| BLACK
RENAISSANCE
-- Super rare 1976 album at the time illegally released in Japan,
trading-hands for $350+
-- Funk, jazz & soul collide with one of the earliest examples
of rap on LP
-- For fans of: Roy Ayers, Pharoah Sanders, Last Poets, rare groove,
soul-jazz, breaks nbeats
'Black Renaissance' is undoubtedly one of my all time favorite
tunes, up there with Sun Ra's 'Sleeping Beauty' and Coltrane's 'A
Love Supreme'."
- Gilles Peterson, BBC Radio 1, London 2002.
Harry Whitaker is a piano player, producer and arranger who
on MLK day 1976, at the age of 26, recorded Black Renaissance Body,
Mind, and Spirit, a holy grail amongst collectors of soul-jazz
and rare groove. So rare, its virtually a myth to many collectors
and music aficionados.
Made up of two long tracks that periodically build and release for
forty minutes over two sides of an LP its an improvised masterpiece
combining Afrocentric spiritual soul, jazz, poetry, amazing solos,
a tasty bass line or two and more than a fair share of funky beats.
Its also one of the earliest albums to feature rapping. I
called the project Black Renaissance because that is what I wanted
to see happen especially in music.
Given its rarity, when asked if he was surprised that people knew
about the album Whitaker jokes Ive told enough people
about it over the years! Now they can actually hear it. It was a
record before its time.
Harry Whitaker cut his teeth on the best of the Roy Ayers
Ubiquity releases (including playing keys on We Live In Brooklyn
Baby and co-producing the Coffy OST) on and making
a living working closely with Roberta Flack as her musical
director, even playing on her big Eugene McDaniels written
hit I Feel Like Makin Love. Black Renaissance
Body, Mind, and Spirit, was his first attempt at a project
where he wrote and composed the music and played keys on all tracks.
This album features Woody Shaw, Azar Lawrence, Buster Williams,
Billy Hart and Mtume amongst others. CD liner notes (and album
insert) explain how this album almost never saw light of day. |
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