Tuesday 1 September 2009

Lamont Dozier “Peddlin’ Music On The Side”

Lamont Dozier

Peddlin’ Music On The Side
( LP Warner Bros. Records, 1977 )
Catalog # BS 3039

Tracklisting:
A1 Sight For Sore Eyes (5:05)
A2 What Am I Gonna Do ‘Bout You (Girl) (The Coke Song) (6:24)
A3 Break The Ice (4:50)
A4 Tear Down The Walls (4:02)
B1 Going Back To My Roots (9:45)
B2 Family (4:41)
B3 Peddlin’ Music On The Side (4:51)

Personnel & Credits:
Backing Vocals – Waters, The
Bass – Wilton Felder
Drums – James Gadson
Electric Piano – Ronnie Coleman
Engineer – Rik Pekkonen
Guitar – Arthur Adams , David T. Walker , Ray Parker Jr. , Roland Bautista , Steve Beckmeyer
Mastered By – Bernie Grundman
Percussion – Bill Summers , Paulinho Da Costa
Piano [Acoustic] – Joe Sample
Producer – Steward Levine
Synthesizer – Michael Boddicker
Arranged By – Lamont Dozier

Review:
For his second Warner Bros. LP, Peddlin’ Music on the Side, Motown veteran Lamont Dozier turns the production reigns over to Stewart Levine (The Crusaders, Minnie Riperton’s Adventures in Paradise, Hugh Masekela). Pianist Joe Sample & bassist Wilton Felder of The Crusaders are on hand to make stellar contributions, giving Dozier his most jazz flavored album. As usual with a Lamont Dozier album, you have the top musicians, singers, arrangers, and engineering staff involved. The propulsive album opener, “Sight for Sore Eyes,” opens with a striking string and horn arrangement. For the chugging, low key “What Am I Gonna Do ’bout You (Girl)” Dozier slyly caresses the lyric in a manner that suggests that he thinks that “his bad girl is good.” “Break the Ice” bops along on thumping bass and soft conga. The inspiring “Tear Down the Walls” has lyrics that admonish: “there’s no hope unless we change within/ let protect our let’s be friends/ peace on earth and harmony/ it could be a reality/ it’s up to you and me/ tear down the walls.” The Afro-centric disco hit “Going Back to My Roots” was co-arranged by Hugh Masekela and has a message that most can relate to: “zipping up my boots/ going back to my roots/ to the place of my birth/ back down to earth/ ain’t talkin’ ’bout no roots in the land/ talkin’ ’bout the roots in the man.” The 12″ version of “Going Back to My Roots” is a collectible and the song was a 1981 disco hit for RCA Records group Odyssey (”Native New Yorker”). The heart-tugging, dramatically arranged “Family” paints a picture of the family under attack. The warm-toned ballad “Peddlin’ Music on the Side” lists the travails of trying to make it in the music business. This album stands as one of Lamont Dozier’s finest works.
By Ed Hogan (AMG)

By Celo

1 comment:

right stuffer said...

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