News & Updates
Bernie Worrell / April 19, 1944 - June 24, 2016
Classically-trained keyboardist Bernie Worrell has his place established as a major innovator in the Funk with Parliament-Funkadelic, with whom he played from about 1970 into the early '80s, and contributing to projects of other members of the mob. He brought the Bach to the Funk. He spent the '80s as a member of the Talking Heads and beyond that found an incredible amount of creative work with superproducer Bill Laswell. In his later years he was a staple on the jamband scene with Les Claypool, Govt Mule and others. A musical prodigy from New Jersey, he was playing piano by...
Alexis Korner / April 19, 1928 - Jan 1, 1984
Sending a birthday shout-out to one of the fathers of British blues, Alexis Korner. He brought many artists to Britain to perform in the nightclubs from the '50s to the '70s. He also had slots on radio & TV to help bring American blues records and artists to the general public. But perhaps more importantly, he led bands that served as a school for young British blues-rockers. He played guitar, piano and mandolin with several ensembles from the '40s and formed Blues Incorporated in '61. Membership in that collective group included a who's-who of great British soon-to-be rockers (and jazzers),...
Clyde Stubblefield / April 18, 1943 - Feb 18, 2017
The recently-deceased Clyde Stubblefield, along with Jabo Starks, was one of the drummers in the James Brown band from '65-'70, powering "Cold Sweat", "Ain't It Funky Now", "Say It Loud - I'm Black & I'm Proud", "There Was A Time", "Sex Machine", "I Got The Feelin", "Mother Popcorn", "Get Up Get Into It Get Involved", Bobby Byrd's "If You Don't Work, You Can't Eat", Marva Whitney's "It's My Thing", Vicki Anderson's "Message From The Soul Sisters" and many more. "Starks was the Beatles to Clyde's Stones. A clean shuffle drummer to Clyde's free-jazz left hand"--Questlove Of course, it's his drums...
Lord Kitchener / April 18, 1922 - Feb 11, 2000
The calypsonian Aldwyn Roberts became Lord Kitchener in 1945. He bumped around the Caribbean (including his native Trinidad, as well as Jamaica) before setting sail for the UK in '48, where he immediately hit with the classic "London Is The Place For Me". He was a popular and important figure in the West Indian community that was starting to move to the UK in huge numbers. Kitch caught the wave of popularity that calypso rode in the '50s, even touring Africa. In '62 he was back in his homeland and he was one of the biggest Caribbean stars in the...
David Axelrod / April 17, 1931 - Feb 5, 2017
Best known as a producer of sample-ready '60s records of unique vision, David Axelrod held many chairs in his career, from drummer to composer, A&R man and especially as a recording engineer, arranger and producer. In the late '60s and '70s he created several personal statements with his drum-heavy engineering, polished arrangements, creative use of strings, funky beats and eco-oriented themes. A longtime favorite of hip-hop samplers, his music was a groovy fusion of jazz, rock and soul. His sound and style is unmistakable to the ears. The son of a union activist, he grew up in Los Angeles and...
Peace & Rhythm presents glorious independent music on limited edition vinyl. Funk, world & jazz are the launch points. Run by DJs.