UTOPIC CITIES : PROGRESSIVE JAZZ IN BELGIUM 1968-1979 (LIMITED EDITION)

(2LP)
Limited version on grey marbled vinyl. 2LP in gatefold sleeve including liner notes. Utopic Cities is an eclectic selection of forward-thinking jazz from the Belgian underground, including the left-field fusion of Marc Moulin's Placebo, Koen De Bruyne, Solis Lacus and more.
Genre Jazz
FormatVINYL
Cat. noSDBANLP15LTD
Label SDBAN
Artist VARIOUS ARTISTS
Release Date11/06/2021
Carrier2LP
Barcode5414165124832
Tracklisting
UTOPIC CITIES : PROGRESSIVE JAZZ IN BELGIUM 1968-1979 (LIMITED EDITION)
vinyl Album or track playing


TRACKLISTING


A1. Placebo - S.U.S.
A2. Solis Lacus - Utopic Cities
A3. Open Sky Unit - Open Sky
A4. Brussels Art Quintet - Vas -y Voir
B1. Koen De Bruyne - Pathetic Dreams
B2. Raphaël - Archangelo
< br>C1. Philip Catherine - Memphis Talk
C2. Jacques & Micheline Pelzer Quartet - Face Reality
C3. The Kenny Clarke-Francy Boland Big Band - Sakara
D1. M arc Moulin - Tohubohu pt. I
D2. Babs Robert - Pro Forma I
D3. Lou MacConne ll - Naima





INFO


On June 11th, independe nt groove label Sdban Records will release Utopic Cities: Progressive Jazz in Be lgium 1968-1979 featuring twelve essential compositions from a highly creative p eriod in Belgian jazz. The release follows Sdban's critically acclaimed Let's Ge t Swinging: Modern Jazz in Belgium 1950-1970, released back in 2017.

Utopic Cities is an eclectic selection of forward-thinking jazz from the Belgian underground, including the left-field fusion of Marc Moulin's Placebo, Koen De Bruyne and Solis Lacus; the intense post-bop of Jacques Pelzer and Lou MacConnel l; the cutting edge soul jazz of Philip Catherine and Open Sky Unit or the other worldly avant-garde of Babs Robert and the Brussels Art Quintet. Recorded in the aftermath of the revolutionary year 1968, this music is the fruit of a highly c reative momentum in Belgian jazz history that produced a unique sound which dist inguishes itself from its American source of inspiration by an indefinable chara cteristic that can be hardly better described than 'Belgian'.