A third vote for that one, and second votes for the Corea Piano Improvisations, Cowell, Liebman, Corea/Burton, and Witch-Tai-To.
Great album, but (just) post 1973 cutoff. I also like Priester's "Polarization", but "Love, Love" is magnificent.
Saw them live in West Palm Beach in 1971, my first full-fledged arena concert. Heavy, man. My favorite by them is the title track to "One Way Or Another". And later on, Mike Pinera joined, on his way to setting the record for most rock bands fronted in a five-year period (Blues Image, Iron Butterfly, Ramatam. Cactus, Thee Image).
And keep in mind Kloss was 16 when he recorded his first Prestige album, and 21 when he recorded his last one. I think Prestige was well aware of the fast company they had the kid keeping, what with one of the albums titled "In The Land of the Giants". I'm also a fan of the "Essence" album on Muse, with Hannibal Peterson and Micky Tucker. The lead cut, "Love Will Take You There" is my all-time favorite Kloss. And that one is also MIA on CD.
Me too, in several different styles. The American Quartet, the European Quartet, the solo stuff, the long-running trio all have their merits, and are all very different from each other.
Beach Boys and Motown have also had releases which were explicitly made for copyright protection. And that was the case for the 36-CD Dylan live 1966 set, which contained some of the most horrible sounding recordings ever (as well as some marvelous ones).
Here's my pick for Pullen's organ work. The great Doug Carn albums are 'Infant Eyes", 'Spirit of the New Land', and 'Revelation', though not necessarily for his organ playing per se (and he plays a lot of piano on them).
Haven't listened to this, but have heard a lot by the group. By the 80's they were (exceedingly talented) seasoned pros doing repertory in a lot of ways, more polish and less fire than the early days.
All the early allman bros. Start with "fillmore east" go next to "beginnings" which repackages their first two lp's third to "eat a peach" then skip 20 years to the Warren Haynes era of the Allman bros especially the live stuff. The Gregg solo albums are not nearly as strong.
I passed. I have the earlier Esoteric issues of the three albums, and that issue of the live one has much bonus material not on this box. Utility of this box depends on if you have the earlier issues and how much you like the group. "Bundles", with Allen Holdsworth, is the gem of the bunch.