Slightly Latin
Slightly Latin is an album by the jazz multi-instrumentalist Roland Kirk. It was originally released on the Limelight label in 1965 and features performances by Kirk with Virgil Jones, Martin Banks, Garnett Brown, Horace Parlan, Eddie Mathias, Sonny Brown, Montego Joe, Manuel Ramos, Coleridge Perkinson and an unidentified choir.[2]
Slightly Latin | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1965 | |||
Recorded | November 16 & 17, 1965 | |||
Genre | Jazz | |||
Label | Mercury | |||
Producer | Hal Mooney | |||
Roland Kirk chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Track listing
- All compositions by Roland Kirk except as indicated.
- "Walk On By" (Burt Bacharach, Hal David) - 2:32
- "Raouf" - 3:03
- "It's All in the Game" (Charles Dawes, Carl Sigman) - 5:14
- "Juarez" - 5:22
- "Shaky Money" - 2:36
- "Nothing But the Truth" - 3:33
- "Safari" (Eddie Mathias) - 4:26
- "And I Love Her" (John Lennon, Paul McCartney) - 2:53
- "Ebrauqs" - 8:16
- Recorded in New York City on November 16 & 17, 1965
Personnel
- Roland Kirk: tenor saxophone, manzello, stritch, clarinet, flute, bagpipes, piccolo, baritone saxophone, siren
- Virgil Jones: trumpet
- Martin Banks: flugelhorn
- Garnett Brown: trombone, arranger
- Horace Parlan: piano, celeste, vibraphone
- Eddie Mathias: double bass
- Sonny Brown: drums, nagoya harp
- Montego Joe: conga
- Manuel Ramos: percussion
- Coleridge Perkinson: conductor (tracks 2, 4 & 6)
- Unidentified choir (tracks 2, 4 & 6)
gollark: I added a thing where I can remote into potatOS computers for... definitely debugging purposes... and run code, which makes it much easier to patch sandbox escapes where silly triangles don't release the code.
gollark: The sandboxing stuff makes up probably the majority of the code, and holes in the sandbox get discovered every month or so and quickly patched.
gollark: Maybe two years?
gollark: But mine actually does a lot of complex OS-ey things for sandboxing - basically, to stop people from meddling with its code, uninstalling it, sort of thing, but keep existing programs working, I have to try and confine stuff to a limited amount of functionality.
gollark: ComputerCraft computers are pretty feature-complete with just the built-in software, so most "OS"es are just fancy GUIs.
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