Charles Earland - Collection (1970 - 2004) Lossless
BAND/ARTIST: Charles Earland
- Title: Collection
- Year Of Release: 1970-2014
- Label: Various
- Genre: Jazz, Funk, Soul
- Quality: WAV/ Flac (tracks/image+.cue)
- Total Time: 19:53:04
- Total Size: 8,12 Gb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Charles Earland (May 24, 1941 – December 11, 1999 was an American jazz composer, organist, and saxophonist in the soul jazz idiom.
Earland was born in Philadelphia and learned to play the saxophone in high school. He played tenor with Jimmy McGriff at the age of 17 and in 1960 formed his first group. He started playing the organ after playing with Pat Martino, and joined Lou Donaldson's band from 1968 to 1969.
The group that he led from 1970, including Grover Washington, Jr., was successful, and he eventually started playing soprano saxophone and synthesizer. His hard, simmering grooves earned him the nickname "The Mighty Burner".
In 1978, Earland hit the disco/club scene with a track recorded on Mercury Records called "Let The Music Play", written by Randy Muller from the funk group Brass Construction. The record was in the U.S. charts for five weeks and reached number 46 in the UK Singles Chart. With Earland's playing on synthesizer, the track also has an uncredited female vocalist. He had several moderate Billboard R&B chart hits in the mid-1970s and early '80s on Mercury and later Columbia Records.
Earland traveled extensively from 1988 until his death in 1999, performing throughout the USA and abroad. One of the highlights of his latter years was playing at the Berlin Jazz Festival in 1994. Among the musicians that performed with him at the Berlin Jazz Festival was the Alabama-born Chicago resident, Zimbabu Hamilton. on the drums. Earland died in Kansas City, Missouri, of heart failure at the age of 58.
Earland was born in Philadelphia and learned to play the saxophone in high school. He played tenor with Jimmy McGriff at the age of 17 and in 1960 formed his first group. He started playing the organ after playing with Pat Martino, and joined Lou Donaldson's band from 1968 to 1969.
The group that he led from 1970, including Grover Washington, Jr., was successful, and he eventually started playing soprano saxophone and synthesizer. His hard, simmering grooves earned him the nickname "The Mighty Burner".
In 1978, Earland hit the disco/club scene with a track recorded on Mercury Records called "Let The Music Play", written by Randy Muller from the funk group Brass Construction. The record was in the U.S. charts for five weeks and reached number 46 in the UK Singles Chart. With Earland's playing on synthesizer, the track also has an uncredited female vocalist. He had several moderate Billboard R&B chart hits in the mid-1970s and early '80s on Mercury and later Columbia Records.
Earland traveled extensively from 1988 until his death in 1999, performing throughout the USA and abroad. One of the highlights of his latter years was playing at the Berlin Jazz Festival in 1994. Among the musicians that performed with him at the Berlin Jazz Festival was the Alabama-born Chicago resident, Zimbabu Hamilton. on the drums. Earland died in Kansas City, Missouri, of heart failure at the age of 58.
Tracklist
1970 - Black Drops
1970 - Black Talk!
1970 - Living Black!
1972 - Intensity
1973 - Leaving This Planet
1974 - The Dynamite Brothers OST
1978 - Perceptions
1980 - Coming To You Live
1988 - Front Burner
1989 - Third Degree Burn
1999 - Cookin With The Mighty Burner
1999 - Organomically Correct (Best of)
2000 - Anthology
2002 - Charles Earland In Concert (1972-1974)
2002 - Charles Earland Tribute Band - Keepers of the Flame
2004 - Funk Fantastique (1971-1973 sessions)
2004 - The Mighty Burner
1999 - Charles Earland - Live *
1976 - The Great Pyramid (2014) *
Jazz | Soul | Funk | Discography
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