Jazz / Jazz-Funk, Soul Jazz
  Baby Face Willette	Organ Ben Dixon	Drums Big John Patton	Organ Blue Mitchell	Trumpet Bobby Hutcherson	Performer Charlie Freeman	Guitar Clarence Johnston	Drums Cynthia Cochrane	Producer Dean Rudland	Compilation, Liner Notes, Compilation Producer Donald Bailey	Drums Earl Van Dyke	Organ Eugene Wright	Guitar Fred Jackson, Jr.	Tenor (Vocal) Freddie Roach	Organ Graham Marsh	Cover Design, Illustrations Grant Green	Guitar Harold Vick	Tenor (Vocal) Idris Muhammad	Drums Jack McDuff	Performer Jackie Mills	Drums Jay Arnold	Tenor (Vocal) Jimmy Lewis	Bass Jimmy McGriff	Organ Jimmy Smith	Organ Lou Donaldson	Performer Morris Dow	Guitar P. Linard	Artwork Reuben Wilson	Performer Richard "Groove" Holmes	Performer Ronnie Foster	Performer Sammy Creason	Drums Wilbert G.T. Hogan	Drums
  This is a very attractively priced sampler by Blue Note, issued in the early '90s on CD highlighting their deep and funky soul-jazz titles for the beat heads and emergent hip-hop nation that was sampling in earnest at the time. (Little did the label know that collectors and DJs wanted wax, not shiny little plastic.) In any case, this attractively priced sampler of BN acts from the '60s and '70s is all killer, no filler; it's heavy on funk and soul. Sure it's got the big B sharp players from the era, like Groove Holmes ("Down Home Funk"), Jack McDuff (the amazing "Hunk O Funk"), Big John Patton (with a killer cover of the Meters' "Cissy Strut"), Reuben Wilson ("Bambu") and Ronnie Foster ("Don't Know My Love"), but there's way more. Lou Donaldson and Grant Green make up the royalty for this period (the producers still hadn't realized just how happening Donald Byrd was to the emerging hip-hop generation so he's not here) and they are well represented by a few cuts each -- Donaldson's read on James Brown's "Say It Loud (I'm Black and I'm Proud)," is a monster; and Green's take on "Cantaloupe Woman" is simply bad ass. But there is some added class to this mix with Candido's smoking drum funk in "Tic Tac Toe," and Blue Mitchell's set-opening "Who Dun It." But the big surprise comes at the very end when Bobby Hutcherson clocks it all out with his uber funky soulful read of Sly Stone's "Family Affair," setting the vibe just right as a cap. A couple of these Blue Note soul-jazz comps would fuel any bash, and would provide an awesome Friday night jump to Sunday afternoon cruise control and leave the listener without a care in the world. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide |