At Last!
In 1960, Etta James released At Last! A debut that placed a formidable, uncontainable voice inside the most controlled setting possible and let the friction speak for itself.
In 1960, Etta James released At Last! A debut that placed a formidable, uncontainable voice inside the most controlled setting possible and let the friction speak for itself.
In 1969, Laura Nyro released New York Tendaberry. A record that folded soul, gospel, jazz and confession into something quietly radical.
In 1969, Isaac Hayes released 'Hot Buttered Soul.' A record that broke soul music out of the three-minute single and rebuilt it as something cinematic, slow-burning and expansive.
In 1964, The Impressions released 'Keep On Pushing.' A gospel-soul statement of hope and perseverance that lit the fuse for the civil rights era.
In 1972, Terry Callier released What Color Is Love - a tender, expansive, genre-defying masterpiece that somehow went overlooked for decades.