Free Shipping in BC on all orders of $150 or more. Free Shipping for rest of Canada and USA on all orders of $200 or more.

Free Shipping in BC on all orders of $150 or more. Free Shipping for rest of Canada and USA on all orders of $200 or more.

Goin’ Away (Analogue Productions/33rpm)

Format: LP

$59.99

Availability: In stock

Part of the ultimate audiophile Prestige stereo reissues from Analogue Productions — 25 of the most collectible, rarest, most audiophile-sounding Rudy Van Gelder recordings ever made. All cut at 33 1/3 and also released on Hybrid SACD

All mastered from the original analog master tapes by mastering maestro Kevin Gray. 180-gram LPs pressed at Acoustic Sounds’ state-of-the-art pressing plant, Quality Record Pressings, plated by Gary Salstrom

Tip-on jackets on thick cardboard stock

First 250 LP copies of each title will be numbered editions and will only be available to series subscribers

“At times the guitar seems a bit low in the mix, but on this remastered Analogue Productions LP, cut from the original master tapes by Kevin Gray, it sounds warm and natural while the boisterous vocals have have a commanding presence; the recording also does a fine job of capturing Leonard Gaskin’s deep bass tones and the timbre of Herbie Lovelle’s brushes.” — Music = 4.5/5; Sonics = 4/5 – Jeff Wilson, The Absolute Sound, September 2016. Read more here.

Sam “Lightnin’” Hopkins, a true poet who invented most of his lyrics on the spot and never seemed to run out of new ideas, was a blues giant of post-war blues whose style was rooted in pre-war Texas traditions. While he cranked up his amp to fierce proportions when performing for his friends at Houston juke joints, producers who recorded him for the so-called folk-blues market usually insisted that he use an acoustic guitar for more “authentic” results. Either way, Lightnin’ seldom made a bad record, and this June 4, 1963, session on which he played acoustic was among his finest, thanks much to the sensitive support of bassist Leonard Gaskin and drummer Herbie Lovelle, who did a remarkable job of following his irregular bar patterns and abrupt song endings.

Related Products

Shopping Cart
Scroll to Top

Login

Subscribe to our Newsletter

Subscribe to our Newsletter