Roots and Grooves Maceo Parker

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CD

  • Release Date: 02/12/2008
  • Original Release: 2007
  • Sales Rank: 15,008
  • Label: HEADS UP
  • UPC: 053361313425
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Roots and Grooves

Disc 1
1LISTENHallelujah I Love Her So 6:38
2LISTENBusted 3:53
3LISTENThem That's Got 6:12
4LISTENYou Don't Know Me 6:24
5LISTENHit the Road Jack 5:09
6LISTENMargie 6:01
7LISTENGeorgia on My Mind 6:17
8LISTENWhat'd I Say 9:36

Disc 2
1LISTENUptown Up 5:57
2LISTENTo Be or Not to Be 6:22
3LISTENOff the Hook 8:02
4LISTENAdvanced Funk 7:10
5LISTENShake Everything You Got 7:07
6LISTENPass the Peas 17:48

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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Say the name Maceo Parker, and immediately the legendary R&B saxman's longterm association with the late, great James Brown comes to mind. Depending on how steeped one is in R&B, Parker's later work with George Clinton and Bootsy Collins might pop up. But long before the Godfather of Soul entered the saxman's life, Parker was grooving heavily on Ray Charles, who became one of the influential musical heroes of his life. The first disc of Roots and Grooves gloriously celebrates Parker's connection to these roots, his early years in North Carolina listening to early Charles tracks on the radio. The second is something of a wildly jazzy, impossibly funky jam retrospective on his best solo tracks. The hook that makes this more than simply a high energy covers date is that it teams the brilliant altoist with Germany's renowned WDR Big Band -- and from the first swinging blasts behind Parker's horn on "Hallelujah I Love Her So," "big" is the operative word. Given Parker's sense of groove invention and the evergreen emotional power of Charles' chestnuts like "Busted" and "Hit the Road Jack," anyone might have expected this to be a dream match. But it's more than that because Parker also sings with a gravelly, Charles-like perfection on these two songs, and even more poignantly on "You Don't Know Me," "Margie," and a magically moody "Georgia on My Mind." Charles may have been declared deceased in body in 2004, but he lives again through Parker in haunting yet wonderful ways. On "Getting Back to Funk" (the title of the second disc), Parker revisits his own rich catalog of classics, starting with "Uptown Up" and vibing right on through to a nearly 18-minute scorching take on "Pass the Peas." Released in early 2008, this double set was an instant classic. Charles was not the only genius who loved company -- Parker, too, has a blast working with one of the hippest big bands in the world. Jonathan Widran, All Music Guide

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