JBs - More Mess On My Thing (2019 Black Friday Release)
A fantastic slice of lost work from the legendary JBs –
including the track that first got Bootsy Collins and company the job as James
Brown's backing band! The set leads off with that gem of a groove – the fast
funky "More Mess On My Thing" – a tune that's got the sort of
impeccable sharpness the JBs would bring to the James Brown universe in the early
70s – complete with tight drums, effortless basslines, and horn lines so tight
they could cut glass! "The Wedge" follows – a sweet organ-driven
instrumental with a vibe that's a lot like "Brother Rapp" – but
stretched out as a long instrumental jam! And that approach really takes off on
the super-long "When You Can Feel It Grunt (If You Can)" – a tune
that begins with the band doing their own version of "Let The Music Take
Your Mind", before going off into all the these other directions on the
first-ever issue of the complete take of the tune! ~ Dusty Groove
Greg Foat - Dreaming Jewels
The funkiest record in years from the great Greg Foat – a
set that moves away from some of the more open, meditative sounds of other
recent albums – and has Greg returning to the kind of grooves that first made
us fall in love with his music! Foat plays Fender Rhodes throughout – and the
album's got lots of great rhythms from the drums of Malcolm Catto and Clark
Tracey, and the added percussion of Eric Young – whose congas kick things up
fantastically next to the heavy bass of Phillip Achille. There's also some
strong horn work throughout too – tenor from Binker Golding, trumpet from
Trevor Walker, and both soprano and tenor from Rob Mach – players who are used
in individual, spacious ways – and not as the more familiar horn section
approach to funk – which skews the whole album much more strongly in a
jazz-based direction. Titles include "Eric's Breakdown", "The
Door Into Summer", "Kushiro River", "Sapphire Dreams",
"Lake Kussharo", and "Not That It Makes Any Difference". ~
Dusty Groove
Eric Alexander - Eric Alexander With Strings
A really fantastic album from tenorist Eric Alexander – a
player we've always loved, but who really seems to be opening up some new sides
in his music in the past few years! As you'd guess from the title, the album's
in a classic "with strings" mode – Eric's tenor out front soloing,
with support from a familiar core trio that includes David Hazeltine on piano,
John Webber on bass, and Joe Farnsworth on drums – all augmented by these
really beautiful string passages from Dave Rivello – an arranger we're not sure
we've heard before, but who does a tremendous job here – couching the strong
tenor lines with a sensitivity that reminds of of classic 60s charts from
Torrie Zito. There's a mature, open quality to the whole thing that's really
wonderful – a new sophisticated side of Alexander's music, and one that we love
from the very first note. Titles include "Dreamsville",
"Gently", "Lonely Woman", "Some Other Time",
"Slow Hot Wind", and "The Thrill Is Gone". ~ Dusty Groove
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