![]() ![]() That's probably the brunt of all the "JAM" shit you saw. All the crap that you see that was released between 19 is completely 's all done by imposters so of course they are trying to ride "Jam On It"s coattails. "Jam-On This (Old School's Back In Session)" was done 13 years after "Jam On It", and is basically a tribute. I was cowtowing to the powers that be at the label who wanted us to do another "Jam On It".of course it didn't work at all. Now as for "Let's Jam", you're absolutely right. ![]() "Jam On It" (they took out the hyphen again.I hated those bastards) was our 2nd song, and the premise was simple.if you want "it" done right, you have to Jam-On "it", in other words, get Jam-On to do it. Because of typos by some idiot or the other it became know as "Jam On Revenge", and they then added "The Wikki Wikki Song" for commercial purposes. Our first single was originally called "Jam-On's Revenge" because it was about our crew battling rappers. Since what we were about was battling other crews, of course we tended to drop our name quite often. AllMusic.My Street DJ crew from the 70s was (is) called Jam-On Productions. ^ "We'll Talk About It Later - Nucleus | Releases".Archived from the original on 19 February 2011. ^ a b Feather, Leonard Gitler, Ira (2007).^ Carr, Ian Fairweather, Digby Brian, Priestley (2004).The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Live At The BBC 13-CD box-set (Repertoire, 2021).Bracknell Sunshine with Ian Carr (Gonzo, 2016).Three of a Kind with Ian Carr (Gonzo, 2015).Live 1970 with Leon Thomas (Gearbox, 2014).Jazz London 29/30 with Brian Lemon (BBC, 1983).Labyrinth with Ian Carr (Vertigo, 1973).Belladonna (Vertigo 1972, CD CD Linam Records).Solar Plexus with Ian Carr (Vertigo, 1971).We'll Talk About It Later (Vertigo, 1970).Geoff Castle – piano, electric piano, synthesizer.Tony Roberts – clarinet, bass clarinet, tenor saxophone.Tony Coe – clarinet, bass clarinet, tenor saxophone.Karl Jenkins – baritone saxophone, oboe, piano, electric piano.Tim Whitehead – tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute. ![]() Phil Todd – tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute.Brian Smith – tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute.Bob Bertles – tenor saxophone, soprano saxophone, flute.On 4 August 2009, Nucleus Revisited appeared at Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club in London with Michael Garrick's Quartet as part of their two-week-long Brit Jazz Fest. Although Ian Carr did not play due to ill health, he was present at the concert and received a standing ovation. Nucleus Revisited included Geoff Castle, Mark Wood, and Tim Whitehead and on trumpet, as at the 2005 Cargo concert, Chris Batchelor. Newcleus discography blogspot series#This was followed on 30 March 2007 by a Nucleus Revisited concert at London's Pizza Express Jazz Club as part of a series of concerts to mark the tenth anniversary of Jazzwise magazine. In August 2005, a reincarnation of Nucleus with old and new members performed at Cargo in London. Their debut album, Elastic Rock, and the next two collections, We'll Talk About It Later (1970) and Solar Plexus (1971), were all released on Vertigo Records, and music journalist Colin Larkin noted were "vital in any comprehensive rock or jazz collection". The band was established by Ian Carr, who had been in the Rendell–Carr Quintet during the middle and late 1960s. In 1970, the band won first prize at the Montreux Jazz Festival, released the album Elastic Rock, and performed both at the Newport Jazz Festival and the Village Gate jazz club. Nucleus were a British jazz-fusion band, which continued in different forms from 1969 to 1989. ![]()
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