GIVE THEVIBES SOME by KHAN JAMAL

SKU141948
ArtistKHAN JAMAL
TitleGIVE THEVIBES SOME
LabelSOUFFLE CONTINU RECORDS
Catalog #FFL 101
Tag
ReleaseW 47 - 2025
FormatVinyl - EULP
EAN Barcode3491570069622
Import
 € 29,99 incl. VAT, excl. shipping

Tracks

  1. pure energy
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/f/ffl_101_give_thevibes_some/a1_pure_energy_.mp3
  2. clint
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/f/ffl_101_give_thevibes_some/a2_clint_.mp3
  3. 35.000 feet up
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/f/ffl_101_give_thevibes_some/b1_35.000_feet_up.mp3
  4. give the vibes some
    https://objectstore.true.nl/rushhourrecords:files/tracks/f/ffl_101_give_thevibes_some/b2_give_the_vibes_some_.mp3

Description

Carefully remastered and restored by Gilles Laujol
Graphic design by Stefan Thanneur
4 page booklet with rare and unpublished photos
425GSM Frovi Brown Board
Heavyweight 180 gr. LP
Officially Licensed from Palm / Geneviève Quievreux

On “Cold Sweat,” James Brown famously called to “give the drummer some.” In 1974, Philadelphia vibraphonist Khan Jamal called to Give the Vibes Some, with superb results. Pianist and composer Jef Gilson’s PALM label gave Jamal the platform he needed to deliver a thorough exploration of contemporary vibraphone. After launching PALM in 1973, Gilson quickly demonstrated that he would only produce records not found anywhere else. Give the Vibes Some, PALM number 10, was another confirmation of this guiding principle.

Raised and based in Philadelphia, Khan Jamal took up the vibes in 1968, after two years in the army during which he was stationed in France and Germany. Decisively drawn to the instrument by the work of the Modern Jazz Quartet’s Milt Jackson, Jamal studied under Philadelphia vibraphone legend Bill Lewis and soon made his debuts in the local underground.

Early in 1972, Jamal made his first recording, with the Sounds of Liberation. The band attempted an original fusion of conga-heavy grooves with avant-garde jazz soloing. Saxophonist Byard Lancaster, an important figure in Jamal’s development, contributed much of the solo work. Later in 1972, Jamal made his leader debut with Drum Dance to the Motherland, a reverb-drenched, never-to-be-replicated experiment with live sound processing. Both albums appeared on the tiny musician-run Dogtown label.

“We couldn’t get no play from nowhere. No gigs or recording sessions or anything. So I took off for Paris,” Jamal recalled in a Cadence interview with Ken Weiss. “Within a few weeks, I had a few articles and I did a record date. It didn’t make me feel good about America.” That was in 1974, while Byard Lancaster was recording the music gathered on Souffle Continu’s recent The Complete PALM Recordings, 1973-1974.

Jamal’s record date delivered Give the Vibes Some. At its core, it was an exploratory solo vibraphone album, even if two tracks added (through technological resourcefulness?) a très célèbre French drummer very much into Elvin Jones appearing under pseudonym for contractual reasons. Another track, for which Jamal switched to the vibes’s wooden ancestor, the marimba, added young Texan trumpeter Clint Jackson III. The most notable article published on Jamal during this stay in France was a Jazz Magazine interview. Jamal’s last word there were “The Creator has a master plan/drum dance to the motherland.” “Give the vibes some” could be added to this programmatic statement.

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