Thursday, 12 February 2026
Monday, 9 February 2026
Wednesday, 26 November 2025
The Wednesday Classic #2
After a forgettable false start peddling iffy acid jazz, Mo’ Wax made a stylistic shift in 1994, kickstarting a four-year period that continues to resonate two decades on. The first Headz compilation is a neat 18-track digest of that transition, a declaration of what was to come. Influences, ambitions and comments on the status quo of the time are found in the slowed down grooves and samples as well as the track titles: ‘Ravers Suck Our Sound’, ‘Contemplating Jazz’, ‘In Flux’, ‘The Time Has Come’. The titular beatheads may have seemed like a stoned, uncreative bunch at the time but their aesthetic has proven resilient. Alongside obvious names like DJ Shadow, La Funk Mob and R.P.M, Headz also featured Nightmares On Wax, Autechre, Howie B. and various members of Major Force
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Headz - A Soundtrack Of Experimental Beathead Jams |
Disc 1
1. Freedom Now Meditation • Patterson
2. Contemplating Jazz • Attica Blues
3. Symmetrical Jazz Flapper Till 5AM mix • Awunsound
4. Stars • Nightmares on Wax
5. Ravers Suck Our Sound • La Funk Mob
6. Miles Out of Time Astrocentric Mix 'n' Beats • M.F. Outa 'National
7. The Inside • RPM
8. Lowride • Autechre
9. Wildstyle (The Krush Handshake) • Olde Scottish
Disc 2
1. Lost and Found S.F.L. • DJ Shadow
2. Destroy All Monsters • Skull
3. .....Don't Fake It • Deflon Sallahr
4. 2000 • RPM
5. Slipper Suite (i) Jeremy's Velvet Slippers
(ii) Moonraker (iii) Unspeakable Acts
Palm Skin Productions
6. The Time Has Come • Unkle and The Major Force Orchestra
7. Head West – Gun Fight at the O.K. Corrall • Howie B. Inc.
8. They Came in Peace • Tranquility Bass
9. In-Flux • DJ Shadow
British "trip hop" label owned and run by James Lavelle. Launched in 1992, defunct in 2002 |
Label: Mo Wax – MWCD026
Series: Headz
Format: FLAC
Country: UK
Released: Oct 31, 1994
Genre: Hip Hop
Style: Downtempo, Trip Hop
Wednesday, 12 November 2025
The Wednesday Classic #1
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Marc Johnson • Bass Desires |
2. Resolution (Coltrane)
3. Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair (Traditional)
4. Bass Desires (Erskine)
5. A Wishing Doll (Bernstein, David)
6. Mojo Highway (Johnson)
7. Thanks Again (Scofield)
Bill Frisell • Guitar, Guitar Synthesizer
John Scofield • Guitar
Peter Erskine • Drums
Format: Flac
Country: Germany
Released: 1986
Genre: Jazz
Style: Fusion, Contemporary Jazz
Wednesday, 24 September 2025
Monday, 22 September 2025
Sam Morrison
In 1975, During Miles' funk-fusion period, Miles heard a 22 year-old saxophonist from Long Island named Sam Morrison, and was so intrigued by his playing,(reportedly saying "I haven't heard that much fire on the saxophone since 'Trane was in my band")that the very next day Miles fired Sonny Fortune, and hired Sam as a regular member of the Miles Davis group. Sam toured the U.S. with Miles, including a concert at Central Park, and concerts recorded live at the Bottom Line. While just about to embark on a tour of Japan, Miles suddenly cancelled the
On both a professional and artistic level, Sam's life seemed to be on an ascendency. But the mounting pressures of supporting a wife and two children, and living a life on the road led to a disenchantment of the jazz life. So in 1979, without notice, Sam dropped out of the music scene, sold his saxophone, moved to the Catskill mountains, and pursued a career as a professional tennis instructor. For nearly a decade Morrison existed if he were half a person, wandering aimlessly (but not painlessly) through the jungle of the status-quo.
Then in 1989, Sam had a mystical vision that manifested itself in the form of a dream. In this dream, Sam states that he sees himself giving a tennis lesson. Then suddenly, he hears a strange whistling sound that at times, resembles a soprano saxophone. He turns around and notices a middle-aged black man standing at side court. Some strange and unknown force drives Sam to walk up to the man. "What do you want" Sam asks. A tear streams down the man's sullen face. "In 1957, I was addicted to drugs, had no money, no gigs, and no place to live" the man replied. "But I never gave up. Never! Two years later, I went on to record one of the most important and influential records of my career......Giant Steps."
From that day on, Sam Morrison knew what he had to do. He bought a used sax at the pawn shop. He began practicing his horn incessantly, day and night. He got a hold of every record, manuscript, and music book he could beg, borrow, and steal. It was as Sam describes as a re-birth of his soul. A reawakening that has sparked a new interest and exitement for the music he has always loved.
Today, at age 42 (1996), Morrison is an established veteran of the American artform we know as jazz. However, he refuses to remain idle. In his home, nestled in New York's Catskill mountains, Sam is sitting in his livingroom, which also houses vintage Hi-Fi stereo equipment and some five-thousand vinyl jazz records. At once, he appears lost in thought, fingering his saxophone, working on a new musical idea, preparing music for an upcoming concert. As his gaze slowly pans the room, he suddenly turns his head. "This is the second show,", he says bemusedly. "The first one was a quite a trip." As he leans back in his chair, arms stretched outward, he breaks into a wide grin reminiscent of the Cheshire Cat. "This is the second show."
Cosmic Trip
Bill Laswell: EFX
Soprano & Tenor Saxophonist, Alto & Bass Flute Player, Composer, and Synthesist
Sam Morrison is a multifaceted musician known for his mastery of the soprano and tenor saxophones, as well as his artistry on the alto and bass flutes. With a career that spans several decades, he has left an indelible mark on the world of jazz, collaborating with legendary artists and contributing to iconic recordings.



