Friday 17 April 2009

Brute Force - Brute Force (1970)




1.Do It Right Now
2.Some Kind Of Approval
3.The Deacon
4.Right Direction
5.Monster
6.Ye-Le-Wa
7.Doubt.


 


Bass - Russel I. Ingles , Thomas Lee Williams
Congas - Robert A. Jones
Drums - Sidney Smart
Guitar - Sonny Sharrock
Piano [Electric] - Richard Daniel
Producer - Herbie Mann
Saxophone [Tenor], Flute - Stanley Strickland
Trumpet - Arthur Ray Brooks , Teddy Daniels, Jr.


Review by Sean Westergaard
Brute Force was a soul-jazz band (slanted toward the soul end) that released a single self-titled album in 1970, produced by Herbie Mann. The band had a solid soul sound, which could head into slightly more out territory, as well. The band and Mann had a stroke of genius when they decided to recruit the band's childhood friend and Mann bandmate Sonny Sharrock (who had also played with Pharoah Sanders at that point) to add some extra spice to the sessions. The results are so righteous and groovy, you'll wonder where this album has been for the last 30 years. Imagine the Black Panthers recording Memphis Underground and you're somewhere in the ballpark. Strong vocals on about half the tunes, great horn playing, dirty electric piano, killer two-bass grooves, and Sharrock's ultra-aggressive soul playing make this album a solid winner. Sharrock fans will flip at this forgotten session, and DJs and crate-diggers everywhere would be well-served by picking this up. Right on, Brother!

1 comment:

  1. Brute ForceArtist...............: Brute Force
    Album................: Brute Force
    Genre................: Soul/Jazz
    Source...............: CD
    Year.................: 1970
    Ripper...............: EAC (Secure mode) / LAME 3.92 & Asus CD-S520
    Codec................: LAME 3.98
    Version..............: MPEG 1 Layer III
    Quality..............: Extreme, (avg. bitrate: 289kbps)
    Channels.............: Joint Stereo / 44100 hz
    Playing Time.........: 00:39:34
    Total Size...........: 81.83 MB.

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