Wattstax (CD) ~ Various Artists Cover Art

Music from the Wattstax Festival & Film (CD)

By: Various Artists


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Product Description


Track Listing

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DISC 1 for Music from the Wattstax Festival & Film (CD) Album By Various Artists
1   Salvation Symphony - Dale Warren & The Wattstax '72 Orchestra
2   Introduction - Rev. Jesse Jackson
3   Lift Every Voice And Sing - Kim Weston
4   Heavy Make You Happy (Sha-Na-Boom-Boom) - The Staple Singers
5   Are You Sure - The Staple Singers
6   I Like the Things About Me - The Staple Singers
7   Respect Yourself - The Staple Singers
8   I'll Take You There - The Staple Singers
9   Precious Lord, Take My Hand - Deborah Manning
10   Better Get a Move On - Bettye Crutcher
11   Them Hot Pants - Lee Sain
12   Wade In Water - Little Sonny
13   I Forget To Be Your Lover - William Bell
14   Explain It To Her Mama - The Temprees
15   I've Been Lonely (For So Long) - Frederick Knight
16   Pin the Tail On the Donkey - The Newcomers
17   Knock On Wood - Eddie Floyd
 
DISC 2 for Music from the Wattstax Festival & Film (CD) Album By Various Artists
1   Peace Be Still - The Emotions
2   Old Time Religion - Golden
3   Lying On the Truth - The Rance Allen Group
4   Up Above My Head - The Rance Allen Group
5   Son Of Shaft/Feel It - The Bar-Kays
6   In the Hole - The Bar-Kays
7   I Can't Turn You Loose - The Bar-Kays
8   Introduction - David Porter Show
9   Ain't That Loving You (For More Reasons Than One) - David Porter
10   Can't See You When I Want To - David Porter
11   Reach Out And Touch (Sombody's Hand) - David Porter
12   Niggas - Richard Pryor
13   Arrest/Lineup - Richard Pryor
14   So I Can Love You - The Emotions
15   Show Me How - The Emotions
 
DISC 3 for Music from the Wattstax Festival & Film (CD) Album By Various Artists
1   Open the Door To Your Heart - Little Milton
2   Backfield In Motion - Mel & Tim
3   Steal Away - Johnnie Taylor
4   Killing Floor - Albert King
5   Pick Up the Pieces - Carla Thomas
6   I Like What You're Doing (To Me) - Carla Thomas
7   B-A-B-Y - Carl Thomas
8   Gee Whiz (Look At His Eyes) - Carla Thomas
9   I Have a God Who Loves - Carla Thomas
10   Breakdown, The - Rufus Thomas
11   Do the Funky Chicken - Rufus Thomas
12   Do the Funky Penguin - Rufus Thomas
13   I Don't Know What This World Is Coming To - The Soul Children
14   Hearsay - The Soul Children
15   Theme From Shaft - Isaac Hayes
 


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Review

Entertainment Weekly (p.78) - "A palpable energy elevates many of the performances, including Louise McCord's funk-gospel workout 'Better Get a Move On'..." -- Grade: A-

Title Note

In 1972, Stax Records was second only to Motown as America's most successful black-owned record company, and as part of an ambitious bid to grow into a multimedia empire, the Memphis-based label had opened offices in Los Angeles and was eager to announce its presence in the community. The Watts Summer Festival was an annual celebration staged in the beleaguered Watts neighborhood of L.A., a mostly African-American community that had been scarred by race riots in the late '60s, and in 1972 Stax did something special for the occasion: it staged an all-day concert at the Los Angeles Coliseum on the final day of the Watts festival, with nearly every artist on the Stax roster appearing live on-stage and tickets priced at only a dollar. Over 110, 000 people attended the show, a camera crew was on hand to capture the proceedings for a feature film, and a mobile recording truck committed the whole show to tape. Two albums featuring material from the Wattstax festival appeared in 1972 and 1973, but both contained studio recordings along with material from the concert, and Wattstax: Music from the Wattstax Festival and Film is a three-CD set that brings together the lion's share of the previously released live material from the show along with a handful of previously unreleased performances recorded that day. This set tries to give a sense of the size, shape, and flow of the massive concert, opening with "Salvation Symphony" (a grand-scale orchestral piece written by Dale Warren, who led the big band that backed most of the performers) and an invocation by the Rev. Jesse Jackson, and closing with headliner Isaac Hayes winding up the crowd with "Theme from Shaft." Along the way, the festival attempted to showcase the breadth of both the African-American musical experience and the Stax artists, touching on gospel, blues and several flavors of rhythm & blues, though the jazz acts which appeared at the show didn't make the cut for this set. While these three discs feel a bit overstuffed, there's a wealth of memorable music here and some pleasant surprises, too.

Despite the absence of Yvonne Staples, who was sick that day, the Staple Singers turn in an engaging and deeply moving set, especially on "I Like the Things About Me," and while Lee Sain, William Bell, and Eddie Floyd only get one song each, they all make the most of their time on-stage. The Emotions offer a mesmerizing take on "Peace Be Still" in a performance recorded at an L.A. storefront church. The Bar-Kays tear into a deliriously funky set with the frantic "Son of Shaft" and "I Can't Turn You Loose," and David Porter makes a rare live appearance showing he was as strong a vocalist as he was a songwriter. The Rance Allen Group's strong gospel-funk is impressive, as is the Soul Children's furious "I Don't Know What This World Is Coming To" (the latter nearly steal the show with their second number, the raucous "Hearsay"). Carla Thomas sounds like soul royalty in her five-song set, and her dad Rufus Thomas throws the party into high gear as he and his band percolate through "The Funky Chicken" and "The Breakdown." Isaac Hayes was clearly the star attraction, and the crowd goes nuts as he lays into "Theme from Shaft," and it's a shame we don't get to hear more of him, though his Wattstax set appears in full on an album of its own. As good as the music is, and most of it's very good, what's most special about this collection is the sense of optimism and hope in a society struggling with the social ills of the early '70s that pervades these performances; at a time when the hope born of the Civil Rights Movement was starting to fade and cynicism was taking its place, Jesse Jackson's chant of "I am somebody," taken up by the 110,000 in attendance, sounds like a defiant cry for a better world, and that higher purpose makes this more than just another recording of classic '70s soul and funk, but a celebration of both life and music. ~ Mark Deming

As it is with the multiple Woodstock soundtrack albums, it's hard to keep up with what's on the soundtrack discs bearing the name Wattstax in the title, counting the two initial volumes that came out in the 1970s, and now this three-CD package. Making matters more confusing is how, as the title of this set infers, the albums mix music from the festival with music from, or somehow associated with, the film Wattstax (which had some scenes, musical and otherwise, that actually didn't take place at the Wattstax festival itself). And to make matters yet more confusing, Music from the Wattstax Festival & Film, for all its generous length, isn't simply a combination of the Wattstax music that appeared in the '70s on either Wattstax, The Living Word: Live Concert Music from the Original Movie Soundtrack or Wattstax: The Living Word, Vol. 2. A lot of tracks from those albums do appear on these three CDs, but some don't; plus, Music from the Wattstax Festival & Film adds 17 previously unreleased songs, as well as one (Isaac Hayes' "Theme from Shaft") that previously appeared on Isaac Hayes at Wattstax. It's something of a head-hurting exercise to keep it all straight. But ultimately, the most important thing to bear in mind is that Music from the Wattstax Festival & Film is the best, and certainly most bountiful, of the Wattstax-spawned discs, though it's marred by the exclusion of some previously issued tracks from the other Wattstax releases.

Most of this was indeed recorded at the Wattstax festival on August 20, 1972, featuring live soul from many artists on the Stax label. Most of the best performances from the previous Wattstax iterations were retained, among them well-recorded selections by the Staple Singers (whose four songs include "Respect Yourself" and "I'll Take You There"), Eddie Floyd (doing "Knock on Wood"), the Bar-Kays (whose nine-minute "Son of Shaft/Feel It" is a highlight), Albert King, Carla Thomas, Johnnie Taylor (with an eight-minute "Steal Away"), the Emotions, and Rufus Thomas. Some of the best cuts, however, are found in the dynamic previously unreleased material by lesser-known Stax artists, like Louise McCord's "Better Get a Move On," Lee Sain's "Them Hot Pants," Little Sonny's funk-blues "Wade in the Water," the Newcomers' Jackson Five-like "Pin the Tail on the Donkey," and Mel & Tim's hit "Backfield in Motion." The addition of some gospel songs also reflects the breadth of music at the festival, though the gospel tunes aren't as inspiring as the soul ones. On the whole, it's an important document of some of the better, live-'70s soul recordings. Arguably, however, some of the less interesting, previously unissued songs, should have been excluded to make room for some tracks by Albert King, Johnny Taylor, and Little Milton that showed up on the two Wattstax, the Living Word volumes, but somehow didn't make it onto Music from the Wattstax Festival & Film. ~ Richie Unterberger



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