MandrillMandrill
Release Date: 07/28/1998
Original Release:
1970
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 287657_CD
UPC # 090431600221
Label: Collectables Records
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Disc: 1
5.
Peace and Love (Amani Na Mapenzi): Movement I (Birth) / Movement II (Now) / Movement III (Time) / Movement IV (Encounter) / Movement V (Beginning)
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Performer: Mandrill
Engineer: Kim King Producer: Beau Ray Fleming; Mandrill Distributor: Gotham Distributing Corp. Notes: Mandrill: Louis Wilson, Richard Wilson, Carlos Wilson, Omar Mesa, Claude "Coffee" Cave, Fudgie Kaem, Neftali Santiago. Recorded at Electric Ladyland Studios, New York, New York in December 1970. Includes liner notes by Mark Marymont. Mandrill's debut isn't half the album it could've been, since the band's talented musicianship and desire to experiment were often subverted -- by ambitions of pop success as well as a dry, over-serious approach to music-making. The three Wilson brothers, though masters of over a dozen instruments, still hadn't mastered the added burden of songwriting; "Warning Blues" is perfunctory (as is the vocal performance) and "Symphonic Revolution" is a bland summer-day soul song with cloying strings. The group sounds much more confident getting into a good groove and allowing room for some great playing; the band's self-titled song, "Mandrill," is the best here, featuring great solos for flute and vibraphone. Mandrill also loved playing with different musical forms: "Rollin' On" moves from an average rock song to a torrid Latin jam and climaxes with a testifying gospel session. Most ambitious of all is the five-part, 14-minute suite "Peace and Love," but the intriguing concept is negated by a few bizarre pieces, one of which sounds like a parody of a Vincent Price reading over a Santana jam. The band would soon learn that experimentation and stylistic change-ups were a means, not an end. ~ John Bush |