SOUNDS GOOD E-Book on all Amazon sites
SOUL, FUNK and JAZZ FUSION - Exception CD Remasters
Just Click Below To Purchase for £3.95
Thousands of E-Pages - All Details and In-Depth Reviews From Discs
(No Cut and Paste Crap)
"...Ghetto Blaster..."
For their June 2017 UK CD
Reissue and Remaster – Ace Records' Beat Goes Public label (BGP) has decided to
bolster up the original 11-track compilation with Nine Bonus Tracks from the
first three platters - making CDBGPD 305 a very tasty purchase indeed. Here are
the Lady Days, John Coltranes and Whiteys On The Moon...
UK released Friday, 30 June
2017 (7 July 2017 in the USA) - "The Revolution Will Not Be
Televised...Plus" by GIL-SCOTT HERON on Ace Records/Beat Goes Public
CDBGPD 305 (Barcode 029667077927) offers the 11-Track US LP with Nine Bonus
Tracks added on and plays out as follows (63:44 minutes):
1. The Revolution Will Not
Be Televised [Side 1]
2. Sex Education: Ghetto
Style
3. The Get Out Of The Ghetto
Blues
4. No Knock [without intro]
5. Lady Day And John
Coltrane
6. Pieces Of A Man
7. Home Is Where The Hatred
Is [Side 2]
8. Brother [without intro]
9. Save The Children
10. Whitey On The Moon
[without intro]
11. Did You Hear What They
Said?
Tracks 1 to 11 are the
US-based compilation "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" -
released December 1974 in the USA on Flying Dutchman Records BDL1-0613 and June
1975 in the UK on RCA Records SF 8428 (US copies came in a gatefold sleeve - UK
copies were single covers).
Tracks 1, 5, 6, 7 and 9 are
from his 2nd US album "Pieces Of A Man" - released December 1971 on
Flying Dutchman Records FD 10143
Tracks 2, 3 and 11 are from
his 3rd US album "Free Will" - released August 1972 on Flying
Dutchman Records FD 10153
Tracks 4, 8 and 10 are
newly-mixed and edited 1974 creations
BONUS TRACKS:
12. When You Are Who You Are
13. I Think I'll Call It
Morning
14. Or Down You
15. Free Will
16. The Middle Of Your Day
17. Speed Kills
18. Paint It Black
19. Who'll Pay Reparation On
My Soul?
20. The Revolution Will Not
Be Televised
Tracks 12, 13 and 14 are
from his second US LP "Pieces Of A Man" - released December 1971 on
Flying Dutchman Records FD 10143
Tracks 15, 16 and 17 are
from his 3rd US LP "Free Will" - released August 1972 on Flying
Dutchman Records FD 10153
Tracks 18, 19 and 20 are
from his US debut LP "Small Talk At 125th And Lenox" - released
January/February 1971 on Flying Dutchman Records FDS-131 (recorded live in
1970)
The 16-page booklet pictures
rare American 45s – the Side 1 and Side 2 labels of the US original Flying
Dutchman LP as well as providing full colour plates of the three albums this CD
reissue takes from. DEAN RUDLAND provides the info – entertaining and
insightful as ever – while long-standing Audio Engineer NICK ROBBINS provides
the beautiful Remasters. The sound on this reissue is wonderful.
It's easy to hear why Brits
fell head over heels for Scott-Heron when you listen to the whole compilation -
eight of his best tracks mixed in with three rapped intros that feel like they
could always have been there. The way the songs run - it feels like a major
album release in the same vein as say Marvin's "What's Going On" or
Mayfield's "Curtis" or Donny Hathaway's "Extension Of A
Man" or even Stevie's "Innervisions" - the overall listen is
just fantastic. And you have to say that the Remaster is just gorgeous –
kicking with power and detail. You hear Purdie’s drums – everything. Just check
out the superlatively concise guitar solo by Burt Jones on the get-it song
"When You Are Who You Are" complimented throughout by Hubert Laws on
Saxophone. That’s followed by crystal clear Brian Jackson piano on "I
Think I'll Call It Morning" held up by sweet Bass plucks from Ron Carter –
gorgeous stuff and joyful music too. This LP worked too because not everything
is a rant against the white oppressors - songs like "Sex Education: Ghetto
Style" is funny - "Brother" is cutting when it comes to his own
colour's shortcomings and both "The Get Out Of The Ghetto" and
"Save The Children" songs feel sexy and soulful in that Marvin way.
Back when the second album "Pieces
Of A Man" was issued in August 1972 in the USA and credited as Gil
Scott-Heron with Pretty Purdie and The Playboys (Drummer Bernard Purdie) –
Flying Dutchman tried "Lady Day And John Coltrane" as a lead off US 7”
single with "Save The Children" on the flipside (FD 26015) – both
tracks on this compilation of course. Because the "Pieces Of A Man"
album was delayed until 1973 – the British 45 on Philips 6073 705 didn’t arrive
until April 1973 and had the first bonus track on this CD as its B-side - "When
You Are Who You Are". It’s modest Record Collector Price Guide price of
under a tenner doesn’t reflect the difficulty you would have of locating a copy
(I’ve never actually seen one). The other US 45 represented on here is his 1971
debut - "The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" b/w "Home Is
Where The Hatred Is" on Flying Dutchman FD 26011 (again credited to Gil
Scott-Heron with Pretty Purdie and The Playboys). That B-side is one of the
albums other gems – drugs at home instead of family and love – Gil’s lyrics
hard-hitting, real and humane – like the whole album.
The CD then cleverly lines
up nine more from the three LPs - the Bonus cuts themselves feeling like
another overlooked album nugget. By the time you get to the spoken poem
"Paint It Black" and you're in love with the man. The first LP only
had a few music tracks on it (see my separate review for "Small Talk At
125th And Lenox") and "Who'll Pay Reparation On My Soul?" was
one of them - the White House reading out platitudes to beleaguered ghetto
families from cue cards. And it ends with his 'first version' of "The Revolution
Will Not To Be Televised" where he raps his poem to a Tabla beat - the
crowd stunned as he speaks of stolen TVs and pigs shooting innocent bystanders
and black people in the street looking for a brighter tomorrow...
"...A rat done bit my
sister Nell...and whitey's on the moon..." - Gil sings on his most famous
song - raging against ghetto poverty while NASA spends billions back in a time
when the word billions was truly a gargantuan amount.
A truly superlative reissue
of a huge Soul-Funk-Jazz album from that golden Seventies period – "The
Revolution Will Not Be Televised". And not for the first time has Ace
Records of the UK pulled off an absolute winner.
Put this high on your shopping list and hope Gil returns in spirit form to guide us for when man goes to Mars for a few quid more than billions...
Put this high on your shopping list and hope Gil returns in spirit form to guide us for when man goes to Mars for a few quid more than billions...