By Nick DeRiso
Maceo Parkerleader of the ferocious JB Horns, James Brown's band and musical backbone back in the dayonce put it all in perspective, introducing a song from the stage: We like to play two percent jazz ... and 98 percent funky stuff."
The JBs later took off on their own, recording some terrific solo albums (altoist Parker's aforementioned Life on Planet Groove," baritone saxophonist Pee Wee Ellis' Blues Mission," bone player Fred Wesley's Comme Si, Comme Sa"). Lost somewhere along the way, however, was this collaborative effort, the aptly titled Funky Good Time/Live" on Gramavision.
Recorded in Japan, the propulsion here in undeniable. These three guys have been playing together for so long, it's like brothers finishing sentences for one another. And I love a live soul album, if only because the crowd becomes another growling instrument. Folks howl and grimace, they whoop and hootas, frankly, do these still-rocking JB Horns.
Everybody gets their solo turn, too: Pee Wee on the excellent Blues for a L.S.," Fred on House Party" and Maceo on Children's World."
But, it's the arm-in-arm revelry of the full-band tuneshorns tastefully basting eachthat makes this such a funky find. Highlights, no surprise, are several songs from the James Brown eraincluding the title cut, and Soul Power."
Maceo Parkerleader of the ferocious JB Horns, James Brown's band and musical backbone back in the dayonce put it all in perspective, introducing a song from the stage: We like to play two percent jazz ... and 98 percent funky stuff."
The JBs later took off on their own, recording some terrific solo albums (altoist Parker's aforementioned Life on Planet Groove," baritone saxophonist Pee Wee Ellis' Blues Mission," bone player Fred Wesley's Comme Si, Comme Sa"). Lost somewhere along the way, however, was this collaborative effort, the aptly titled Funky Good Time/Live" on Gramavision.
Recorded in Japan, the propulsion here in undeniable. These three guys have been playing together for so long, it's like brothers finishing sentences for one another. And I love a live soul album, if only because the crowd becomes another growling instrument. Folks howl and grimace, they whoop and hootas, frankly, do these still-rocking JB Horns.
Everybody gets their solo turn, too: Pee Wee on the excellent Blues for a L.S.," Fred on House Party" and Maceo on Children's World."
But, it's the arm-in-arm revelry of the full-band tuneshorns tastefully basting eachthat makes this such a funky find. Highlights, no surprise, are several songs from the James Brown eraincluding the title cut, and Soul Power."