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Track: 10: My Sweet Lord bonus track King Curtis & Billy Preston,Track: 11: Them Changes alt. version/bonus track,Track: 12: Ode To Billie Joe alt. version/bonus track,Track: 13: Soul Serenade alt. version/bonus track,Track: 14: Memphis Soul Stew alt. version/bonus track,Track: 1: Memphis Soul Stew,Track: 2: Whiter Shade Of Pale,Track: 3: Whole Lotta Love,Track: 4: I Stand Accused,Track: 5: Them Changes,Track: 6: Ode To Billie Joe,Track: 7: Mr Bojangles,Track: 8: Signed Sealed Delivered (I'm Yours),Track: 9: Soul Serenade
Media Type: CD
Artist: CURTIS,KING
Title: LIVE AT FILMORE WEST
Street Release Date: 07/11/2006
"Six months after this recording was made, `King' Curtis Ousley would be stabbed to death while standing in front of his New York City apartment building. This tragic violence brought a premature close to a career that had recently projected to new heights, and seemed poised to go just about anywhere. Active since the early fifties, King Curtis moved easily from jazz to soul to rock and roll. To put things in perspective, you should know that when Sam Cooke sings "Play that one called `Soul Twist'" in "Having a Party," he's referring to a King Curtis tune. The man was ubiquitous, but usually stayed behind the scenes, serving as a bandleader, producer or back-up musician for an endless number of performers, including the Coasters, the Isley Brothers, Bobby Darin and John Lennon. In 1971, he was acting as bandleader for Aretha Franklin (see my review for "Aretha Franklin Live at the Fillmore West") and racking up a few hits of his own. "King Curtis Live at the Fillmore West" culls the highlights from his own sets at this venue, and it also marks a high point of his recording career.
The band alone justifies the price of admission. Billy Preston plays keyboards and Cornell Dupree plays guitar, while Jerry Jemmott and Bernard Purdie make up the rhythm section. Fattening out the rich sound of Curtis' own baritone saxophone are the Memphis Horns, making this ensemble a dream team of funky soul-music brethren. Even when the material is lacking, the band manages to transcend mundanity with spirited interpretations. Would you expect "Ode to Billie Joe" to have a fatback groove? I wouldn't have. Could you even imagine a baritone sax handling Robert Plant's vocal line for "Whole Lotta Love"? I didn't think so. This version in particular brings the song full circle, taking it closer to its roots as a Willie Dixon composition. The best tune here, though, is "Memphis Soul Stew," a gorgeous eight-minute rhythmic workout that virtually defines the funky/loose and yet stop-on-a-dime/tight spirit of contemporary soul music. It is a virtual primer in everything anyone would need to know about cooking up a hot rhythm and letting it simmer until it boils over with intense energy. Throw in a bonus track that features Billy Preston molding "My Sweet Lord" into something uniquely his own, and you will have to wonder how on Earth anybody could claim George Harrison's composition as a derivative of "He's So Fine."
King Curtis had a lengthy career, but it still ended much too soon. Catch this set and you're also bound to wonder how soul music would have progressed had we not lost such a talented force at the peak of his powers. A- Tom Ryan"
What live music used to sound like
J. Brodnicki | Hendersonville, TN USA | 09/22/2007
(4 out of 5 stars)
"The late 60s and early 70s gave us many music acts "Live at the Fillmore," a sign that the act had really arrived. By today's standards, the recordings were raw and, at their best, authentic to the sound and feel of the time.
King Curtis "Live at the Fillmore" is a satisfying mix of instrumental soul, R&B that combines the smooth melody of cuts like "A Lighter Shade of Pale" with some funky R&B (Memphis Soul Stew and others). While not every cut works (Led Zeppelin's A whole Loota Love), the CD shows a consistet level of musicianship and is a great sample of the musical experiments and fusion of the era."
Magic......Pure aural pleasure!
C.J. | Norman, OK USA | 03/05/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)
"From the moment I put on this recording, I was captivated. Six minutes into 'Memphis Soul Stew' listners are treated to an explosion of sound that wraps up in it the genres of soul, rock, jazz, and most likely some unearthly sound millions of light years away. From beginning to end, King Curtis and the incredible musicians brought together on this recording groove and interact in a manner that few bands achieve. If you own three live recordings in your life, this should be .333333."
The Tops
Steven Hirsch | Maryland | 12/21/2006
(5 out of 5 stars)
"As in the very best. King Curtis and everyone here cooks up the finest Memphis Soul Stew. Whiter Shade of Pale is lovely. Everything surges with a funky pull. Billy Preston shines on organ, but the others rise to the occasion too. If you like soul, get this, you'll love it."
Godfather of muzak?
J. Macrae | Outer Space | 12/08/2009
(2 out of 5 stars)
"How this album made the greatest live album list is beyond me. Replacing lyrics with sax solos in songs is hard to pull off, even for a master such as King Curtis. Versions of Whiter Shade of Pale, and Whole Lotta Love are truly awful and cheesy. The majority of the album ain't much better, with Memphis Soul Stew, I Stand Accused, and Soul Serenade being the exceptions. The add on of My Sweet Lord as a bonus track is also a good listen. With six good tracks(two being alternate versions) out of fourteen, needless to say, I do not like this album. If you want some good King Curtis, I suggest King Curtis and Champion Jack Dupree-Blues at Montreux.