Pucho And The Latin Soul Brothers - Cold Shoulder (1968/2000)
Artist: Pucho, The Latin Soul Brothers
Title: Cold Shoulder
Year Of Release: 1968/2000
Label: Prestige
Genre: Latin, Soul, Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 01:17:49
Total Size: 482 / 182 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Cold Shoulder
Year Of Release: 1968/2000
Label: Prestige
Genre: Latin, Soul, Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 01:17:49
Total Size: 482 / 182 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01 - Sunny 05:23
02 - No One Knows 04:58
03 - Cold Shoulder 04:27
04 - Big Stick 04:22
05 - Left In The Cold 02:53
06 - Payin' Dues 02:58
07 - I Can't Stop Loving You 03:33
08 - Let Love Find You 03:15
09 - Georgia On My Mind 03:52
10 - Dateline 06:32
11 - Bim 07:16
12 - How Did It Happen 02:50
13 - Friendship Train 05:07
14 - Jamilah 06:17
15 - The Spokerman 05:11
16 - Cloud Nine 08:55
The 16 tracks on this 78-minute CD are drawn from four Prestige LPs that Pucho and the gang cut between 1967 and 1970: Big Stick!, Heat, Dateline, and Jungle Fire. As there were already a few Pucho comps out there when this appeared in 2000, you could be forgiven for being wary of track duplication. Happily, however, this does not overlap at all with Fantasy's other Pucho anthologies (Tough! and Legends of Acid Jazz), and has only four songs from the U.K. Ace import The Best of Pucho & the Latin Soul Brothers. It can't be readily determined why the material on Cold Shoulder was skipped over in favor of the songs on previous reissues; it's just about as good, though perhaps a hair less fine. It is, like those other collections, outstanding boogaloo music, indeed rating among the finest combinations of Latin, soul, and jazz sounds ever made. This a little more weighted toward tracks with a soul-pop bent (a few even have strings), including covers of "Sunny," "I Can't Stop Loving You," and "Georgia on My Mind." It also has a fairly high quotient of original compositions (usually penned or co-penned by pianist/arranger Neal Creque). Plus there's a higher-than-normal quotient of numbers with vocals by Jackie Soul, who sings on almost everything taken from the Big Stick! and Heat! albums. His raw, rasping style might not find favor among some soul purists, but fits the band's adventurous, sometimes irreverent approach well. In contrast, the selections from Pucho & the Latin Soul Brothers and Jungle Fire! turn to instrumental arrangements with a stronger jazz element, ranging from the near-easy listening "How Did It Happen" (with its watery organ) to some steamy James Brown-ish funk on their nine-minute version of "Cloud 9."
Henry "Pucho" Brown was the leader of the funky electric boogaloo movement that nondancers call Latin jazz. A master of the timbales, Pucho enlisted his Brothers for a string of slammin' Prestige albums back in the '60s, but their brand of Latin grooves passed when disco rose in the '70s. So Brown broke up the band and took on work playing for tourists in the Catskills. Fortunately, the acid jazz craze of the '90s rightfully held Pucho & His Latin Soul Brothers in the highest esteem, and the band is again active and recording. Cold Shoulder, however, collects 16 classic tracks from Dateline, Big Stick, Heat!, and Jungle Fire!, all of which were recorded in the group's golden era. Of particular note is singer Jackie Soul--he certainly studied his Otis Redding, and is a force equal to the hard-hitting mambo and salsa beats that were this band's stock-in-trade. Sadly, the singer has passed away, thus making these already vital sides that much more important. --Tad Hendrickson
Henry "Pucho" Brown was the leader of the funky electric boogaloo movement that nondancers call Latin jazz. A master of the timbales, Pucho enlisted his Brothers for a string of slammin' Prestige albums back in the '60s, but their brand of Latin grooves passed when disco rose in the '70s. So Brown broke up the band and took on work playing for tourists in the Catskills. Fortunately, the acid jazz craze of the '90s rightfully held Pucho & His Latin Soul Brothers in the highest esteem, and the band is again active and recording. Cold Shoulder, however, collects 16 classic tracks from Dateline, Big Stick, Heat!, and Jungle Fire!, all of which were recorded in the group's golden era. Of particular note is singer Jackie Soul--he certainly studied his Otis Redding, and is a force equal to the hard-hitting mambo and salsa beats that were this band's stock-in-trade. Sadly, the singer has passed away, thus making these already vital sides that much more important. --Tad Hendrickson