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The Best of the Bar-Kays [Stax]
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The Best of the Bar-Kays [Stax] in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $11.99
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While curiously overlooking the group's earliest hits (
"Soul Finger"
and
"Knucklehead"
),
The Best of the Bar-Kays
offers a worthwhile thumbnail portrait of
the Bar-Kays
' evolution from a neo-
Booker T. & the MG's
soul
instrumental combo into one of the wilder
funk
ensembles of the 1970s. Focusing on the years 1968 (when the group's second lineup came together following the death of four members of the band in the same airplane crash that claimed
Otis Redding
) through 1975 (when the band left
Stax
to sign with
Mercury
finds them bridging the gap between the
R&B
sounds of the 1960s and the 1970s, and gaining more than their share of attitude along the way. Highlights include a very
Booker T.
-influenced cover of
"Midnight Cowboy,"
the funky and funny
Isaac Hayes
pastiche
"Son of Shaft,"
a revved-up take on
"Montego Bay,"
and the tight groove of
"A.J. the Housefly."
While not a complete overview of
' career,
is at least a strong starter, and should ideally be followed up by
The Best of Bar-Kays
, which concentrates on their work for
. ~ Mark Deming
"Soul Finger"
and
"Knucklehead"
),
The Best of the Bar-Kays
offers a worthwhile thumbnail portrait of
the Bar-Kays
' evolution from a neo-
Booker T. & the MG's
soul
instrumental combo into one of the wilder
funk
ensembles of the 1970s. Focusing on the years 1968 (when the group's second lineup came together following the death of four members of the band in the same airplane crash that claimed
Otis Redding
) through 1975 (when the band left
Stax
to sign with
Mercury
finds them bridging the gap between the
R&B
sounds of the 1960s and the 1970s, and gaining more than their share of attitude along the way. Highlights include a very
Booker T.
-influenced cover of
"Midnight Cowboy,"
the funky and funny
Isaac Hayes
pastiche
"Son of Shaft,"
a revved-up take on
"Montego Bay,"
and the tight groove of
"A.J. the Housefly."
While not a complete overview of
' career,
is at least a strong starter, and should ideally be followed up by
The Best of Bar-Kays
, which concentrates on their work for
. ~ Mark Deming