Monday, July 20, 2015

Archie Shepp - Attica Blues

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1972
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:24
Size: 86,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:47)  1. Attica Blues
(0:19)  2. Invocation: Attica Blues
(5:07)  3. Steam (Part 1)
(3:16)  4. Invocation to Mr. Parker
(5:10)  5. Steam (Part 2)
(4:00)  6. Blues for Brother George Jackson
(0:29)  7. Invocation: Ballad for a Child
(3:36)  8. Ballad for a Child
(4:22)  9. Good Bye Sweet Pops
(6:12) 10. Quiet Dawn

Refining his large-ensemble experiments of 1971, Attica Blues is one of Archie Shepp's most significant post-'60s statements, recorded just several months after authorities ended the Attica prison uprising by massacring 43 inmates and hostages. Perhaps because Shepp's musical interests were changing, Attica Blues isn't the all-out blast of rage one might expect; instead, it's a richly arranged album of mournful, quietly agonized blues and Ellingtonian swing, mixed with a couple of storming funk burners. Of course, Shepp doesn't quite play it straight, bringing his avant-garde sensibilities to both vintage big band and contemporary funk, with little regard for the boundaries separating them all. 

His soloing on tenor and soprano is typically sharp-edged and modal, and his nasal, slicing tone on soprano is featured quite heavily. The stylishness of the slow numbers is undercut with quivering, faintly unsettling dissonances, and the up-tempo funk cuts recall the way Sly Stone's arrangements ping-ponged many different elements off each other in a gleeful organized chaos. That's especially true on the gospel-inflected title song, a monster of a groove that later became a hit on the acid jazz revival circuit (and stands up to anything recorded by straight-up funk bands of the era). In the same vein, "Blues for Brother George Jackson" sounds like an edgier Isaac Hayes-style blaxploitation soundtrack cut. Vocal ballads are plentiful, and Joe Lee Wilson ("Steam," a song Shepp would return to often) and Carl Hall (aka Henry Hull) both acquit themselves well; more debatable are the poetic recitations and the choice of flügelhornist/composer Cal Massey's young daughter Waheeda to sing "Quiet Dawn" (although Waheeda's almost-there intonation is effectively creepy). Still, in the end, Attica Blues is one of Shepp's most successful large-group projects, because his skillful handling of so many different styles of black music produces such tremendously groovy results. ~ Steve Huey  http://www.allmusic.com/album/attica-blues-mw0000648984

Personnel : Archie Shepp (soprano & tenor saxophones); Marion Brown (alto saxophone, flute, bamboo flute, percussion); Walter Davis Jr. (piano, electric piano); Joe Lee Wilson (vocals), William Kunstler (spoken vocals); John Blake, Leroy Jenkins (violin); Cal Massey (flugelhorn); Charles Greene (trombone); Cornell Dupree (guitar); Jimmy Garrison (bass); Beaver Harris, Billy Higgins (drums); Juma Sultan (percussion).

Attica Blues

4 comments:

  1. Hi Giullia, please re-up this recording. Thanks.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hey Giulia, would it please be possible to reinstate the link to this album. Thanks if you can

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thank you Giulia, you are the kindest of people and I greatly appreciate your great work here.

    ReplyDelete

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