Sunday, April 10, 2022

War - The World Is A Ghetto (1972 us, brilliant funky soul jam psych, 40th anniversary expanded edition)



War was great—funky, bluesy, jazzy and meditative; their hits were jams edited into pop sensations. Their sound was unique: a thick stew of stone funk, deep bass lines, African percussion, jazz-R&B organ, Latin rhythms, free-form jazz and previously untested combinations, like harmonica and saxophone. Their vocals were earthy—sometimes weary, sometimes happy—with gospel-soul licks and group chants. By late 1972, when work began on the album The World Is A Ghetto, their grooves were already in the air. “Spill The Wine,” a collaboration with British blues-rock star Eric Burdon, had been a smash. Then came tours, two albums, and the hit “Slippin’ Into Darkness.”

The time was right. Self-contained groups, from Earth, Wind & Fire to multi-racial jam band the Allman Brothers, and personally expressive black singer-songwriters from Stevie Wonder to Bill Withers, were on the rise. Miles Davis and Marvin Gaye were experimenting, shaking loose of formula. War—seven guys from Compton and Long Beach in Southern California: Thomas “Papa Dee” Allen, on percussion; Harold Brown, drums; B.B. Dickerson, bass; Lonnie Jordan, keyboards; Charles Miller, saxophones; Lee Oskar, born in Denmark but living in L.A., harmonica; and Howard Scott, guitar—was in the middle of the mix.

The Ghetto album was the result of spirited rehearsals in Long Beach followed by two solid weeks of jam sessions at Crystal Industries studio in Los Angeles. Papa Dee provided the central theme—ghetto life has no boundaries, illustrated on the cover by a Rolls Royce with a flat tire. With no boundaries in the studio, the band drew on their many roots: their bittersweet title song, infused with jazz, fell together on take 36. “The Cisco Kid,” the album’s eventual pop centerpiece, was inspired by Scott’s fond memories of a popular television character, and solidified the band’s growing Chicano following. “Where Was You At” evolved from a syncopated New Orleans drum line, thanks to Brown’s recollections of their early Southwest tours. (“No jazz on this session,” he calls out on one take.) The immersive, spacey “Four Cornered Room” was inspired by Dickerson’s first experiments with hashish. “Beetles In A Bog,” from Oskar, is a jazz march. 

“City, Country, City” is the album’s longest jam, a beautiful, virtuosic performance spotlighting among others Miller’s flowing sax. Its cinematic feel owes a debt to its origin: as score for the Paramount film The Legend Of Nigger Charley, at a time when their peers Isaac Hayes, James Brown, Curtis Mayfield, Bobby Womack and Marvin Gaye were creating movie soundtracks. “[The studio] wasn’t giving us enough credit and money, so we took the song back,” Jordan told writer Barry Alfonso. “The movie didn’t make it that big, but our record did.” (John Bennings was the film’s eventual composer; Lloyd Price sang the theme song.)  “They just cooked,” said Jerry Goldstein, the group’s longtime produc¬er who had been through the music business wars with Jimi Hendrix and Sly Stone. “Then we’d carve out a 35- to 40-minute album from the jams.” 

Some of the LP’s ideas were not so much discarded as considered too long for the vinyl era. The chugging “Freight Train Jam” is a band tour-de-force in the vein of “City, Country, City.” “58 Blues” is more down-home. “War Is Coming” is a scalding rock-blues, a slower, early version of a funk jam the group would release five years later on Platinum Jazz. Each is included in this 40th anniver¬sary expanded edition. 

Although “The Cisco Kid” became a huge crossover hit, selling one million copies its first day of release, an edited version of “The World Is A Ghetto” was the album’s first single, and a bigger hit on the R&B/Soul singles chart. The audience was hungry for a messenger, according to Jordan. “Someone had to be the teacher or the preacher back then,” he further relayed to Alfonso. “We chose to be that.” Oskar thought the move was less intentional. “As far as being political and making heavy statements go, I think people were looking for that,” he said. “They wanted to believe that something they liked was meaningful. The music was the main thing.” 

War continued as a force through the 1970s, following this album with Deliver The Word, which includes the hit “Gypsy Man”; a double-live LP; the smashes “Why Can’t We Be Friends” and “Low Rider”; the disco hit “Galaxy”; and the soundtrack to Youngblood. Yet The World Is A Ghetto, the best-selling album of 1973, was the group’s only No. 1 Pop album. George Benson’s 1977 up-tempo version of the title song was one of many covers; nearly 20 years later the Texas rap group Geto Boys interpolated the original. “The Cisco Kid” has become a kind of perennial. “City, Country, City” is the go-to track to convert skeptics who’ve only heard the hits. 
War is still great. 
by Harry Weinger
Tracks
1. The Cisco Kid - 4:35
2. Where Was You At - 3:25
3. City, Country, City - 13:18
4. Four Cornered Room - 8:30
5. The World Is A Ghetto - 10:10
6. Beetles In The Bog - 3:51
7. Freight Train Jam 5:41
8. 58 Blues 5:29
9. War Is Coming (Blues Version) - 6:15
10.The World Is A Ghetto (Rehearsal Take) - 8:06
All songs by Howard Scott, B.B. Dickerson, Lonnie Jordan, Harold Brown, Papa Dee Allen, Charles Miller, Lee Oskar.  
Bonus tracks 7-10

War
*Lonnie Jordan - Organ, Piano, Timbales, Percussion, Vocals
*Howard Scott - Guitar, Percussion, Vocals
*B.B. Dickerson - Bass, Percussion, Vocals
*Harold Brown - Drums, Percussion, Vocals
*Papa Dee Allen - Congas, Bongos, Percussion, Vocals
*Charles Miller - Clarinet, Alto, Tenor, Baritone Saxophones, Percussion, Vocals
*Lee Oskar - Harmonica, Percussion, Vocals

Saturday, April 9, 2022

Jam Factory - Sittin' In The Trap (1970 us, essential soul psych brass rock)



Jam Factory was an American band from Syracuse, NY active 1970-1972. introducing Jam Factory at the time to a national audience on The Today Show, replete with Joe English - later a drummer for Paul McCartney and Wings losing a stick, and Earl Ford and Gene McCormick initiating a vicious side-to-side head bobbing that would become the band’s trademark. 

The mythology of the time had band manager, the late Joe Leonard, signing the contract while relaxing in a bathtub after Jam Factory had opened to a standing ovation when they appeared with Hot Tuna at the Fillmore East. Word was Columbia saw Jam Factory as a threat to the genre Sly and the Family Stone was establishing, and wanted to stash them away on the vinyl shelf.

With git-picker Mark Hoffman in "the fringe"!  Gracing the Hammond B-3 is Gene McCormick – so in the groove at the finale he nearly shakes his head off his shoulders. On the skins is Joe English who displays true matched-grip sensibilities - when he can hold on to his sticks! and awesome high vocal range. Not trying to miss the count Steve Marcone, on flugelhorn, vibes and trumpet and holding it all down is the late great Kent Defelice on bass.  The band played the Schaefer Music Festival in 1970. McCormick spent time as a band director and played with Marvin Gaye before moving into the mental health field. He is currently a chief clinician at Vermont’s Department of Corrections. 
Tracks
1. Tight Knit Group - 5:17
2. Sittin' In The Trap - 3:06
3. Trying To Recall (Mark Hoffmann) - 6:26
4. Didn't Know Me Then - 2:45
5. You Better Listen - 5:32
6. It's Your World - 11:47
7. Brothers Gemini (Mark Hoffmann, Steve Marcone) - 2:43
8. Mr. Slow (J. Houston) - 6:08
All compositions by Gene McCormick except where stated

Jam Factory
*Gene McCormick - Keyboards, Saxophone, Vocals 
*Kent DeFelice - Bass, Vocals
*Joe English - Percussion, Vocals
*Earl V. Ford, Jr. - Trombone, Vocals
*Mark Hoffmann - Guitar, Vocals 
*Steve Marcone - Flugelhorn, Trumpet, Vibraphone 

Related Act


 

Friday, April 8, 2022

Chelsea Beige - Mama, Mama, Let Your Sweet Bird Sing (1971 us, powerful brass classic rock)



When the Last Ritual disbanded, Allan Springfield, Kenneth Lehman, John Scarzello and Chris Efthmian together with Earl Ford, Stanford L. James III and Billy Schwartz, formed a new band by the name Chelsea Beige. They signed to EPIC, recorded and released one and only album titled "Mama, Mama, Let Your Sweet Bird Sing", in 1971. 

There's is music in this album. Music to replenish the constant rush of meandering tunes that many new groups perform on their first LP. For this reason this album is worthwhile. Perhaps another attraction here is the addition of brass, which appears to be after the fact but adds to the LP in certain parts. The songs themselves are high energy and have should receive more attraction.
Tracks
1. Heritage - 5:49
2. Cookers Tease - 3:50
3. Hung On The Line - 4:39
4. Fried Eggs And Bow Legs - 4:22
5. The Frost Is Coming - 3:32
6. With One Hand Tied - 4:07
7. Here And Now - 4:52
8. In Search Of The Hole - 9:08
All songs by Allan Springfield

Chelsea Beige
*Allan Springfield - Vocals, Piano
*Kenneth Lehman - Alto Sax, Clarinet, Backing Vocals
*John Scarzello - Trumpet, Fluegel Horn
*Chris Efthmian - Drums
*Stanford L. James III - Bass
*Billy Schwartz - Lead Guitar, Backing Vocals
With
*Earl Ford - Trombone
*Lloyd Michaels - Trumpet
*Dominick Aloi - Trumpet 

Related Act



 

Thursday, April 7, 2022

Buzzy Linhart - Buzzy (1972 us, incredible fusion rock)



There are two Buzzy Linhart albums entitled Buzzy, one released in 1969 on Philips, and this third solo release on Buddah records in 1972. There's a jazzy "Eye 1-2-C-U Shuffle," which could be the Electric Flag with Linhart on vocals. The band -- featuring Danny Trifan on bass, guest star Moogy Klingman on organ, future Steely Dan/Doobie Brothers session man supreme Jeff "Skunk" Baxter on acoustic and electric guitars, Ten Wheel Drive's Luther Rix, and mixing by Todd Rundgren -- creates what may be the most intimate of Linhart albums released on a major label. 

There's a great cover of Elton John and Bernie Taupin's "Take Me to the Pilot" with the equally great line "he's a virgin" with Buzzy quipping "aren't we all?." Interesting that Uni Records pushed much Elton John product out in this early-'70s period when Buddah had three Linhart discs in release (one on a subsidiary called Eleuthera Records, a band project called Music, with a majority of the songs written by Buzzy). On February 28, 2002, AMG spoke with the singer/songwriter's son, Xeno Linhart (note that the publishing company on some of the songs is Xeno Music, with Ascap as the Performing Rights Organization). Xeno claimed that "Apparently, shortly after recording The Time to Live Is Now, there was a drummer swap. Luther Rix and Kevin Ellman swapped bands so Luther and Bette Midler could be together, and bringing in an Indian drummer into the Trio to do the ragas seemed right. But Kevin left soon after to go with Moogy Klingman and become Utopia. All this in just a few months, and then there are the next sets of players. But the order of recording is not really the same as the order of release. 

There really are two albums called Buzzy. The 18-minute version of "Sing Joy" [is] on Buzzy Phillips 1969, later on Best of Buzzy Linhart (1972) and the more memorable 8:30 version [appears] on Buzzy Kama Sutra/Buddah 1972 The Black Album, as it is called for its mostly black cover (by photographer Ira Wexler). The first Buzzy is quite unique in its arrangements. Best of Buzzy (1972) on KamaSutra/Buddah is a repackaging of the Buzzy (Phillips) and other material. So, the two "Sing Joy" (tracks) show up in a few places. It is worth some study itself, as it was the first raga Buzzy wrote (1964), and then re-wrote a few times. It is also a major component of the 30-minute long live raga jam by Seventh Sons, "4 A.M. at Franks" (also released as "Raga," both on ESP Disks). We have restored and remastered the cut for inclusion on a collection of improvised one-take recordings to be called 'Avant Buzz.' 

So, there is a lot of Buzzy's material with the date 1972, but it was just a timing issue, and probably a mistake by record companies to flood the market with so much of his material all at once and not making it clear that some was recorded years earlier." On Barry Gordy's "You Got What It Takes" -- a hit for both Marv Johnson and the Dave Clark Five in the '60s, Linhart gives it a musician's treatment. Nothing on this album seems to be crafted with the charts in mind, though on "Rollin' On" Buzzy lifts melody and lines from Bacharach/David by fusing "What the World Needs Now" into his song. L. Luther Rix's "Boogaloother" is a delight with passages straight from the Ten Wheel Drive songbook. "Sing Joy" changes the mood, evolving from the percussive sounds into a rocking "Tutti Frutti" tracked live at Studio A of New York's Record Plant. The Black Album may be the least commercial of Buzzy's efforts, but it is solid musicianship and contains sounds that drew from, as well as inspired, past and future works of Ten Wheel Drive, Bette Midler, Utopia, Jimi Hendrix, and Steely Dan, and it is all quite staggering. 
by Joe Viglione
Tracks
1  Tornado (Buzzy Linhart, Artie Traum) - 2:28
2  Rollin’ On (Buzzy Linhart) - 3:20
3  You Got What It Takes (Berry Gordy, Gwen Gordy Fuqua, Tyran Carlo) - 2:44
4  Boogaloother Or Captain Hornbone’s Last Desperate Truck (Luther Rix) - 1:12
5  Sing Joy Tutti Frutti (Buzzy Linhart, Dona Calles, Dorothy La Bostrie, Richard Penniman) - 8:29
6  Take Me To The Pilot (Bernie Taupin, Elton John) - 5:00
7  Eye 1-2-C-U Shuffle (Buzzy Linhart) - 2:29
8  Tell Me True (Buzzy Linhart) - 3:50
9  Don’t You Pay Me No Mind (Buzzy Linhart) - 4:09

Musicians
*Buzzy Linhart - Vocals, Acoustic, Electric Guitars, Vibraphone, Marimba, Drums, Percussion, Piano
*Peter Ponzol - Woodwind, Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Flute
*Luther Rix - Drums, Congas, Timbales, Backing Vocals
*Jeff "Skunk" Baxter - Acoustic, Electric Guitars, Pedal Steel Guitar, Congas, Backing Vocals
*Danny Trifan - Bass, Organ, Backing Vocals, Clavinet, Harmonium, Percussion
*Mark "Moogy" Klingman - Keyboards, Organ, Piano 
*Peter Plansky - Tambourine


Wednesday, April 6, 2022

Out Of Focus - Not Too Late (1974 germany, fantastic jazz prog jam krautrock, 2000 remaster)



This set of five songs follows on the heels of their masterpiece Four Letter Monday Afternoon, and continues their jazzy, progressive rock style in as fine form as they ever have been in. The instrumentation: drums, bass, two guitars, sax, and a vocalist / sax / flute player. Their strengths lie both in the long instrumental sections and in the adventurous structures of the songs, which contain plenty of time changes and composed, thematic parts. 

Perhaps the only slightly duff moment on the album is the short “The Way I Know Her,” a 3 ½ minute acoustic guitar ballad that seems a bit dull for a band who practically doesn’t know what the word means. But it’s an insignificant point on a map of some of the finest German rock of the 70s. With good quality sound (for an archive anyway) and lengthy liner notes by guitarist Remigius Dreschler, this comes recommended to all fans of the German rock scene, especially those who like it on the jazzy side.
by Mike McLatchey,  2001-03-01
Tracks
1. That's Very Easy (Moran Neumüller) - 9:04
2. X (Remigius Drechsler) - 10:57
3. The Way I Know Her (Moran Neumüller) - 3:36
4. Y (Remigius Drechsler) - 7:51
5. Spanish Lines (Moran Neumüller) - 9:11

Out Of Focus
*Moran Neumüller - Vocals, Tenor, Soprano Saxes, Flute
*Remigius Drechsler - Guitars, Choir
*Klaus Spöri - Drums
*Stephan Wischeu - Bass
*Wolfgang Göhringer - Guitars, Choir
*Ingo Schmid-Neuhaus - Baritone, Alto Saxes



 

Monday, April 4, 2022

Rankin File - Mr. Sax (1973 uk / canada, wonderful acid folk rock)



Rankin File was a full-time band during 1971 and 1973, touring in UK and Europe, appearing in folk clubs, concert and festivals.

Ian Rankin was the main songwriter singer and also played guitar, he was born in Edinburgh Scotland, Rick Nickerson is from Canada, he was the bass player and did the backing vocals. 

Tony Mitchell was born in Blantyre and grew up in Edinburgh, he was the lead guitarist. Between 1971 and 1973 Rankin File recorded 2 albums, "Rankin File" released by Technicord Records and "Mr Sax" by Folk Heritage records.
Tracks
1. Me In A Leash - 2:58
2. Lost It On The Road - 5:55
3. Leaving Home - 3:51
4. Words And Wisdom - 2:51
5. Whispy (Tony Mitchell) - 2:00
6. Met Her On The Shap - 2:43
7. Carefully - 3:10
8. Mr Sax - 6:21
9. Call On Me - 3:17
10.Sense Of Kind - 4:21
Music and Lyrics by Iain Rankin except where stated

Rankin File
*Rick Nickerson - Electric Bass  
*Tony Mitchell - Electric, Acoustic Guitar
*Iain Rankin - Vocals, Guitar


 

Saturday, April 2, 2022

Simon Caine - Simon Caine (1970 canada, beatiful rhythm 'n' blues with jazzy folk psych shades)



Formed in the Bayview area of uptown Toronto in the Summer of Love, the band was originally called Simon Caine And The Catch. At that time Godfrey was a member of The Diplomats while Pendrith had played with several Toronto acts such as Luke and The Apostles, Livingston’s Journey and Ottawa’s Three’s A Crowd. With a solidified line-up, the abbreviated entity of Simon Caine recorded one self-titled album on RCA. 

The album’s liner notes were penned by famed journalist Ritchie Yorke and featured a song co-written by, then, concert promoter John Brower (who would finance and produce the legendary Festival Express cross-Canada train cavalcade). The band was managed by Bob Ezrin and Gary Muth (alongside Cat and Dixie Rump Roast featuring a young Eddie Schwartz) and often booked by Sigma Productions agent Michael Cohl – who would to on to found CPI, Brockham, and has recently been the world-tour promoter for the Rolling Stones. 

Pendrith would go on to a successful career as sideman to some of Canada’s most prestigious talents such as Bruce Cockburn and Murray McLauchlan; Shields still plays (piano, guitar, vocals) and lives in the New Market area outside of Toronto. 
by Gary Muth, Nick Warburton, Richard Wielusiewicz
Tracks
1. 100 Fat Hairs - 3:18
2. Left By The Riverside - 4:11
3. Scarlet Skies - 4:46
4. High Executioner - 2:49
5. Walked Out The Door (Dave Richardson, Pat Godfrey) - 3:48
6. Introspection (John Lawrence Brower) - 5:35
7. This Girl's Eyes - 2:44
8. Death Bed Lullabye - 3:46
9. Brown Paper Dream - 2:51
10.Leave It Up To You (Pat Godfrey) - 3:44
All songs by Peter Shields except where indicated

Simon Caine
*Peter Shields - Vocals
*Pat Godfrey - Keyboards
*Bill Palmer - Guitar
*Bruce Pennycook - Woodwinds
*Dennis Pendrith - Bass
*John Savage - Drums, Percussion
With
*Jim Campbell - Vocals
*Arnie Chycoski - Trumpet 
*David Stilwell - Trumpet 
*Eugene Watts - Trombone 
*Russ Little - Trombone

Friday, April 1, 2022

Silberbart - 4 Times Sound Razing (1971 germany, solid heavy prog underground power acid drenched, 2012 remaster)



Silberbart was an underground heavy progressive power trio from Hamburg. The album contained just four songs: 'Chub Chub Cherry' (a short heavy rock song like a freaky Cream), 'Brain Brain' (16 minutes of acid nightmares, continuously shifting tempo in amphetamine-driven mayhem), 'God' (a much more melodic attempt with powerful guitar arrangement, sounding like Black Sabbath meet Hendrix with a collective paranoia) and 'Head Tear Of The Drunken Sun' (finished at all with 12 minutes of hazardous power trio pyrotechnics). 

This is an extreme album in many ways: the raw power, the cranky vocals, the restless arrangements, not forgetting the ugly silver gnome on the front sleeve. For the first time the history of Silberbart is told by band leader Hajo Teschner and there are many rare photos of the group.
Tracks
1. Chub Chub Cherry - 4:27
2. Brain Brain - 16:19
3. God - 10:11
4. Head Tear Of The Drunken Sun - 12:01
All compositions by Hajo McTeshy

Silberbart 
*Werner Klug - Bass
*Peter Bahrens - Drum, Percussion
*Hajo Teschner - Vocal, Guitars


 

Thursday, March 31, 2022

The Wailers - Walk Thru The People (1968 us, exceptional psych rock)



Given the number of talents early-'60s garage outfits that came out of the Northwest, it's surprising that Tacoma's The Wailers are often forgotten. One of the regions most talented and versatile bands.

By the late 1960s virtually every band in existence seemed duty sworn to recorded a psychedelic album.  With a line up consisting of keyboardists Ron Gardner and Kent Morrill, bassist Buck Ormsby, drummer Dave Roland, and lead guitarist Denny Weaver, the late era Wailers were no exception; their contribution to the idiom taking the form of 1968's Al DeMartino produced "Walk Thru the People".  Unlike 1966's "Outburst", this time around most of the ten tracks were band originals - Gardner and Morrill credited with the majority of songs. 

The interesting thing was that viewed as a marketing move (complete with rear panel Buddha quote), rather than a true artistic statement the results were surprisingly impressive.  While nothing here was what you'd consider to be artistically groundbreaking, all ten tracks offered up an enjoyable mix of psych and commercial touches.  Highlights included 'Busy Man', a blazing cover of the classic 'Smokestack Lightning and the fuzz propelled 'You Can Fly'. Bell tapped the latter for a single 'You Can Fly' b/w 'Thinking Out Loud' (Bell catalog number 694).
Bad-Cat
Tracks
1. Walk Thru The People (Ron Gardner) - 0:52
2. Busy Man (Kent Morrill) - 2:51
3. Thinkin' Out Loud (Kent Morrill, Ron Gardner) - 3:25
4. Suddenly (Ron Gardner, Kent Morrill) - 4:32
5. You Can Fly (Ron Gardner, Kent Morrill) - 3:10
6. Early Mornin' Hour (Denny Weaver, Kent Morrill) - 3:05
7. Just Friends (Woods) - 3:28
8. Smokestack Lightning (Chester Burnett) - 5:50
9. I Can't Tell You (Andy Di Martino, Buck Ormsby, Denny Weaver) - 2:24
10.Walk Thru The People (Ron Gardner) 2:42

The Wailers
*Ron Gardner - Saxophone, Vocals
*Kent Morrill - Keyboards, Vocals
*John "Buck" Ormsby - Bass, Backing Vocals
*Dave Roland - Drums, Vocals
*Denny Weaver - Guitar


Tuesday, March 29, 2022

Gotham - Pass The Butter (1972 us, outstanding funky jazz brass rock)



Gotham was an American brass-rock/soul band from NYC that released the album Pass the Butter on Motown-subsidiary Natural Resources in 1972. 

Gotham, alternately known as the New York Street Band, came together in 1971 when veteran saxophonists Alfred “Peewee” Ellis and Frank Vicari teamed with trumpeters John Catchell and John Eckert, both fresh off a stint with Ten Wheel Drive.

Ellis did a five year (1965–69) stint in the James Brown Revue, where he co-wrote hits like “Cold Sweat,” “The Chicken,” and “Say It Loud – I’m Black and I’m Proud.” During 1970/71, he played on albums by soul singer Bobby Lester, jazz saxist Hank Crawford, and Bahamian musician Exuma.

Vicari spent the prior decade backing big band leader Maynard Ferguson, followed by a stint with Woody Herman and His Swinging Herd. In 1970, he partook in the jazz-psych one-off The Albert. He then played on the 1971 Kudo release From a Whisper to a Scream by soul singer Esther Phillips. As Gotham got underway, he played on the 1972 albums Beer Cans On the Moon by folkster Ed Sanders and the eponymous jazz-rock double-album by White Elephant, produced by Mike Mainieri.

Gatchell played on the 1970 UA release Spectrum by jazz drummer Les DeMerle. With Eckert, Gatchell played on the 1970/71 albums Brief Replies by brass-rockers Ten Wheel Drive and the eponymous fourth album by singer/songwriter Cris Williamson. They both played alongside Vicari on the 1971 Esther Phillips release (Gatchell also played on her 1972 album Alone Again, Naturally). Meanwhile, Gatchell and Ellis locked horns on the 1971 Kama Sutra release Do Wah Nanny by Exuma.

Eckert played on 1969 jazz titles by Paul Desmond and the American Brass Quintet, the latter culminating a five-year stint. He also notched credits on 1970/71 albums by PJ Colt and Carol Hall. In parallel with Gotham, he played on the 1972 Flying Dutchman release Blues and the Soulful Truth by jazz singer Leon Thomas.

The other members of Gotham were guitarist Link Chamberlin, bassist Chris Qualles, drummer James Strassburg, and singer/guitarist Schuylar “Sky” Ford. Chamberlin was a member of ’60s surf rockers The Orchids. More recently, he played on albums by Giant, The Rascals, and the Ernie Wilkins Orchestra. Strassburg hailed from brass-rockers Gas Mask, which issued one album, Their First Album, on Tonsil Records in 1970. The others were relative newcomers to the scene.

Gotham signed to Natural Resources, a sublabel of Motown, and recorded their singular album at MoWest Studios in Los Angeles. The album, Pass the Butter, hit shelves in 1972. It features 11 songs: two written by Ellis (“Use It or Lose It,” “Moon”) and six by Chamberlin, including “Why Doesn’t the Sun Shine,” “Ease My Mind,” and “Talkin’ ‘Bout.” Ford contributed “They Made Me An Outlaw.” They also tackle numbers by Otis Smith (“Sittin’ On a Mountain”) and Billy Vera (“Behind the Wall”).

Pass the Butter was produced by Tom Wilson (The Animals, The Velvet Underground, Mothers of Invention) and engineered by MoWest newcomer Larry Miles, who worked on concurrent label projects by Diana Ross and the Four Seasons. The cover features an illustration by Tim Clark of Rod Dyer, Inc. It shows an encircled image with ambiguous subject matter: apparently two sentient slices of toast, in the shape of hearts, swiving and sweating in a vintage bed. The back shows a photo collage of the eight members with diagonal credit text. In the Netherlands, Pass the Butter was issued on Motown’s Rare Earth division.

Gatchell and Eckert played on the 1973 Paramount Records release by Joel Kaye and His New York Neophonic Orchestra. That same year, Gatchell rejoined Ten Wheel Drive for their eponymous fourth album, released on Capitol. He also played on 1973–75 albums by George Benson, Ronnie Foster, Esther Phillips, John Tropea, and Eumir Deodato.

In 1975, Gatchell interacted once more with Ellis on the Roulette release Out Among ‘Em by Love Childs Afro Cuban Blues Band, produced by Michael Zager. Gatchell then played on 1976 albums by Chick Corea (The Leprechaun) and singer/songwriter David Forman. During said timeframe, Eckert played on albums by Johnny Hammond, Michael Mantler, and different titles by Deodato.

Vicari played on 1973–75 albums by Ferguson, T-Bone Walker, Blue Mitchell, John Lennon, the Manhattan Transfer, and ex-Mountain man Leslie West. In 1976, he played on the Muse Records release Slow Down, Baby, the singular album by soul-funk singer and songwriter Rickie Boger.

Ellis played on mid-’70s titles by Sonny Stitt and Reuben Wilson. As Pee Wee Ellis, he released the jazz-funk album Home In the Country on Savoy Records in 1977. He spent many subsequent years as a musical director for Van Morrison.

Strassburg played on High On You, the 1975 debut solo album by Sly Stone. Behind Ellis, he drummed alongside Idris Muhammad and Bernard Purdie on Home In the Country. In 1983, Strassburg played on the jazz-pop album So Nobody Else Can Hear by Jimmy Cobb with Freddie Hubbard and Gregory Hines.

Chamberlin, as Linc Chamberland, cut a 1977 solo album, A Place Within, on Muse. In 1983, Chamberland collaborated with NW contrabassist David Friesen on the Muse release Yet to Come.

Ellis, Strassburg, and Chamberland all played on the 1977 A&M/Horizon album Light’n Up, Please! by reedist David Liebman.

Gotham’s manager, Marty Perellis, became a road manager for Frank Zappa during the mid-1970s. He’s depicted on the cover of the Mother’s 1973 release Over-nite Sensation.
Jazz-Rock'n'Soul
Tracks
1. Sittin On A Mountain (Otis Smith) - 3:26
2. Ease My Mind - 3:56
3. Why Doesnt The Sun Shine - 3:09
4. Behind The Wall (Billy Vera) - 5:51
5. Use It Or Lose It (Alfred Ellis) - 3:29
6. Window Pane (D. Riley, Link Chamberland) - 7:12
7. Moon (Alfred Ellis) - 1:23
8. They Made Me An Outlaw (Sky Ford) - 2:52
9. Daddy Left Home - 2:46
10.Talkin' 'Bout - 4:58
11.Gettin High - 3:25
All songs by Link Chamberland except where stated

Gotham
*Schuyler “Sky” I. Ford - Vocals
*Frank Vicari - Saxophone
*Pee Wee Ellis - Saxophone
*John Eckert - Trumpet
*John Gatchell - Trumpet
*Link Chamberland - Guitar
*Chris Qualles - Bass
*Jimmy Strassburg - Drums

Related Act