One of his last efforts with the
Mizell production team was definitely not his most critically acclaimed, but
Caricatures continued
Byrd's commercial winning streak that started years previous with 1969's
Kofi and such '70s
Blue Note classics as
Places and Spaces,
Black Byrd, and
Street Lady. His last release for the label was no exception to the formula set forth from the previously mentioned albums. One of
Caricatures strongest features is the level of musicianship from start to finish.
Byrd recruited some of the top '70s
soul-jazz musicians, such as
Gary Bartz,
Alphonse Mouzon,
David T Walker, and future '80s
R&B hitmaker
Patrice Rushen, to help complement the musicianship laid down by
Byrd and the
Mizell brothers. The atmosphere is light and soulful, with musicians bouncing off one another for ideas that shift closer towards
R&B while maintaining a sense of
jazz ideals. While there is no truly memorable anthemic release or hit to speak of,
Caricatures serves its primary purpose of being a
jazz fusion record to make both people dance and purists wince at the notion that
jazz can fuse with other elements and achieve success. ~ Rob Theakston