This album is one of the reasons that
Idris Muhammad is regarded as the drumming king of groove. Featuring the arrangements and keyboards of
Bob James, the saxophone punch of
Grover Washington, Jr., guitarist
Joe Beck, trumpeter
Randy Brecker, percussionist
Ralph MacDonald, and the knife-edge slick production of
Creed Taylor, this 1974 issue is a burning piece of deep, jazzy
soul and grooved-out bliss. The
funk flies fast and heavy, particularly on the title track (
Jimi Hendrix's tune), with soaring solos by
Grover and
James, who fall down in the groove to
Muhammad's powerful pace, setting from the heart of the pocket.
Beck's own solo is special in that he moves against the tempo just a bit, but that only increases the listener's dependence on the groove of
Muhammad. Clocking in at only 34 minutes it's a perfect slice of the raw-onion emotion
Muhammad was pulling down at the time. While there isn't a weak track in the four, it's
Washington's
"Loran's Dance" that takes the cake, even over
Hendrix. While the former is dark and heavy, and the immediately preceding tracks by
James and
Beck, respectively, are light, fancy, free nods to
Creed Taylor's hoping for a
jazz radio single, it's
"Loran's Dance" that showcases not only
Washington as an aspiring writer in his own right (this is only a year before
Feels So Good and
Mr. Magic appeared), but also as a talented interpreter of the edges where
jazz and
soul come together.
James' arrangements are tight, and everybody gets to solo with a little more freedom and grace.
Muhammad keeps the pocket wide and
Brecker and
Washington dance all around in it as
James plays the accents furtively. This is some easy-moving, yet musically complex
jazz. There is great power in these four tracks to make you move or reflect or just tap your foot while nodding "yeah" at your speakers imperceptibly. ~ Thom Jurek