| EUGENE BLACKNELL
Oakland guitar ace Eugene Blacknell released
multiple singles that ranged in style from raw R&B to power house
funk. His musical career stretched from the early 1960s when
as a talented and sharp dressed kid, he would become the youngest
musician from the Bay Area to play the Apollo in New York, to the
end of the 1980s when he died too young.
During that time he established himself as an East Bay original, an
entrepreneur, and an activist. His ability to cross-over from
R&B to blues, funk and soul put him at head of the Bay Area scene
and he was often compared to the likes of Albert and BB King.
His business dealings were inspirational. His band were able
to break into new scenes and live circuits, and he helped improve
standards of pay for African-American musicians in the Bay Area.
With so many accomplishments it’s an irony of fate that he died
before releasing an album despite having recorded enough material
for several.
Ubiquity’s re-issue arm, Luv N'Haight Records, worked with Gino
Blacknell (Eugene's son, himself a producer and a young member
of Eugene Blacknell and the New Breed at the tail-end of their
existence) to compile information, images and music to release this
first official album by Eugene Blacknell. Gino has always
promised his Mom that he would make sure his father’s music was
eventually released. Digging up hours of old master tapes he
found unreleased material, radio advertisements, demos, live
recordings, and he even improved mixes on several tracks. He
also found footage of his father riding choppers with Sly Stone,
checking out drag car races, and playing live at San Francisco music
festivals. During the process of putting this album together
Gino suffered chest pains that turned out to be a series of minor
heart attacks. At time of writing he is in good shape and recovering
well and was able to help finish out this project, which in the
meantime we had coincidentally titled “You Can’t Take Life For
Granted” after one of the unreleased cuts.
Without an album release, which would have cemented
his recordings in the most accessible format back in the day, the
legacy of Eugene Blacknell has been kept alive by way of the stories
past on from musicians lucky enough to work with him. In
addition his handful of tracks released on 7" singles have been
sampled by many, most notably Beck (“We Know We Have Got to Live
Together” was used on “Black Tambourine”). His singles
have become DJ-favorites with the rarest fetching top dollars on the
collectors market.
This compilation is made up of his super rare early
releases as Eugene Blacknell and the Savonics, the highly sought
after raw instrumental funk as Eugene Blacknell and the New Breed,
his big band party-style vocal tracks, and a host of unreleased
material including the radio advertisements, live recordings, and
both vocal and instrumental studio cuts. Fans of Bay Area Funk
will recognize the different musical periods that Blacknell goes
through with comparisons ranging from acts like Johnny Talbot
and Tower of Power to Sly Stone and Graham Central
Station.
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