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27 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Absolute CREAM!,
By Campbell Roark "tri-zeta" (from under the floorboards and through the woods...) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 (Audio CD)
This is it- if you love the funk. I'm the Robot from Lost in sPace waving jointless arms and intoning, "STOP. GO NO FURTHER." Real funk, like real women, be hard to come by. This is the Spot. Only Kool and the Gang can do strings as funky as this- strings I say! Hey now- it's got Jungle Boogie. Bang. It's got the blissed out funk. It's got breakdowns the likes of which you have never heard! It's got the banging instrumentals (Chocolate Buttermilk, Give it up). It's got the laid back mellowness (Summer Madness- revamped by the fresh prince half a generation ago for 'summertime,' and immortalized in Rocky a generation and a half ago). IT"S GOT THEM DRUMS- the hop, skip and a bump, slamminest, bamminest beatfest. And the bass to wedge a pneumatic drill into your hips. It's got the kind of sax that could percolate the La Brea Tar Pits into some lavalamp waterbed of funk! Just stretch out on `em and nod along with those sabre tooth tiger skeletons! Yeah cat! One minor thang- many of the songs are the shorter versions. Oh well. Can't have it all. Anyway. This is the best of Kool and the Gang before JJ Taylor drove the band into the everlovin' ground. (Think Cherish. Think Celebrate. Think Joanna- my wife's middle name is Joanna. I still hate that name. Mr. Taylor's saccharine ass music done ruined my wife's middle name for me). Buy it for the drums. And the sax. and the bass. And the cowbells. Just buy this damn album. Don't make me beg! And don't listen only to the five samples that amazon has allowed to be up in here. they won't do much for you, the better tracks are the later ones. And hey- If you love hip hop, or if you own Paul's Boutique, the Beasties best frikkin album and maybe the world's as well- I can place at least ten samples to this album. Check it out!!!!!!!
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A great collection. Funky Stuff, to be sure!,
By
This review is from: Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 (Audio CD)
This is one of those albums that is de rigeur for one of those great weekend reunions with your pals from the days gone by. It will make you get up and dance, and is more delightful if you have not heard these cuts in a few years (or decades).Kool and the Gang were as funky as anyone this side of Sly Stone back in their day. This has so much of the better stuff from that time, like "Hollywood Swinging", "Funky Stuff" and my personal favorite, "Who's Gonna Take The Weight" (both parts). The clapping and whistle which starts "Funky Stuff" is like a clarion call to start a monster, all day (or night) jam. All Hollywood-style swangin'
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Nipping at the Godfather's heels,
By Dave Wade (NYC) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 (Audio CD)
I was a funk and R&B child. In the 70's, my dad had the good sense to expose me to some stellar stuff...Earth Wind & Fire, Stevie Wonder, The Chi-lites, Barry White, Aretha, Marvin, Jackson Five, Soul Brother #1 (of course) and also some lesser know acts such as Bohannon, BT Express, Eric Gale, and Johnny Guitar Watson to name a few. For whatever reason, I don't remember hearing any early Kool & the Gang wafting through the house. Dad was slipping! It wasn't until my early 20's that I picked up this essential collection. Listening to it, I felt utterly ashamed...What took me so long? It was like hip-hop sample headquarters. While listening, I must have yelled out "Hey..I know that bit! " at least half a dozen times. Funk is a played-out term nowadays. Slap bass and/or a heavy beat doesn't necessarily make something funky. Funk is about timing and nuance. It's about exploiting the possibilities. That's why Led Zeppelin (not a funk act) could, at times, be just as funky as say, The Meters (bonafide funk hall-of-famers). I will say this....after James Brown, there is Kool and the Gang. They are second only to him (James even says so in the liner notes and I agree). The only thing Kool and the Gang didn't possess was the secret weapon....James himself. K&TG drummer George Brown is theirs. A canny, dynamic percussionist who is one of the greats...right up there with Maurice White (EW&F), Greg Errico (Sly), Clyde Subbelfield/Jabo Starks (JB drummers) and Harvey Mason (Headhunters). Add to that Kool's lewd, throbbing bass and the most sparkling brass you'll ever hear and you have funk nirvana. Here's one good example among many...When purchased, put on the headphones and turn up "Love the Life You Live." Pay special attention to the last minute and a half, right after the solo rhythm guitar part. It is total bliss. If you're into funk, soul or hip-hop, you cannot be without this. It'll make you cringe every time you hear "Joanna."
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
let the music take your mind,
By
This review is from: Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 (Audio CD)
Mention Kool and the Gang and everybody's image is of J.T. Taylor, the lean, youthful singer who fronted the band between 1979 and 1988. Taylor's hold on on the band was so complete that most people assumed he was Kool instead of the band's leader, bass player Robert "Kool" Bell. Taylor's vocals were smooth, well polished and always, always upbeat.
But before Taylor's arrival the band had another incarnation as a leading soul band, boasting a handful of Top 40 hits as well as many lesser hits bubbling under the Top 100. This band had no lead singer. They used a large variety of horns to propel their music and held it together with Bell's strutting baseline as they took turns singing as needed. As a missing link between the proto-funk of James Brown and Sly Stone and the full-blown sound of Parliament and Funkadelic, this album is absolutely indispensible.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Classic Old School Funk,
By rodog63jr (bronx, N.Y.C. N.Y. USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 (Audio CD)
Jungle Boogie, Hollywood Swinging, Spirit of The Boogie, Funky Stuff are on here. This will remind the listener that Kool and the Gang were kickin' it long before James Taylor joined up with them.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Classic Kool & the gang !,
By Benny Wilkerson (Scottsdale, Arizona United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 (Audio CD)
I`ve had this CD for 7 years,bought it at a local retail store,and I love it! This is an excellent compilation CD and there isnt a bad track on it. There is some outstanding horn playing on this colection! I tell ya,they just dont make music like this anymore! No wonder I continue to live in the 70s! Check out Ronald Bell`s cool synthesizer work on "summer madness"!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Those were the days.,
By
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 (Audio CD)
Ok, growin up in the nation's capital I remember going to the "Friday night" dance at the local community center and the dj put on "Kool & The Gang" (the first single). All of us were dancing. (jr high shcool dayz). Kool & The gang was puttin out some FONKAY Stuff man. I mean, "Who's gonna take the weight", "Chocolate Buttermilk" "Let the Music take Your Mind". And the drummer George was not bull crappin on those drums man. This is my favorite era of Kool & The Gang. I did not care from them after "Ladies night". Not hating "Celebrate" or the other songs but in my opinion they sounded like that thier funk card had been revoked. Of course "Get Down On It" was a great record, but nothing like the early days. My favorite is "Love The Life You Live". I love the entire song with it's jazz horn line and plusating beat. Those were the days.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Damn...,
By
This review is from: Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 (Audio CD)
Sometimes you have to go far and wide to find real funk. Sometimes it's right in front of your damn nose.
Kool and the Gang practically perfected funk music. Take the rawness of the James Brown sound and the polish of Parliament and you have K and the G distilled. In utopia everyone would own this album.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Essential,
By soonersoulbro (Massachusetts) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 (Audio CD)
This is the best of the "Best of's" by Kool & The Gang because it captures some of their best work (late 60s-mid 70s).Being from northern NJ (as are the members of Kool & The Gang), and also just a handful of years younger than the band's members, I know their music and it is near and dear to my heart. I grew up on Kool & The Gang. I had become disheartened with their 80s slick "discoey" sound and felt that they had completely sold out. I think that Kool's younger brother and group saxophonist Ronnie Bell (I think it's Khalis Bayyan now) would agree. He had always said that he preferred the band's jazzier/funkier sound. Their early stuff was the essence of funk. You read alot about what "experts/critics" say about funk and they always mention James Brown, and rightfully so. But Kool & The Gang was right there with him. (I'd also add Sly & The Family Stone and Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd St. Rhythm Band -- as late 60s funk pioneers.) James became funky with the seminal "Say it Loud..." in '68 -- and Kool & The Gang broke out in '69 with their self-titled single, then following up with "Kool's Back Again" and "The Gang's Back Again." My only regret with this CD is that none of these cuts is included, nor anything from their '73 "Good Times" LP. The comparison between James Brown's band, the J.B.'s, and Kool & The Gang are endless. Funky bass, great drums, rapid-fire horns. I think Kool and them might even have a little edge on keyboards and guitar. All in all, this CD is a must. Also worth seeking out is "Kool and the Gang LIVE at the Sex Machine" from 1971. Raw, live energy with great musicianship.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Funky, cool, jazzy...,
By
This review is from: Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 (Audio CD)
Essential for the casual Kool and the Gang fan. This CD contains many of their relatively early hits. It makes an excellent complement to their later work as contained in the "Millenium Collection" series.
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Best of Kool & The Gang: 1969-1976 by Kool & The Gang (Audio CD - 1993)
$13.98 $12.48
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