LONNIE LISTON SMITH: Visions of a New World (Flying Dutchman BDL1-1196 - 1975) A Chance For Peace/Love Beams/Colors of the Rainbow/Devika Sunset/Visions of a New World (Phase I)/Visions of a New World (Phase II)/Summer Nights Just about the pick of Lonnie's excellent Flying Dutchman albums - Astral Traveling, Cosmic Funk, Expansions, Visions of a New World, Reflections On A Golden Dream, and Renaissance are all absolutely essential. Mainly known for his 'ethereal' electric piano style - creating waves of sound using echoplexi and other effects Lonnie Liston Smith has been hugely influential on modern drum 'n' bass artists such as LTJ Bukem and Photek. He is best known for his jazz-funk classic Expansions, but Visions of a New World is an all-round beautiful album. Lonnie's brother Donald is featured on vocals throughout - he has a distinctive voice with an unusually wide range. The heavy use of percussion is also a distinctive feature - the bongos and congas giving an earthy feel that contrasts with the spiritual nature and intent of the music as a whole. Lonnie lated switched labels to Columbia in the late 70's and like a lot of jazz artists entered the realms of disco - and with some success. Unlike other artists he still managed to retain enough of his original sound to make great albums despite the pressures of change. Loveland and Exotic Mysteries (which featured the hit Space Princess) are the best examples of these later albums. Even later in the 80's he moved to Dr Jazz and went back towards his earlier sound on the albums Dreams of Tomorrow and Silhouettes.



SOUL SEARCHERS: Salt Of the Earth (Sussex SRA 8030 - 1974) I Rolled It You Hold It/Blow Your Whistle/Close To You/Funk To The Folks Ain't It Heavy/Windsong/Ashley's Roachclip/We Share/If It Ain't Funky There were so many good funk albums in the mid-seventies but whilst there are many superb individual tracks solid entire albums are perhaps harder to come by. Yet The Soul Searchers made two great albums for Sussex in '73/'74; We The People and Salt Of the Earth. With Chuck Brown on guitar and vocals every track bounces along with heavyweight, tight funk. Standouts are the rare groove party classics Blow Your Whistle and Funk To the Folks. It seems that the Sussex label are a main source of classic breakbeats (Dennis Coffee, etc) and one of the most famous breaks of all is on Ashley's Roachclip. Checkout the earlier We the People for the title track and a great version of Lyn Collins' Think.


STARSHIP ORCHESTRA: Celestial Sky (Columbia NJC36456 - 1980) You're A Star/New York, New York/The Waiting Game/All Those Things The Genie/Celestial Sky/Yesterday/Serious Business/Give Me Some Skin Along with Aquarian Dream, this was an off-shoot production project of drummer Norman Connors. Blending his increasing use of disco with his jazz-funk roots and a touch of latin he came up with this solid album. Featuring keyboardists Bobby Lyle and Jerry Peters as well as Wah Wah Watson, Paul Jackson and some of the Earth, Wind and Fire horns this album continues where Connors' solo albums for Buddah left off. You're A Star was a big disco hit for both the Starship Orchestra and Aquarian Dream and The Genie became a Bobby Lyle standard. The standout track however is the brasilian tinged mid-tempo track All Those Things.


SUN RA: Lanquidity (Philly Jazz PJ666 - 1978) Lanquidity/Where Pathways Meet/That's How I Feel Twin Stars of Thence/There Are Other Worlds (They Have Not Told You Of) Well if anybody needed proof of Sun Ra's genius this album is it! Totally ahead of its time - some of the tracks wouldn't seem out of place with todays more experimental Hip Hop instrumentals. Thankfully this is one of the better recorded of Sun Ra's albums - his sessions were often poorly recorded simply because he liked it that way. He also often preferred to release the takes that he thought to be the most spontaneous rather than the ones without mistakes! He sticks to this approach with this album - the band going completely out of time at least twice, but it was all part of Sun Ra's masterplan and if he preferred his music to sound like that who are we to argue? Curiously this session was recorded at the legendary Blank Tapes studios in NYC - home of many Bob Blank produced disco classics and features Sun Ra on a host of keyboards listed as ARP, RA MOOG MINIMOOG, CRUMAR ELECTRONIC KEYBOARD as well as Fender Rhodes, Hammond B3 and Yamaha organs. Being on a small, obscure label this album is even rarer than a lot of the Saturn Sun Ra albums - it has been known to sell for £200-£300.


SYREETA: Syreeta (Mowest MW113L -1972) I Love Every Liitle Thing About You/Black Maybe/Keep Him Like He Is/Happiness She's Leaving Home/What Love Has Joined Together/How Many Days/Baby Don't You Let Me Lose This/To Know You Is To Love You Without doubt one of the best female vocalist albums ever made, yet still it remains largely overlooked as a Stevie Wonder side-project with his then wife Syreeta. Syreeta's incredibly delicate voice fits perfectly with Stevie's experimental use of synthesisers. Margouleff and Cecil are credited as synth programmers and TONTO is clearly at work in the very opening bars of the album with a wonderful electronic rhythmic effect. The Moog basslines growl throughout - the first two tracks in particular are awash with Stevie's synth playing - and the use of real strings on Keep Him Like He Is and What Love Has Joined Together give this album a powerful uplifting feel despite its daring experimentation. It seems Stevie felt he could push his ideas even further on this album - released on an obscure Motown off-shoot - than his own high-profile Motown projects.


CAL TJADER: Breeze From the East (Verve V8575 - 1963) Sake and Greens/Cha/Leyte/Shoji/China Nights/Fuji Black Orchid/Theme from 'Burke's Law'/Stardust/Poinciana/East of the Sun (And West of the Moon) After a series of storming latin-jazz albums for Fantasy vibist Cal Tjader made a series of unusual 'world-jazz music' albums with producer Creed Taylor for Verve in the early-60's. The best of these were the oriental-based albums Several Shades of Jade and Breeze From the East. The albums were lavishly presented - Breeze From the East features a famous print by Japanese artist Hokusai. Straddling both lounge-music and jazz the albums are immaculately recorded and Tjader always manages to create wonderful moods despite the laid-back nature of much of the compositions. Whilst Lalo Schifrin scored the earlier Several Shades of Jades, arranger Stan Applebaum added guitars, flute, celeste and Dick Hyman on organ for this session. The combination of Tjaders combo and the new instruments works wonderfully - highlights being Leyte and Fuji which retain elements of Tjaders' latin roots despite the eastern setting.

TONTO'S EXPANDING HEAD BAND: ZERO TIME (1971 ATLANTIC) Cybernaut / Jetsex / Timewhys Aurora / Riversong / Tama A collaboration between British-born jazz bassist Malcolm Cecil and American producer Robert Margouleff - Zero Time was recorded just after the boom and bust of the 'Moog album' phenomenon. Featuring six compositions recorded exclusively on a large, expanded Moog IIIc Modular system, Zero Time is a million miles away from the albums of cheesy Moog covers of the late-sixties. The opening track is intergalactic baroque with space-age lead lines and phasing electronic percussion. The bass is astonishing - maybe the warmest, deepest, and heaviest committed to tape. Jetsex is a brooding effects-scape with simulated engine sweeps and more spooky percussion. Timewhys is a more upbeat sequenced affair with an almost pop feel. Side Two is more introspective (the sides are labeled 'Outside' and 'Inside' respectively in the sleevenotes) and begins with a more conventional electronic soundtrack type track titled 'Aurora'. The Moogs ability to mimic string instruments is amply demonstrated. Riversong is a slow-moving meditative composition with an eerie theremin type backing and soft bell-like echoes supporting an eastern sounding vocal completely processed by the Moog into a 'voice-bag' type sound. Star Trek meets Raga. The album ends with the beautiful 'Tama' - melancholic, with superbly programmed woodwind leads and multi-layered tri-wave harmonies that evoke the sound of Stevie Wonder's 4 albums engineered by Margouleff and Cecil in the years following this recording.


RUFUS & CHAKA KHAN: ASK RUFUS (1977 ABC) At Midnight (My Love Will Lift You Up)/Close the Door/Slow Screw Against the Wall/Ab Fry/Earth Song/Everlasting Love Hollywood/Magic In Your Eyes/Better Days/Egyptian Song After starting out as a blues-rock affair with an all-white rhythm section fronted by the powerful vocals of Chaka Khan, Rufus changed the line-up after their first two albums (which only really contained one outstanding track in 'Tell Me Something Good' - penned by Stevie Wonder). Rufusized - the third album, retained only keyboardist Kevin Murphy, drummer Andre Fischer and Khan whilst adding Tony Maiden and Bobby Watson for a marked improvement with the truly great tracks 'Pack'd My Bags' and the Bobby Womack penned 'Stop On By'. The same line-up - enlisting some assistance from Gavin Christopher - again made some classics on the eponymous fourth album including 'Fool's Paradise' and the evergreen 'Sweet Thing'. By then, Chaka Khan had grown into one of black music's most powerful female vocalists and Rufus had grown into one of the most respected mixed-race outfits since Sly & the Family Stone. Everything was geared up for one of soul music's greatest albums once writer/keyboardist David 'Hawk' Wolinski came onboard in 1977.

Ask Rufus starts with the funky stomper At Midnight featuring Chaka at her wailing best but the album quickly mellows out with the haunting Close the Door. Its an understated gem with Chaka keeping the tension with a low, sensual vocal until finally letting rip at the finale. The whole track features fine strings arranged by Clare Fischer. A classical interlude written by newcomer Wolinski takes us off into new territory with cello, piano and synthesizers building into a rising string ensemble for a beautiful ending. Its back into the funk for another short interlude before the album hits the heights yet again with the ode to mother nature Earth Song. By now its evident that this album is more sophisticated and jazz influenced than previous Rufus efforts and this continues with Side One's closer 'Everlasting Love' on which Chaka displays an incredibly low range. As if it couldn't get any better Side Two starts with another Wolinski- penned beauty 'Hollywood'. Magic In Your Eyes is maybe the album's highlight - a soft latin backing of shakers, congas and percussion with haunting Rhodes and strings with Chaka's spiritual lyrics leaving us all setup for the final two tracks where Chaka is finally let loose vocally. As a combination of sophisticated song-writing with jazz, classical, soul and funk influences this album is up there with the very best.

RUFUS & CHAKA KHAN: STREET PLAYER (1978 ABC) Street Player / Stay / Turn / Best of Your Heart / Finale Blue Love / Stranger To Love / Take Time / Destiny / Change Your Ways Rufus & Chaka's follow-up album a year later is less moody, less introspective in general but is still a triumph for the same team of musicians with the addition of Seawind Horns. The opening title track was of course a huge hit for Chicago and indeed this original is not quite as good. But we're quickly back to Ask Rufus standards with the funky 'Stay'. Again Chaka ranges from growling lows to piercing highs and the arrangement is another genre-defying mixture of jazz, soul, funk and rock. After a rather standard funk workout Rufus hit the heights once more with the poignant 'Best of Your Heart' - all mellow rhodes, phased hi-hats and subtly complex orchestration. This segues into a frantic latin jazz ending featuring a great lead synth solo. Side Two starts with two superb tracks - the soulful Blue Love and Stranger To Love - again straddling the pop, soul and funk genres as only Rufus can. After the funk-fusion filler 'Take Time' comes the bossa flavored gem 'Destiny' before the album ends in funky territory with Change Your Ways. This was arguably Rufus' last great album - Chaka's solo career seemed to mark the end of the great partnership. Despite this, Quincy Jones managed to produce a solid album Masterjam in 1979 - with the disco classic 'Do You Love What You Feel' and great tracks like 'Heaven Bound' all with that unmistakable Quincy sound.
PATRICE RUSHEN: Prelusion (Prestige P-10089 - 1974) Shortie's Portion/ 7/73 Haw-Right Now/Traverse/Puttered Bopcorn Barely out of her teens - keyboardist Patrice Rushen started a trio of great albums for Prestige: Prelusion, Before the Dawn and Shout It Out in 1974 with guest Joe Henderson on tenor sax. Whilst the majority of side two veers into hard Headhunters style jazz/funk its the whole of side one that captures the attention. Both tracks are written by Rushen who plays acoustic and electric pianos as well as clavinet and ARP synthesisers. Both arrangements are lengthy, almost movie soundtrack in feel with excellent horn arrangements. Rushen would later add singing to her increasingly commercial style in the late 70's/early 80's culminating in the wonderful hits Forget-Me-Nots and Remind Me. Her later albums for Elektra Patrice, Posh and Pizzazz all feature excellent boogie/soul tracks such as Number One, Music of the Earth and Wishful Thinking - recently covered by 4 Hero on Talkin' Loud.



EDDIE RUSS: SEE THE LIGHT (1976 MONUMENT)
See the Light / Zauis / Stop It Now /Salem Avenue / Tomorrow Is Another Day / Poko Nose A six track album from Detroit organ player Eddie Russ recorded at United Sounds studios - home to George Clinton's experiments at the time and it seems Bernie Worrell left behind some of his keyboards because it's a heavily electronic album with plenty of squelching ARP basslines and those trademark Solina strings are all over every track. Every track is a winner - even the blazenly disco fillers such a Stop It Now and the Herbie-ish Poko Nose which were even issued on a very rare and now sought-after Monument 12 inch. The laid back Salem Avenue features wonderful sax work from Detroit's Larry Nozero and that other Detroit stalwart Marcus Belgrave is also present on trumpet. The album is best known for its two jazz dance-floor classics See the Light and Zauis. See the Light is a tight and funky cover of the Earth, Wind & Fire tune which starts out in fast, epic style before easing down a gear and rolling out into a superb slice of fusion. Zauis is still a floor-filler today - its latin-style rhythm under-pinning multiple layers of synth work, horns and two astonishing rhodes and synth solo's that build and build to a climax before alternating guitar and sax solos take us home. The uplifting Tomorrow Is Another Day completes a fusion classic.

SANTANA: Welcome (Columbia PC32445 - 1973) Going Home/Love, Devotion and Surrender/Samba de Sausalito/When I Look Into Your Eyes/Yours Is the Light Mother Africa/Light of Life/Flame-Sky/Welcome San Francisco's finest guitar player came to fame after an ecstatic set at Woodstock - the mixture of chaos, rain, electric guitar and furious latin percussion was captured on film and Santana were shot into the limelight. After a few personel changes came a great creative period which saw Santana including the finest latin and fusion musicians on the albums Caravanerai, Welcome, and Borboletta. Although not as commercially successful as albums such as Abraxas, these albums took Santana's soloing skills into the realms of Coltrane influenced soundscapes - the opening to Caravanserai is pure Pharoah Sanders/Lonnie Liston Smith territory for example. Welcome features the exotic vocals of Flora Purim on Yours Is the LIght and the unique yodelling of Leon Thomas on Light of Life. The album opens with a heavy mellotron/organ hymn and the heaviosity remains throughout the album with huge string sections, masses of percussion and Santana's wailing guitar. The later albums worth checking include the triple live affair Lotus and Oneness - specifically for Free As the Morning Sun.
GIL SCOTT-HERON: PIECES OF A MAN (1971 FLYING DUTCHMAN)
The Revolution Will Not Be Televised / Save the Children / Lady Day & John Coltrane / Home Is Where the Hatred Is / When You Are Who You Are / I Think I'll Call It Morning Pieces of a Man / A Sign of the Ages / Or Down You Fall / The Needle's Eye / The Prisoner An album full of mini-masterpieces. Starting with the fire and energy of The Revolution Will Not Be Televised - a biting political satire with points relevant even today. Then Gil surprises those who only knew his previous album of poetry for Flying Dutchman by showing he possesses one of black music's most distinctive singing voices. Most of the album focuses on social issues facing black Americans at the time - drugs, poverty, unemployment, etc. However, these heavier tracks are tempered with uplifting gems like Lady Day and John Coltrane, When You Are Who You Are, and I Think I'll Call It Morning. Gil is backed by Bernard Purdie's band and it's a small, tight-knit 'club-date' production style conducted by Johnny Pate. His future long-term band partner Brian Jackson is superb on electric piano as is guest flautist Hubert Laws. Ron Carter and guitarist Burt Jones make up the band - the combination of Purdie and Carter on the opening track is particularly awesome.

Scott-Heron somehow proved to be a master of both angry socio-political comment and the sunny feel good song - perfectly exemplified by The Needle's Eye and I Think I'll Call It Morning respectively. The whole album is strong from start to finish ending with the epic blues of The risoner. Scott-Heron recorded one further album for Flying Dutchman (Free Will, 1972) - which included the classic 'Did You Hear What They Said'? before switching to Strata East and ultimately Arista.

GIL SCOTT-HERON & BRIAN JACKSON: WINTER IN AMERICA (1974 STRATA EAST) Peace Go With You Brother / Rivers of My Fathers / A Very Precious Time / Back Home / The Bottle / Song for Bobby Smith / Your Daddy Loves You / H2 Ogate Blues / Peace Go With You Brother His only album for Strata East and with pianist and co-composer Brian Jackson now sharing the leader credit. Winter In America sees Gil Scott-Heron n a more intimate session with a small quartet of musicians. This gives Jackson more room to play as he switches from acoustic to electric piano throughout the albums length. The songs are more of the mixture of the impassioned and the laid back. The bluesy 'Rivers of My Father' is a perfect example of this. More gentle and personal are the beautiful and delicate trio of tracks A Very Precious Time, Song For Bobby Smith and Your Daddy Loves You. Jackson's soft Fender Rhodes playing is perfect for these floating ballads. The album is predominantly known for the timeless dance classic The Bottle. A four to the floor stomper about alcoholism - with a rousing, dancing flute line throughout. The album finishes with another biting satire on Nixon-era political life - H2 Ogate Blues. Gil Scott-Heron & Brian Jackson went on to sign for Arista after this album and enlarged the band and continued the political criticism producing many great tracks such as Offering, Winter In America (First Minute of a New Day, 1975), A Toast to the People, A Lovely Day (From South Africa to South Carolina) after which Malcom Cecil came on board with TONTO for tracks such as Racetrack In France, We Almost Lost Detroit, 95 South (Bridges, 1977), and Better Days Ahead (Secrets, 1978).

MARLENA SHAW: THE SPICE OF LIFE (1969 CADET) Woman of the Ghetto / Call It Stormy Monday / Where Can I Go? / I'm Satisfied / I Wish I Knew Liberation Conversation / California Soul / Go Away, Little Boy / Looking Thru the Eyes of Love / Anyone Can Move A Mountain A huge sounding album - and a triumph for the Stepney/Evans production partnership. The album begins with the bumping funk of Woman of the Ghetto. An uplifting ghetto spiritual recorded with all the hallmarks of the Cadet gospel sound - tambourine, handclaps, call and response choir and uniquely on this track an uncredited (Maurice White?) kalimba. Apart from a few standards the album is Charles Stepney at his best. Marlena Shaw is less of a 'cabaret' act on this outing compared to later efforts and the whole of Side Two is pure Chicago soul. Which is ironic as the most well- known tune on the album is the classic 'California Soul' - Shaw delivering the definitive version of Ashford & Simpson's composition. The heavily reverbed drums make for a huge sound together with a gospel piano, handclaps, choir and those classic Evans arranged strings. Other standouts include the jazz-scat classic Liberation Conversation, the Shaw trademark ballad 'Go Away, Little Boy' and the wonderfully over-the-top arrangement of Looking Thru the Eyes of Love with an unmistakable Minnie Riperton in the backing. Marlena switched to Blue Note and later Columbia in the seventies with highlights being her version of Save the Children (Marlena, 1972), You and Me (Just A Matter of Time, 1976), and Look At Me, Look At You (Sweet Beginnings, 1977).

ARCHIE SHEPP: Attica Blues (Impulse! AS 9222 - 1972) Attica Blues/Steam Pt's 1&2/Invocation to Mr. Parker Blues For Brother George Jackson/Ballad For A Child/Good Bye Sweet Pops/Quiet Dawn An album that at times simply roars out of the speakers with its fire and anger, and yet contains in Steam and Ballad For A Child utter calm and beauty. Previously known for his no-compromise free-jazz playing Archie Shepp enlisted a huge line-up for this political statement of an album (and a follow-up titled For Losers) - full of references to the civil rights struggles still going on at the time of release in 1972. Despite the heavy free-jazz presence, tracks such as Blues For Brother George and the title track have all the funk and drive of early Funkadelic and Sly & the Family Stone - the strings and choir-vocals of the title track are so intense! The vocals of Henry Hull (Ballad For A Child) and Joe Lee Wilson (Steam) are another highlight of a compelling album. This album was also a jolt to those critics who doubted the playing ability of the free-jazz exponents - Shepp's playing showing the influences of the early R&B bands from whence a lot of them came.

WAYNE SHORTER: Juju (Blue Note 4182 - 1964) Juju/Deluge/House of Jade Mahjong/Yes Or No/Twelve More Bars To Go Of the many great Blue Note leaders Wayne Shorter perhaps made the three most consistently stunning albums with Juju, Speak No Evil and Adam's Apple. Juju is marginally the best of this stunning trio - all recorded in the early-mid sixties. All six compositions are Shorter originals and its interesting to note that it is almost the same line up as some of Coltrane's classic Impulse! sessions - McCoy Tyner, Elvin Jones, Reggie Workman and just substitute Shorter for Coltrane. Shorter was also previously a member of Art Blakey's classic Jazz Messenger's line-up but most importantly had just started working with Miles when these albums were made, and it seems that experience was invaluable. Shorter later returned the favour by writing many similarly haunting compositions for Miles' bands. Shorter's original approach to composition can be heard in the track Mahjong which he composed in 4-bar sections of alternating melodic line and rhythm - just like two Mahjong players taking their turns. After leaving Miles' band in the late sixties Shorter went on to become a founder member of fusion giants Weather Report. Also essential are the best of his other Blue Note albums Night Dreamer, The Soothsayer , The All-Seeing Eye, Ecetera and Schizophrenia.

HORACE SILVER QUINTET: Song For My Father (Blue Note 4185 - 1964) Song For My Father/The Natives Are Restless Tonight/Calcutta Cutie Que Pasa/The Kicker/Lonely Woman As leader of the early Jazz Messengers and of an ever-changing Quintet in the '60s Horace Silver has been a huge influence on bop/post-bop piano style. His sound is rooted in the blues and when he combined his 'down-home' style with the emerging soul-jazz scene of the early 60s he came up with a series of yet more classic Blue Note sessions. Song For My Father - along with the albums Tokyo Blues and Cape-Verdean Blues - has a swinging commerciality that still appeals today - the classic title track became a standard and Joe Henderson's composition The Kicker and The Natives Are RestlessTonight joined classic earlier Silver compositions like Filthy McNasty, Sister Sadie, Tokyo Blues and Senor Blues. SILVER APPLES: SILVER APPLES (196? KAPP) Oscillations / Seagreen Serenades / Lovefingers / Program / Velvet Cave Whirly Bird / Dust / Dancing Gods / Misty Mountains Simeon and Dan Taylor, aka Silver Apples recorded two astonishing albums for Kapp in the mid-sixties featuring an elaborate array of stand-alone oscillators, drums and poetry. The oscillators it seems (9 in total) were pre-tuned and then played with various manual controls (86 according to the albums accompanying poster). The sound is heavy and raw. Oscillators seemingly without filters provide a thick layer of arpeggiated bass figures for Taylor to lay heavy drum breaks over the top. Lead oscillators come screeching and bleeping throughout tracks like Lovefingers. Most of the tracks have a lot of energy - thanks to the brashly recorded drums - and only Dancing Gods seems ponderous. The typically mid-sixties hippy lyrics date the album somewhat and the vocals can get rather monotonous over this and the follow-up album Contact (which features the superb 'You and I'), but these albums remain landmarks of electronic recording - pre-dating Can and Kraftwerk by many years.

SLAVE: Showtime (Cotillion SD 5227 - 1981) Snap Shot/Party Lites/Spice of Life/Smokin' Wait For Me/Steal Your Heart/For the Love of U/Funken Town Out of the many excellent large funk outfits to come out of the mid-west in the seventies rise Slave. Already with the hit Just A Touch of Love behind them they weighed in with this mighty selection in 1981 - featuring four classic dance hits Party Lites, Smokin', Wait For Me and Steal Your Heart. By now the Slave formula was perfected - heavyweight funk backed by a tight horn section with trademark slide bass licks, rhythm guitars and Steve Arrington's unique and distinctive vocal style. They added a huge string section for this album to give it an even bigger sound and it signalled the peak of their talents. Also check out the earlier albums Just A Touch of Love and Stone Jam.

SLY AND THE FAMILY STONE: There's A Riot Goin' On (Epic 30986) Luv n' Haight/Just Like A Baby/Poet/Family Affair/Africa Talks To You/There's A Riot Goin' On Brave and Strong/(You Caught Me) Smilin'/Time/Spaced Cowboy/Runnin' Away/Thank You For Talkin To Me Africa One of those historic albums that changes the face of music. Sly Stone's genius is encapsulated in this troubled album which reflected American society at the end of the sixties. Sly was a black artist who attracted a radical mixed audience - that was groundbreaking in itself. His music influenced most of the rock bands of the time as well as Miles Davis and other jazz heavyweights. The studio techniques used give the album a curiously experimental feel - despite the familiarity of songs like Family Affair. The processed vocals on tracks like Just Like A Baby and use of early drum machines have an almost lo-fi appeal. Despite his many personal problems Sly continued to make some great individual tracks such as Crossword Puzzle and Loose Booty - tracks that featured on big hip-hop hits - making Sly one of the most influential artists of all time.

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Comment by Edie Antoinette on January 6, 2009 at 8:11am
I'll eventually have all of the artists included in the playlist~and thanks for your patience.

~e

Remembering Q

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Quincy Jones is thoroughly entwined in the musical background of my young adulthood. A genius of unique quality. I have been posting blogs and music throughout the years and decided to embark on the arduous but satisfying task of gathering some of it to remember the excellent legacy that he left.
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The history of the Butlers/Raw Soul is dense, but for all of us music nerds, that's normal. It is not totally clear what year the Butlers actually formed but they released their first single in 1963 on Liberty Records. That single was "She Tried To Kiss Me" and another single followed on Guyden entitled "Lovable Girl." After the Guyden single the Butlers took a break not recording another record until the single "Laugh, Laugh, Laugh" was released on the Phila label in 1966. The group also backed Charles Earland and Jean Wells on one Phila single ("I Know She Loves Me"). 


As you might be noticing, the Butlers were doing a fair amount of recording but not achieving much success. The group's recordings sold regionally but never had the promotion to make an impact on the national scene. After the single with Phila, the Butlers moved to the Fairmount label (part of the Cameo-Parkway family) and released a handful of singles, some being reissued singles of the past. The Butlers were with Fairmount for 1966-67 and then moved to Sassy Records. Sassy released the group's greatest single (in my opinion) "Love (Your Pain Goes Deep)" b/w "If That's What You Wanted." A copy of that 45 sold for just under $500 last summer on eBay. Even though that isn't that much in the world of record collecting--it's still a hefty sum. The Butlers released another single on Sassy ("She's Gone" b/w "Love Is Good") that appears to be even 
harder to come by then the "Love (Your Pain Goes Deep)" single.

 

The true history become a bit blurred here as the AMG biography states that the Butlers last record was released on C.R.S. in 1974 (". However, between 1971 and that single, Frankie Beverly formed a group called Raw Soul and released a number of singles. Some of the songs recorded by Beverly during this period are "While I'm Alone," "Open Up Your Heart," (both on the Gregor label) and "Color Blind." "Color Blind" was released by the Eldorado label and rerecorded by Maze. Beverly's big break came when Marvin Gaye asked Raw Soul to back him on a tour. Gaye helped Beverly/Raw Soul get a contract at Capitol. Beverly decided to take the group in a different direction, a name change occurred, and Maze was created. 

The above isn't the most complete history of Beverly but hopefully someone will know a way to get in touch with the man or his management because a comprehensive pre-Maze history needs to be done on Frankie Beverly (his real name is Howard, by the way). Below you'll find every Frankie Beverly (pre-Maze) song available to me right now ("Color Blind" will be up soon). 

If you have a song that is not included below, shoot it over to funkinsoulman (at) yahoo.com and it will go up in the next Frankie Beverly post (later this week--highlighting Maze). Also, if you have any more information please share your knowledge. The Butlers material has been comp-ed sporadically (usually imports) but the entire Maze catalog has been reissued and is available. 

Enjoy.  "She Kissed Me" (Fairmount, 1966 or 1967) 
 
 "I Want To Feel I'm Wanted" (not sure which label or year) "Laugh, Laugh, Laugh" (Phila, 1966) "Because Of My Heart" (Fairmount, 1966 or 1967)
   
 "Love (Your Pain Goes Deep)" (Sassy, 1967)
   
 "If That's What You Wanted" (Sassy, 1967)
 



Frankie Beverly is one of those cats that has lasting power. He started in the music business doing a tour with doo wop group the Silhouettes and then formed his own group called the Blenders. The Blenders never recorded a single, Beverly wouldn't appear on wax until forming the Butlers a few years later. Along with Beverly, the Butlers included Jack "Sonny" Nicholson, Joe Collins, John Fitch, and Talmadge Conway.

Beverly would later enjoy great success fronting Maze and Conway would become a
well-known penning Double Exposure's
"Ten Percent" and the Intruders' "Memories Are Here To Stay." 
 While Maze is a phenomenal group, Beverly's work before that group will always stand out as his best (imo).
The Butlers produced tunes that most Northern Soul fans would kill for and Raw Soul gave the funksters something to pursue. The Butlers recorded their first single in 1960 titled "Loveable Girl". Left to right John Fitch, T Conway, Frankie Beverly, Sonny Nicholson and Joe Collins. 

Frankie Beverly12/6/46 - 9/10/24

Power...Through Simplicity ♪♫♪

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