LP
£18.99 GBP £22.99

Flying Dutchman

Catalogue No: HIQLP 093

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  • Introduction
  • The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
  • Omen
  • Brother
  • Comment #1
  • Small Talk At 125th & Lenox
  • The Subject Was Faggots
  • Evolution (And Flashback)
  • Plastic Pattern People
  • Whitey On The Moon
  • The Vulture
  • Enough
  • Paint It Black
  • Who'll Pay Reparations On My Soul ?
  • Everyday

Released in 1971 'Small Talk At 125th and Lenox' was the start of Gil Scott-Heron's distinguished forty-year recording career but this album is his simplest and most hard-hitting. For the most part it features him with three percussionists performing his poetry. The rhythmic backdrop and the style of the delivery makes it more than a spoken word album. It is a classic that stands head and shoulders above similar albums of the same date. It laid the basis for Scott-Heron's emergence as one of the leading figures of the black radical movement. Here is the original of 'The Revolution Will Not Be Televised' a FM radio hit which prompted the recording of the full band version better known today. The album also includes the renowned 'Whitey On The Moon' and the much-sampled 'Brother'. Here are Gil Scott-Heron's first three recordings as a singer, including the beautiful 'Who'll Pay Reparations On My Soul'. CD - From new 24-96 transfers and has never sounded better. The original album artwork is presented with its stark Charles Stewart photographs and the booklet contains a new essay on the album by compiler Dean Rudland.LP - 180 Gram Vinyl with Heavyweight Gatefold reverse board sleeve.

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