Originally issued by Phillips under the pseudonym Myriam Frances and long sought by vinyl collectors, Australian nun Sister Irene O’Connor’s 1973 album Fire of God’s Love sees official reissue this week via the always reliable Freedom to Spend label. Drenched in reverb and powered by organ and fuzzy drum machine, it sounds like a holy devotional side project by Broadcast—future music imbued with traditional faith.
The Joys of Cookin’: Tracks from Groove Merchant, 1971-1974 (A Mixtape)
Founded in 1971, Sonny Lester’s Groove Merchant label was pretty far removed from what was going on in jazz at the beginning of that decade. Fusion, black power, spiritual jazz and ECM were all happening elsewhere. Maybe that’s what makes it so much fun. Groove Merchant was content to serve up sweaty, funky party jazz, brimming with flute blowouts, wicked guitar and miles of Hammond B3 soul. Thrown in some softcore cover art, and you’ve got something cooking. Lester’s short-lived label had grooves to spare. Call it a case of truth in advertising.













