmonic invention with this band. There's also the deeply moving 'Malcolm's Gone,' a co-write between Thomas and Sanders that features the latter's gorgeous blowing, hard and true in the middle of the mix, and a wildly spiritual Eastern vibe coming through in the improvisation. It's the longest track on the record, and one of the most criminally ignored in Thomas' long career. The album closes with Bell and Houston's 'Let the Rain Fall on Me.' It's a shimmering straight jazz number with a beautiful piano solo by Smith. It sends out a visionary album out on a sweet, soulful note. Ultimately, this is among Thomas' finest moments on vinyl, proving his versatility and accessibility to an audience who, for too long already, had associated him too closely with the avant-garde and free jazz.-Thom Jurek/AMG
Tracklist