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4.045 Ft
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1. | A Tear in Elmina
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2. | A Close Encounter of the Very Best Kind
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3. | Shades of Dolphy (Prelude)
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4. | Shades of Dolphy
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5. | Solar
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6. | Thrivin' on a Groove
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7. | Nature Boy
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8. | Caravan
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Jazz
Phil Ranelin - Arranger, Cowbell, Liner Notes, Producer, Trombone Carl Randall, Jr. - Group Member, Sax (Tenor) Danny Grissett - Group Member, Organ, Piano (Grand) Don Littleton - Conga, Drums, Group Member, Percussion George Harper Jr. - Group Member, Sax (Baritone), Sax (Tenor) Gregory Howe - Compilation, Editing, Producer James Leary - Bass, Group Member Janna Gadden - Photography Jinshi Ozaki - Group Member, Guitar Justin Weiss - Mastering Keith Fiddmont - Flute, Group Member, Sax (Soprano) Lorca Hart - Drums, Group Member Louis Van Taylor - Clarinet (Bass), Flute, Flute (Alto), Group Member Michael Session - Group Member, Sax (Alto), Sax (Soprano) Nate Morgan - Group Member, Piano Ryan Cross - Bass, Group Member William Henderson - Group Member, Piano Zane Musa - Group Member, Sax (Alto)
Phil Ranelin--known for his extensive work with Tribe Records, Pharoah Sanders, Freddie Hubbard, and many other greats--delivers a live album recorded over three years during his Tribe Renaissance period. Radio promotion through Mitchell Feldman Associates. Print and press through Wide Hive Records.
Phil Ranelin
Active Decade: '70s Genre: Jazz Styles: Soul-Jazz, Fusion, Post-Bop, Free Jazz, Free Funk, Avant-Garde Jazz
Trombonist Phil Ranelin was one of the Detroit jazz scene's unsung heroes, releasing several excellent, politicized albums that blended post-Coltrane avant-garde jazz, post-Bitches Brew psychedelia, hard bop, funk, and African rhythms. Ranelin was born and raised in Indianapolis, and later moved to New York and then Detroit, where he started out as a session man for Motown artists like Stevie Wonder. In 1971, along with saxophonist Wendell Harrison, Ranelin co-founded a band, magazine, and record label conglomeration known as the Tribe, which used experimental jazz as a vehicle to raise African-American political consciousness. That year, Ranelin also issued his first album as a leader, Message From the Tribe. 1974's The Time Is Now! continued Ranelin's accessible avant leanings, but 1976's Vibes From the Tribe pushed more firmly into groovy jazz-funk territory. The Tribe organization folded in 1978, after which Ranelin played with Freddie Hubbard for several years. In 1986, Ranelin led a date for Rebirth titled Love Dream, and ten years later released the self-produced album A Close Encounter of the Very Best Kind -- which featured his new Los Angeles-based sextet -- on Lifeforce. Though Ranelin's albums didn't get much exposure outside of his home base, they found their way onto the acid jazzrare-groove collector's market, creating an underground buzz around Ranelin's music. In 2001, Tortoise drummer John McEntire remixed and remastered The Time Is Now! and Vibes From the Tribe, which were reissued by the Hefty label. The following year, a full-fledged electronic Remixes collection was released. ---Steve Huey, All Music Guide |
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