- Digital
John Heartsman & Circles
Music of my Heart
Jazzman
- Cat No: JMANCD030
- Release: 2010-02-01
- updated:
Track List
-
1. John Heartsman & Circles - The Thrill Is Gone
05:05 -
2. John Heartsman & Circles - A Day In The Life Of A Fool
06:42 -
3. John Heartsman & Circles - Every Day I Have The Blues
05:28 -
4. John Heartsman & Circles - Talking About My Baby
03:37 -
5. John Heartsman & Circles - You Are The Music Of My Heart
04:56 -
6. John Heartsman & Circles - Who Do You Love
03:51 -
7. John Heartsman & Circles - Silky Pete
03:26 -
8. John Heartsman & Circles - Mr. Magic
05:01 -
9. John Heartsman & Circles - Ontario Serenade
03:18 -
10. John Heartsman & Circles - The Road To Nowhere
03:55 -
11. John Heartsman & Circles - Up From Down
03:18 -
12. John Heartsman & Circles - Dream A Dream
03:11 -
13. John Heartsman & Circles - If We Can't Be Lovers (Can't We Be Friends)
02:23 -
14. John Heartsman & Circles - Silky Pete (Pt. II)
03:30 -
15. John Heartsman & Circles - Summer
02:42
16bit/44.1khz [wav/flac/aiff/alac/mp3]
It's the fourth installment in our HOLY GRAIL series, and we're proud to present Sacramento multi-instrumentalist Johnny Heartsman's hopelessly obscure self-pressed double LP of top grade funky jazz & soul from 1977, carefully repressed on CD and vinyl (limited to 1000 vinyl copies only). Now get this - the original LP has recently hit over $5000 (yes, over five thousand US dollars!) - TWICE - at online auction! Now it's available in its original format with original artwork for a song, but be quick - as ALL of our previous releases in this series have all sold out - FAST!!!
John Heartsman is known as the guy who played on a thousand R&B hits. From the mid '50s to the late '60s he recorded countless sessions, backing up the likes of Jimmy McCracklin, Lowell Fulson, Sugar Pie DeSanto, and many, many more. Then is the early '70s, exhausted from constant touring and seedy late night gigs, he took up a low-key residency at a small Sacramento jazz club. Here, Heartsman finally got to do his OWN thing. And his thing went down so well with the local audience that he decided to record some material and offer an LP for sale. The album was quickly snapped up by the Basin St West regulars, and very few escaped the local area.
A couple of decades later, and sadly a little while after Heartsman himself had passed away, a couple of copies surfaced on the funk collectors scene in LA and whispers and rumours of a set of sustained quality funky soul and jazz began circulating slowly. Very few copies have appeared since, making the LP almost as legendary as the long and hidden career of the man himself..