Soul Strut 100: # 53 - Dorothy Ashby - Afro Harping
RAJ
tenacious local 7,782 Posts
I will slowly be unveiling the Top 100 Soul Strut Related Records as Voted by the Strutters Themselves.
# 53 - Dorothy Ashby - Afro Harping
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About
Afro Harping was arranged by producer Richard Evans (see also Groovin??? With The Soulful Strings ) and recorded by Ashby with unknown musicians for Cadet Records in 1968. As an example of Ashby???s talents as the undisputed master of the jazz harp (the stringed instrument, by the way, not the harmonica), it is not ideal; her earlier straight-jazz records make a better case for her instrument in improvised music. But as a groove-heavy slice of late-'60s lounge, it???s unbeatable. Actually, there are two styles on the album: a heavy funk, psychedelic groove showcased on the two side-openers, ???Soul Vibrations??? and ???Afro-Harping???; and a genial, insinuating pop-jazz feel with more extensive displays of harp prowess. Both are lightweight and certain to garner the derision of jazz purists, but those with open ears will enjoy the record as a cheesy but delightfully fun artifact of a less self-conscious time.
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=12526#.UDeTMGD8_W8
Media
# 53 - Dorothy Ashby - Afro Harping
.
About
Afro Harping was arranged by producer Richard Evans (see also Groovin??? With The Soulful Strings ) and recorded by Ashby with unknown musicians for Cadet Records in 1968. As an example of Ashby???s talents as the undisputed master of the jazz harp (the stringed instrument, by the way, not the harmonica), it is not ideal; her earlier straight-jazz records make a better case for her instrument in improvised music. But as a groove-heavy slice of late-'60s lounge, it???s unbeatable. Actually, there are two styles on the album: a heavy funk, psychedelic groove showcased on the two side-openers, ???Soul Vibrations??? and ???Afro-Harping???; and a genial, insinuating pop-jazz feel with more extensive displays of harp prowess. Both are lightweight and certain to garner the derision of jazz purists, but those with open ears will enjoy the record as a cheesy but delightfully fun artifact of a less self-conscious time.
http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=12526#.UDeTMGD8_W8
Media
Comments
can't play this and not get a reaction
when you are starting out and you get this LP you get why you started record collecting
Great record. I got amped off of the mumbles and Pete Rock samples, but the whole thing is a great listen.
I was very pleased to find a copy in VG+/VG+ at a used bookstore for $2.99 about 7 years ago.
Kindly,
parallax
7 responses?
Shouldn't the responses get higher as we go deeper?
It could also be that the list is losing some steam just because of the sheer volume of it. Or that the people who voted aren't here anymore.
Soul Strut is dying a slow death. Booooooo!
More ishes, more beatoffs. This place still has lots of juice. I just wish some of the big dudes of yore would pop in, but I get it that people move on. And it's been a good run, so even if it dies it was still huge.
This place ruined my life!
And back to Dorothy...
This record is a nice listen. Beats. Wacky stuff. Funky harp.
I agree. My burned CD of this got plenty listens at night time in college...
agree.
i suppose the rubaiyat will be higher on the list, then?