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The Herbaliser Band - Session 1 & 2

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Download links and information about The Herbaliser Band - Session 1 & 2 by The Herbaliser. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to Electronica, Jazz genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 01:32:44 minutes.

Artist: The Herbaliser
Release date: 2009
Genre: Electronica, Jazz
Tracks: 19
Duration: 01:32:44
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Who's the Realest? (Instrumental) 5:25
2. Ginger Jumps the Fence (Instrumental) 5:09
3. The Sensual Woman (Instrumental) 4:21
4. The Missing Suitcase (Instrumental) 5:39
5. Shocka Zulu (Instrumental) 5:11
6. Shattered Soul (Instrumental) 5:06
7. Goldrush (Instrumental) 5:40
8. Forty Winks (Instrumental) 5:39
9. Mr. Chombee Has the Flaw (Instrumental) 3:31
10. Geddim! (Instrumental) 4:54
11. AM Prelude (Instrumental) 1:32
12. Another Mother (Instrumental) 7:31
13. Blackwater Drive (Instrumental) 4:46
14. MS Prelude (Instrumental) 1:29
15. Moon Sequence (Instrumental) 6:08
16. Amores Bongo (Instrumental) 4:06
17. CC Prelude (Instrumental) 0:36
18. Theme from Control Centre (Instrumental) 5:27
19. Stranded On Earth (Instrumental) 10:34

Details

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Soon after their debut, Jake Wherry and Ollie Teeba's Herbaliser project began growing from avatars of studio hip-hop into a live band experience that was a significantly different prospect than their records promised. Then, after three LPs for Ninja Tune during the late '90s, they brought their band into the studio and produced Session 1, an eight-track album with covers of their earlier material. The band was a crackerjack, including a base of Ralph Lamb (brass) and Andy Ross (woodwinds), together known as the Easy Access Orchestra — plus guests including saxophone maestro Chris Bowden. Virtually the same lineup was intact more than a decade later when Session 2 was recorded, in early 2009. In the meantime, the Herbaliser had moved even closer to the vibrant club-jazz displayed on Session 1, which makes it a bit less revelatory, but an accomplished work of pinpoint-precise live jamming nevertheless. Latter-day highlights "Geddim!" and "Amores Bongo" appear hand in hand with older tracks that would have been sure things for the original session — "Mr Chombee Has the Flaw," from 1997's Blow Your Headphones and "Moon Sequence," from 1999's Very Mercenary.