Oscar Brown Jr. - Kicks! The Best Of Oscar Brown Jr. (2004)

  • 09 Dec, 10:08
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Artist:
Title: Kicks! The Best Of Oscar Brown Jr.
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: BGP Records
Genre: Jazz, R&B, Soul, Funk, Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 01:06:07
Total Size: 401 MB | 152 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist
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01. Mr Kicks
02. Work Song
03. The Snake
04. Straighten Up and Fly Right
05. Humdrum Blues
06. Signifying Monkey
07. It Ain't Necessarily So
08. Afro Blue
09. Dat Dere
10. Hazel's Hips
11. Watermelon Man
12. Jeannine
13. Tall Like Pine
14. Sixteen Tons
15. But I Was Cool
16. One For My Baby
17. Opportunity Please Knock
18. All Blues
19. Excuse Me For Living
20. Work Song
21. When Malindy Sings
22. Elegy (Plain Black Boy)
23. The Tree and Me

With 23 tracks from all four of Brown's early-'60s albums for Columbia, this is the finest representation of the singer's work on record. It's true that it doesn't include some worthy post-Columbia material, particularly cuts from the 1964 live recording Mr. Oscar Brown Goes to Washington (such as "Brother Where Are You?"). It's also true that some fans might have minor quibbles with the songs selected for this best-of, which omits numbers like "Rags and Old Iron," "Brown Baby," and "Man, Ernest Boy" that could have made worthy inclusions. Yet it's hard to argue with what is here, including as it does standouts like the oft-covered "Work Song" (in two versions, actually); his vocal adaptations of Mongo Santamaria's "Afro Blue," Duke Pearson's "Jeanine," and Miles Davis' "All Blues"; "But I Was Cool," one of the most humorous jazz vocal pieces ever; and more serious numbers adapting the work of African-American poetry, "Elegy (Plain Black Boy)," and "When Malindy Sings." The four standards taken from In a New Mood are the least interesting numbers, but at least everything else on the CD is a Brown original, or an adaptation of a musical or literary work to which Brown added new words and/or music. Though he was perhaps a bit too theatrical in his singing and songwriting to get as hip a reputation as gutsier, moodier performers like Nina Simone (who covered several Brown songs in her early days), this remains some of the best music to fuse jazz, pop vocals, and African-American consciousness.~Kicks! The Best of Oscar Brown Jr. Review by Richie Unterberger


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