A mixed bag of good soulful music..its quite summery..Probably due to the BBQ i went to at the weekend... Summer finally here and im looking to purchace a hammock.
Blogs a bit short today...Actually so is this cd... ill let the music do the talking.
There I was. Back bent. Dust on my fingertips. Eyes narrowed like a detective in a 70s cop show. Somewhere between the warped Heatwave 7-inch and a bootleg “Best of Shabba” tape, I felt it. That tingle. That crackly whisper from the wax gods. Crate Diggin’ ain't therapy. It's resurrection. This mix isn’t polite. It doesn’t ask permission. It walks in with dusty boots and soul on its breath. From the first slap of Mr. Foxy’s “Cashville Chronicles”, you know exactly what time it is — grown-folk grooves, dusty gems, no filler, no filter. We’re talking Tom Browne’s brass strut, Little Beaver’s backroom two-step, Latimore’s gravel-growl bedroom sermons, and Thee Sacred Souls floating in like new prophets with old souls. You know those record shops where the real heat is never out front? Where the gold’s behind the beaded curtain, next to a rusty fan and an old fella named Marvin who hasn’t moved since 1996? That’s where this mix lives. Not on the racks — in the back. In ...
🎧 TDK 1.20: The Original Therapist Was a Cassette Tape By Ms Jo 90 | Rehab’s Couch Before algorithms tried to guess our moods, before playlists came pre-packed and soullessly shuffled, there was the TDK 1.20 — 120 minutes of blank magnetic possibility. Two sides. Sixty minutes each. One journey. If you know, you know. This wasn’t just a cassette. It was a confessional booth, a time machine, a sonic love letter — sometimes to someone else, often to yourself. You’d hit “record,” pause, and pray no one coughed during the intro. Each mix took hours. Days. Weeks. You’d wait for that perfect song to come on the radio, index finger ready on the red button. And when it did? Magic. That hiss, that warmth, that raw intimacy… The TDK 1.20 didn’t just play music — it held it. And don’t get it twisted: the 1.20 was a rebel. While the cool kids swore by the 90-minute tape for its thicker, safer ribbon, the 120 was for the emotional daredevils. The longform storytellers. The DJs with som...
After the women carried on regardless, the brothers answer. Not loud, not flashy — but in that quiet register of truth only grown men know how to tune into. This mix isn’t about stoicism. It’s about softness. It’s about Carl Thomas with his heart in his throat, Will Downing in a silk confession, Joe whispering what he should’ve said before, and Anthony Hamilton just being Anthony Hamilton — gospel in his chest, gravel in his voice, love in his bones. These are men who’ve lived and lost, who’ve held back tears behind dark shades, who’ve prayed with soul samples and made peace with the echoes. This is not the answer to her resilience — it’s the reflection in it. The other side of the silence. The kind of mix that reminds you: real men do feel. And when they do? They say it with a groove. So here it is: Then the Men Say… Pull up a chair. Let the brothers speak. Link here
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