The Blackbyrds - Flying Start (1974) [Vinyl]

Artist: The Blackbyrds
Title: Flying Start
Year Of Release: 1974
Label: Fantasy/Prestige/Milestone QuadraDisc – FPM-4004
Genre: Jazz-Funk, Funk
Quality: APE (image + .cue) [192kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 39:01
Total Size: 1.74 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Flying Start
Year Of Release: 1974
Label: Fantasy/Prestige/Milestone QuadraDisc – FPM-4004
Genre: Jazz-Funk, Funk
Quality: APE (image + .cue) [192kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 39:01
Total Size: 1.74 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
A1 – I Need You (05:30)
A2 – The Baby (05:17)
A3 – Love Is Love (04:46)
A4 – Blackbyrds' Theme (04:03)
B1 – Walking In Rhythm (04:13)
B2 – Future Children, Future Hopes (04:41)
B3 – April Showers (03:49)
B4 – Spaced Out (06:11)
Review by Robert Gabriel
For their second album, Flying Start, the Blackbyrds whipped up yet another healthy menu of proto-disco music. Complete with crispy drum breaks, relentless basslines, chicken-scratch guitar, majestic horns, and meandering clavinet, their dance-oriented brand of funky jazz is captured at its finest on tracks such as "The Baby," "Blackbyrds' Theme," and "Spaced Out." Meanwhile, breezier songs such as "Love Is Love," "Walking in Rhythm," and "April Showers" express the more melodic side of the Blackbyrds' repertoire. Produced by Howard University professor and jazz legend Donald Byrd, the album represents an accessible rather than experimental version of jazz fusion, a style that later became wholly embraced by proponents of hip-hop culture.
For their second album, Flying Start, the Blackbyrds whipped up yet another healthy menu of proto-disco music. Complete with crispy drum breaks, relentless basslines, chicken-scratch guitar, majestic horns, and meandering clavinet, their dance-oriented brand of funky jazz is captured at its finest on tracks such as "The Baby," "Blackbyrds' Theme," and "Spaced Out." Meanwhile, breezier songs such as "Love Is Love," "Walking in Rhythm," and "April Showers" express the more melodic side of the Blackbyrds' repertoire. Produced by Howard University professor and jazz legend Donald Byrd, the album represents an accessible rather than experimental version of jazz fusion, a style that later became wholly embraced by proponents of hip-hop culture.