The Castle/Sanctuary reissues of the Perception catalog from the early to mid-'70s have been a blessing in that they put the former soul-funk label's offerings -- many of which were hard to come by in their original editions despite the top-tier names who recorded them (Fatback Band, Dizzy Gillespie, James Moody, et al). Two of the more obscure offerings the label issued were by soul-jazz poet Wanda Robinson from Baltimore, who issued a pair of printed collections, as well, and has since disappeared from public life. The two albums, Black Ivory (named for her backing band) and Me & a Friend, were issued in 1971 and 1973, respectively, and offer a portrait of the artist as a (righteously) angry young woman about social mores, political injustices, and sexual politics and were produced by jazz composer and pianist Anthony Davis. The 11 cuts that make up Black Ivory are rooted by a chamber jazz group of piano, flute and saxes, bass, and a drum kit textured by strings, a horn section, and a bluesy electric guitar in places ("Parting Is Such," "Tragedy No. 456 6.04"). The poems are excerpted from a book entitled The Daze of Wine...Without Roses, and deal with the politics of relationships, both facile and profound, both spiritual and sexual. While the set has funky moments, Me & a Friend is a far harder album musically. With a band led by keyboard maestro Julius Brockington and the United Chair -- a local jazz-rock fusion group -- Me & a Friend is wooly, greasy, and tough, it's all vibe with big, fat funk lacing its grooves and adding another dimension to both the celebration and darkness in the poetry. Robinson's delivery is strident, but not overbearing, her language is direct and confrontational, without metaphorical allusions. This is the music of "the message" that was inspired by the Last Poets and carried on by Gil Scott-Heron and Brian Jackson. It's dated sounding to be sure, but the grooves are magical and Robinson's original style is timeless. (AMG?)Wanda Robinson - The Soul-Jazz Poetry of Wanda Robinson (2000) {{links in comments}}
Sample here.
MU
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is the link missing ?
ReplyDeletethanks
the link is a comment above yours...?
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is all i see, on this one and one other :( thanks for hitting back
click them, they're links!
ReplyDeletety :)
ReplyDeleteThanks for this gem... also, the conversation above is priceless.
ReplyDeleteThanks for this, really nice, and yes getting used to downloading is very funny, especially when you see it happening to someone else:) Paul
ReplyDeleteMs. Wanda Robinson epitomizes in spoken word, the hurts, pain, hopes and dreams of Black people, Black Struggle, Black Intimacy, Black Relationships, Black Marriages, Black Families and Black LOVE!
ReplyDeleteAlthough she speaks to the BLACK experience, her stories are really the American experience -- the HEARTS and SOULS of us all!
"Black Ivory" was and remains the GRAMMY of ALL genres of music -- it so exquisitely captured the conscience of the 50'S, 60's, 70's and yes, even today!
Remembering that era (50's-70's)is why we MUST pray, support, and then wrap our arms around President Obama and VOTE for him in 2012 -- in order to keep him strong, focused and mindful that we will NEVER go back! He symbolizes America's future -- THEY (the Republicans) are America's past!
GOD BLESS YOU Ms. Robinson for sharing your perceptions of a world that you and we all made better place for all humanity!
Your music then and now, forces us all to stop, think back and remind ourselves, "NEVER AGAIN"!
You, like the late Blues Singer, Mr. Marvin Sease, have been the most under appreciated artists of all time!
But never worry! Your music and talent, his music and talent, speaks volume of what you both share in common --- a "Revolutionary GENIUS" that ignites the realization in us all to be "connected to something greater than ourselves"!
YOU, like Marvin Sease, are ANGELS sent to us directly from GOD!
Keep doing what you do BEST!
"HE" has his arms wrapped around you!