Locations

Downtown

  • 203 SW 9th Ave
  • Portland, OR 97214
  • (503) 222-0990

Hawthorne

  • 3574 SE Hawthorne
  • Portland, OR 97205
  • (503) 239-7561

Hours

  • Mon-Fri 10-7
  • Sat 10-8
  • Sun 11-6

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Other Albums by This Artist:

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Wheedle's Groove 45's Box Set
In 2004, Light In The Attic and DJ Supreme La Rock compiled the first ever set of vintage Pacific Northwest soul, funk, and R&B, Wheedle’s... (Click the album for more)
  • $59.95 Vinyl
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The Darjeeling Limited
Music plays a huge part in director Wes Anderson's meticulously crafted world. For this movie set in India, he's come up with a typically wi... (Click the album for more)
  • $16.95 CD
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Good God! A Gospel Funk Hymnal
As the liner notes explain, "gospel funk...as a genre...just barely exists, a product of years spent sifting through bland 45s and LPs, sear... (Click the album for more)
  • Vinyl out of stock
  • $16.95 CD
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Rio Baile Funk: Favela Booty Beats
Courtesy of Berlin-based DJ and journalist Daniel Haaksman, Baile Funk is a reflection of Brazil's melting pot society, combining a mixture ... (Click the album for more)
  • $16.95 CD

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Brazil 70: After Tropicalia New Directions In Brazilian Music In The 1970's
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Subtitled: New Directions in Brazilian Music in the 1970s. "Soul Jazz Records follow up to their incredibly successful Tropicalia: A Revolution in Sound mixes Brazilian funk, rock, samba and soul in equal measures. Brazil 70 follows Brazilian music in the 1970s in the aftermath of Tropicalia and as the country's dictatorship entered its most oppressive phase. Musicians and artists from the Tropicalia period of the late-60s such as Gilberto Gil, Rita Lee (Os Mutantes lead-singer) and Gal Costa entered a new phase mixing rock, funk, samba and soul alongside a wealth of like-minded new artists such as Novos Baianos, Raul Seixas, Nelson Angelo and Joyce and more. With the constant threat of imprisonment, artists nevertheless managed to produce radical music that, like Tropicalia before it, managed to deal with questions of identity, sexuality and society in a revolutionary manner. Brazil 70 chronicles this period in Soul Jazz Records customary style with extensive sleeve-notes, exclusive photography and killer tunes! Vinyl comes on super-loud DJ pressing."

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