Funky Skull

Funky Skull

by Melvin Jackson
Funky Skull

Funky Skull

by Melvin Jackson

Vinyl LP(Long Playing Record)

$31.99 
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Overview

Bassist Melvin Jackson has exactly one album in his catalog as a leader (he spent most of his time playing with Eddie Harris). But man, that's all he needed. Pumping his upright through a Maestro G-2 filter box, a Boomerang, an Echoplex, and an Am peg amp, he made that thing sound like something from outer space while keeping it firmly in the groove of the corner bar on Front Street. Gimmicky? That's what they once said about Roland Kirk playing multiple horns at once, too. As for the naysayers who think of this as a novelty, consider the heavies in his band: Roscoe Mitchell, Leo Smith, Lester Bowie, Phil Upchurch, Pete Cosey, Morris Jennings, Jodie Christian, Billy Hart, Byron Bowie, Steve Galloway, and a whole lot of others. All of these cats were heavyweights in their own right. What does Funky Skull sound like? Psychedelic, funky soul-jazz and a whole lot more. Jackson bowed his bass a well as plucked it depending on what the tune needed. Produced in Chicago by Robin McBride and originally released on the Limelight label, it marked an era of exploration and Jackson was on the ground floor of the space station. There was only one requirement: the groove had to be in the pocket and the beat had to be on the one. There are nine tunes here; Jackson wrote or co-wrote four, including the two-part title cut. He took pages from both Harris' serious soul-jazz book and James Brown's funky one. There are vocals on these tracks, but they amount to little more than accents on the repetitive rhythmic lines being laid down. It's all backbone-slipping, hard, electric jazz funk from the pre-fusion era. "Funky Skull, Pts 1 & 2" and Eddie Harris' "Cold Duck Time, Pts. 1 & 2" were actually spun on jukeboxes throughout the Midwest and in New York in beer gardens, at lunch counters, in bowling alleys, etc. In other words, these jams got heard and grooved to by ordinary folks, not just jazz heads. The nickels got pumped for a reason. Some cuts here, such as "Dance of the Dervish," have pretty sophisticated arrangements and fell more firmly in the jazz camp, but were outside it, too -- especially the Echoplexed bass solo. Elsewhere, "Everybody Loves My Baby," which is a workout for hand percussion, hi hat, and bowed electronically affected bass, was out there on the launching pad in terms of classification. It gets brought back in from the cold by Jackson's "Say What," with the horns playing as a section with striated harmony and a subtle B-3 played by some uncredited genius who kept the funk lines clipped and tight; it was Jackson's cue for wrapping himself all over the groove while never leaving the pocket entirely. The bleating saxophone solo tells you that something else is being aspired to and delivered: it pushes the melody line way out the window, but the rhythm section never loses it for a second. "Funky Doo," written by Jackson and producer Robin McBride, rocks it up while being a dance tune for a sweaty after-hours party. The set ends with "Silver Cycles," written by Jackson and Harris. Clocking in at over nine minutes, it begins with a small piano vamp and Jackson playing glissando bowed bass before flutes, a trap kit, and other horns wind their way in. Jackson's bass gets double-tracked, finding the expansive groove being laid down and extrapolated into harmonic wonderland. Textures by the horn section, and the lower edges of the bass and piano registers are expounded upon, with the horn playing in high, tinny fashion, creating a huge space in the middle for anything to happen. But it stays on the subtle side with all sorts of interaction going on between the instruments crisscrossing channels and parts before fading into the night. Funky Skull is a one of a kind listening experience. It's fun, wildly inventive, freewheeling and complex all at the same time. This is one of those records that one has to hear to believe, and once heard, has to have as a permanent part in your collection. [Luckily for us, the fine folks over at Dusty Groove in Chicago reissued this Limelight classic on CD in 2007.] ~ Thom Jurek

Product Details

Release Date: 12/08/2023
Label: Verve
UPC: 0602455798879
Rank: 28382

Album Credits

Performance Credits

Melvin Jackson   Primary Artist,Bass (Acoustic),Bass
Tom Hall   Trumpet
Phil Upchurch   Fender Rhodes,Guitar,Bass (Electric),Guitar (Rhythm)
Soud Of Veeling   Vocals
Byron Bowie   Flute,Flute,Sax (Tenor)
Tobie Wynn   Sax (Baritone)
James Tatu   Sax (Tenor)
Doinald Towns   Trumpet
Roscoe Mitchell   Flute,Sax (Alto),Sax (Baritone)
Billy Hart   Drums
Jodie Christian   Piano,Arp Echoplex,Organ (Hammond)
Leo Smith   Trumpet,Flugelhorn
Lester Bowie   Trumpet,Flugelhorn
Pete Cosey   Guitar
Bobby Pittman   Soloist,Sax (Tenor)
Tom T. Hall   Trumpet
The Sound of Feeling   Vocals
Morris Jennings   Drums
Melvin "Lil' Son" Jackson   Arp Echoplex,Bass (Acoustic)
Maurice Miller   Vocals,Soloist
Steven Galloway   Trombone
Toby Wynn   Sax (Baritone)

Technical Credits

Hank Cicalo   Audio Engineer,Engineer
Bruce Swedien   Audio Engineer,Remixing
Brian Christian   Audio Engineer,Remixing
Murray Allen   Audio Engineer,Engineer
Robin McBride   Audio Production,Composer,Producer,Liner Notes
Chris Kalis   Reissue Producer
Stuart Walder   Audio Engineer,Engineer,Remixing
Spencer Williams   Composer
Jack Palmer   Composer
Eddie Harris   Composer
Melvin Jackson   Composer
Sidney Clare   Composer
Con Conrad   Composer
Tom Staebler   Design
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