
UK import
2024 box set of five albums by vibraphonist Roy Ayers - sometimes known as the "Godfather of Acid Jazz" - released in the years 1975-1977. I almost didn't buy this set because I already had two of the five albums, but I wanted to hear Vibrations and this set was the cheapest way to pick up a (legitimate) copy. At $30 ($6 per album), it's a hard to pass up this shining set. I mean, everybody loves the sunshine, right?
A TEAR TO A SMILE (1975)
10 tracks, 40 minutes
10 tracks, 40 minutes

In which Ayers moves from his early '70s funky jazz to a funk-jazz-soul-R&B-disco mix while maintaining his bona fides as one of the best vibraphone players in the land. There's a new focus on vocal tracks that sometimes works, sometimes doesn't. There's some great grooves and performances to be had throughout. With this album, Ayers begins his slow transition from jazz player to conductor/producer/arranger as he inches toward the smoother, more commercial sound of his late '70s peak.
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| I love how he adds descriptors for each performer in the credits. |
Reviews/ratings:
- Record World: "The feel flows throughout"
- CashBox: "a low keyed approach to funk, sprinkled ever so lightly with the essential life juices of jazz and rhythm and blues."
- The Virgin Encyclopedia of Jazz (1999): ★★
Album chart peaks:
- US Billboard 200: Did not chart
- Billboard Jazz: #8
- CashBox: #181
- Record World Jazz: #11
Tracks: I enjoy 2000 Black, Show Us A Feeling, The Old One Two (Move To Groove), and A Tear To A Smile. My current favorite cut is the ethereal ballad, Miles (Love's Silent Dawn). The only track that plays it safe is a cover of Earth, Wind & Fire's The Way Of The World, but just because it's safe doesn't mean it's not extrememly enjoyable. (And quite frankly, that song is just begging for jazz covers.) Ayers hits the vibes more on this album than a few of the subsiquent releases, especially on tracks like Ebony Blaze, Time And Space, That's The Way Of The World, Miles (Love's Silent Dawn), and the title track.
MYSTIC VOYAGE (1975)
10 tracks, 43 minutes
10 tracks, 43 minutes

Previously appeared on The CD Project. Note: the 7" version of Evolution is included in this box set as a bonus track.
EVERYBODY LOVES THE SUNSHINE (1976)
10 tracks, 40 minutes
10 tracks, 40 minutes

Previously appeared on The CD Project.
VIBRATIONS (1976)
11 tracks, 42 minutes
11 tracks, 42 minutes

Following up the success of Everybody Loves The Sunshine, so we've got more of the same. I'm not complaining. Rather than trying to reinvent himself, Ayers doubled down on the formula he had been refining all decade: warm vocals, sophisticated jazz harmonies, and irresistible funk grooves. This album also marks the beginning of a shift to utlizing disco/dance grooves on a few tracks. While not having the commercial success of Everybody Loves The Sunshine, Vibrations did quite well on a variety of charts.
Reviews/ratings:
- DownBeat (★½): "I've been known to walk out of restaurants for no other reason that stuff like this coming over the loudspeaker."
- Billboard: "elements of jazz and soul that fuse together for a varied array of mellow and upbeat compositions."
- CashBox: "Roy Ayers Ubiquity is a classy jazz/rock/funk aggregation that, on each album, gets better and better."
- The Virgin Encyclopedia of Jazz (1999): ★★
Album chart peaks:
- US Billboard 200: #74
- Billboard R&B: #11
- Billboard Jazz: #8
- CashBox: #94
- CashBox Jazz: #4
- Record World Jazz: #4
Tracks that could have fit on Everybody Loves The Sunshine: Baby I Need Your Love, The Memory, Better Days, Searching, Vibrations, and Baby You Give Me A Feeling.
Tracks embracing the disco trends of the time: Domelo (Give It To Me), Come Out And Play, and Moving Grooving.
Too funky to fit neatly in either of the above categories: Higher and One Sweet Love To Remember.
Bonus track: 7" version of Domelo (Give It To Me)
more to come...
Previously revisited for the blog:
Everybody Loves The Sunshine (1976)
Mystic Voyage (1975)













