We Free Kings Rahsaan Roland Kirk

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CD

  • Release Date: 10/25/1990
  • Original Release: 1961
  • Sales Rank: 33,752
  • Label: POLYGRAM RECORDS
  • UPC: 042282645524

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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We Free Kings

1LISTENThree for the Festival 3:07
2LISTENMoon Song 4:20
3LISTENA Sack Full of Soul 4:37
4LISTENThe Haunted Melody 3:37
5LISTENBlues for Alice Bonus Track / Alternate Take 5:11
6LISTENBlues for Alice Master Take 4:08
7LISTENWe Free Kings 4:44
8LISTENYou Did It, You Did It 2:27
9LISTENSome Kind of Love 6:09
10LISTENMy Delight 4:28

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

We Free Kings, Roland Kirk's third long-player, is among the most consistent of his early efforts. The assembled quartet provides an ample balance of bop and soul compliments to Kirk's decidedly individual polyphonic performance style. His inimitable writing and arranging techniques develop into some great originals, as well as personalize the chosen cover tunes. With a nod to the contemporary performance style of John Coltrane, as well as a measure of his influences -- most notably Clifford Brown and Sidney Bechet -- Kirk maneuvers into and out of some inspiring situations. His decidedly 'Trane-esque solos on "My Delight" are supported with a high degree of flexibility by one-time Charles Mingus' pianist Richard Wyands and Dizzy Gillespie percussionist Charlie Persip. The album's title track is a Kirk original, based on the melody of the Christmas hymn "We Three Kings." Incorporating recognizable melodies into Kirk's oft times unorthodox musical settings would prove to be a motif throughout his career. An example is the highly touted cover of Charlie Parker's "Blues for Alice." This is an ideal avenue for the quartet to explore one of Kirk's specialties -- the blues. The almost irreverent manner in which he fuses blues and soul music into the otherwise bop-driven arrangements is striking. "A Sack Full of Soul" is a funky number with a walking-blues backbeat that perfectly supports Kirk's swinging solos. The stop time syncopation is reminiscent of Ray Charles' "What'd I Say." The 1987 CD version also includes an alternate take of "Blues for Alice." One additional track -- a cover of the Frank Loesser standard "Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year" -- was also recorded at these sessions and remained unissued until its inclusion on the ten-disc Rahsaan: The Complete Mercury Recordings of Roland Kirk box set. Lindsay Planer, All Music Guide

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