Spirits Known and Unknown [Bonus Tracks] Leon Thomas

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CD - Remastered / Bonus Tracks

  • Release Date: 12/07/2004
  • Original Release: 1969
  • Sales Rank: 46,414
  • Label: RCA VICTOR EUROPE
  • UPC: 090266387625

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Spirits Known and Unknown [Bonus Tracks]

1LISTENThe Creator Has a Master Plan (Peace) 4:27
2LISTENOne 3:10
3LISTENEchoes 5:42
4LISTENSong for My Father 5:21
5LISTENDamn Nam (Ain't Goin' to Vietnam) 4:46
6LISTENMalcolm's Gone 8:45
7LISTENLet the Rain Fall on Me 5:39
8LISTENUm, Um, Um 5:24
9LISTENA Night in Tunisia 8:27
10LISTENTake the "A" Train previously unreleased / Alternate Take 1 2:15
11LISTENTake the "A" Train previously unreleased / Alternate Take 2 2:09
12LISTENTake the "A" Train previously unreleased / Master Take 2:07
13LISTENWalkin' previously unreleased / Alternate Take 2:34
14LISTENWalkin' previously unreleased / Master Take 2:32
15LISTENWillow Weep for Me previously unreleased / Alternate Take 2:40
16LISTENWillow Weep for Me previously unreleased / Master Take 2:34
17LISTENIf It Didn't Hurt So Much previously unreleased / Alternate Take 2:41
18LISTENIf It Didn't Hurt So Much previously unreleased / Master Take 2:35

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Leon Thomas' debut solo recording after his tenure with Pharoah Sanders is a fine one. Teaming with a cast of musicians that includes bassist Cecil McBee, flutist James Spaulding, Roy Haynes, Lonnie Liston Smith, Richard Davis, and Sanders (listed here as "Little Rock," etc.), Thomas' patented yodel is in fine shape, displayed alongside his singular lyric style and scat-singing trademark. The set begins with a shorter, more lyrical version of Thomas' signature tune "The Creator Has a Master Plan," with the lyric riding easy and smooth alongside the yodel, which bubbles up only in the refrains. It's a different story on his own "One," with Davis' piano leading the charge and Spaulding blowing through the center of the track, Thomas alternates scatting and his moaning, yodeling, howling, across the lyrics, through them, under them and in spite of them. It's an intense ride and one that sets up the glorious "Echoes." This tune is Thomas at his most spiritual and uplifting, carrying the mysterious drift of his tune entwined with Spaulding's flute and a set of Pan pipes fluttering in and out of the mix before his wail comes to the fore as a solo. The end of side one reaches into Thomas' past (he sang with everyone from Count Basie to Grant Green and Mary Lou Williams) for a highly original read of Horace Silver's classic "Song for My Father." Thomas imbues the tune with so much emotion, it's a wonder he can keep it under wraps. Side two is more free-form in nature with "Damn Nam," a near rant, but one possessed with melodic vision and harmonic invention by this band. There's also the deeply moving "Malcolm's Gone," a co-write between Thomas and Sanders that features the latter's gorgeous blowing, hard and true in the middle of the mix, and a wildly spiritual Eastern vibe coming through in the improvisation. It's the longest track on the record, and one of the most criminally ignored in Thomas' long career. The album closes with Bell and Houston's "Let the Rain Fall on Me." It's a shimmering straight jazz number with a beautiful piano solo by Smith. It sends a visionary album out on a sweet, soulful note. Ultimately, this is among Thomas' finest moments on vinyl, proving his versatility and accessibility to an audience who, for too long already, had associated him too closely with the avant-garde and free jazz. [BMG's 2002 version included four tracks from the same sessions not included on the original LP, with alternate and master takes of each.] Thom Jurek, All Music Guide

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