Gil Scott-Heron - Village Gate New York 1976 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting) (2025)

  • 14 Apr, 15:15
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Artist:
Title: Village Gate New York 1976 (Remastered, Live On Broadcasting)
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: DMG
Genre: Soul, Jazz, R&B, Jazz-Funk
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 38:53
Total Size: 221 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Intro Jam (Live) (03:15)
2. 17th Street (Live) (06:12)
3. Must Be Something We Can Do (Live) (05:24)
4. It's Your World (Live) (04:45)
5. Home is Where the Hatred is (Live) (12:40)
6. Johannesburg (Live) (06:36)

One of the most important progenitors of rap music, Gil Scott-Heron's aggressive, no-nonsense street poetry is equal parts politically conscious activism, cultural awareness, polemic, and social commentary, inspired a legion of intelligent rappers. His engaging songwriting skills -- often with longtime musical partner Brian Jackson -- placed him on the jazz charts, and later in his career, the R&B charts as well. Early recordings, such as 1971's Pieces of a Man and 1975's Winter in America, showcased his spoken word poetry and commentary, and more conventional songwriting chops that scored him a deal with the then-fledgling Arista Records run by Clive Davis. With Jackson and the Midnight Band, Heron delivered seminal jazz-funk outings including 1975's First Minute of a New Day, It's Your World (1976) and Bridges (1977), all of which placed in the upper half of the Top 200; in all, between 1974 and 1980, they placed nine albums on that chart. The group also delivered a par of R&B radio singles in "Angel Dust" and "Shut 'Em Down." That group split in 1980 and Scott-Heron formed the Amnesia Express, which functioned as both his live and studio outfit. He continued releasing albums for Arista until 1982 and Moving Target. After a dozen years of recording inactivity, personal problems, and only occasionally playing live, Scott-Heron returned to the studio in 1994 and issued Spirits. After another 15 years, he signed with Richard Russell's XL Recordings and delivered the acclaimed I'm New Here in 2010. A remixed version in collaboration with Jamie xx titled We're New Here, was issued in 2011, just a month before Scott-Heron's passing.