SOUNDS OF LIBERATION: Unreleased [Columbia University, 1973] (BREWERYTOWN BEATS)
This is the 2021 repress, folks.
From the one-sheet:
“Sounds Of Liberation was a band -- and a social movement -- formed in 1970 out of the Germantown & Mt Airy neighborhoods of Philadelphia.
The band consisted of seven members: Khan Jamal (vibraphone), Byard Lancaster (alto saxophone), Billy Mills (bass), Dwight James (drums), Monnette Sudler (guitar), Omar Hill (percussion), William Brister (percussionist, aka Rashid Salim). Originally conceived and formed by Khan Jamal, the arrival of Byard Lancaster in 1971 helped shift their focus and efforts into a higher gear [...]
Sounds of Liberation were at the forefront of avant-garde Black expression in the early 1970s, putting action behind their creative endeavors. They were as much of a community force as a band, and because of that there was a strong desire by the entire group to work with a range of different populations, from school children to inmates. They continued to do so throughout the mid-1970s.
The group issued one self-released album, New Horizons -- alternately titled The Sounds Of Liberation in later pressings -- in 1972, on their Dogtown label […] By 1973 the band -- along with their manager, George Gilmore (father of R & B musician Linc Gilmore, of Breakwater fame) -- travelled to New York City for a recording session at Columbia University. This five-song session of original music (with compositions penned by Jamal, Lancaster and Sudler) has never been released and has been prepared for this important and long-overdue LP package by group members, in collaboration with Brewerytown Beats Records in Philadelphia."
This is the 2021 repress, folks.
From the one-sheet:
“Sounds Of Liberation was a band -- and a social movement -- formed in 1970 out of the Germantown & Mt Airy neighborhoods of Philadelphia.
The band consisted of seven members: Khan Jamal (vibraphone), Byard Lancaster (alto saxophone), Billy Mills (bass), Dwight James (drums), Monnette Sudler (guitar), Omar Hill (percussion), William Brister (percussionist, aka Rashid Salim). Originally conceived and formed by Khan Jamal, the arrival of Byard Lancaster in 1971 helped shift their focus and efforts into a higher gear [...]
Sounds of Liberation were at the forefront of avant-garde Black expression in the early 1970s, putting action behind their creative endeavors. They were as much of a community force as a band, and because of that there was a strong desire by the entire group to work with a range of different populations, from school children to inmates. They continued to do so throughout the mid-1970s.
The group issued one self-released album, New Horizons -- alternately titled The Sounds Of Liberation in later pressings -- in 1972, on their Dogtown label […] By 1973 the band -- along with their manager, George Gilmore (father of R & B musician Linc Gilmore, of Breakwater fame) -- travelled to New York City for a recording session at Columbia University. This five-song session of original music (with compositions penned by Jamal, Lancaster and Sudler) has never been released and has been prepared for this important and long-overdue LP package by group members, in collaboration with Brewerytown Beats Records in Philadelphia."
This is the 2021 repress, folks.
From the one-sheet:
“Sounds Of Liberation was a band -- and a social movement -- formed in 1970 out of the Germantown & Mt Airy neighborhoods of Philadelphia.
The band consisted of seven members: Khan Jamal (vibraphone), Byard Lancaster (alto saxophone), Billy Mills (bass), Dwight James (drums), Monnette Sudler (guitar), Omar Hill (percussion), William Brister (percussionist, aka Rashid Salim). Originally conceived and formed by Khan Jamal, the arrival of Byard Lancaster in 1971 helped shift their focus and efforts into a higher gear [...]
Sounds of Liberation were at the forefront of avant-garde Black expression in the early 1970s, putting action behind their creative endeavors. They were as much of a community force as a band, and because of that there was a strong desire by the entire group to work with a range of different populations, from school children to inmates. They continued to do so throughout the mid-1970s.
The group issued one self-released album, New Horizons -- alternately titled The Sounds Of Liberation in later pressings -- in 1972, on their Dogtown label […] By 1973 the band -- along with their manager, George Gilmore (father of R & B musician Linc Gilmore, of Breakwater fame) -- travelled to New York City for a recording session at Columbia University. This five-song session of original music (with compositions penned by Jamal, Lancaster and Sudler) has never been released and has been prepared for this important and long-overdue LP package by group members, in collaboration with Brewerytown Beats Records in Philadelphia."