
Blurb from the back CD insert:
A frequent drummer on some of the most visible Kudu sessions, Idris Muhammad was finally signed to the label as a recording artist, and marked his album debut with the sensational POWER OF SOUL. With Bob James writing the charts, and Grover Washington, Jr. providing some exquisite contributions on the saxophone, the album made quite a splash at the time, and quickly established Idris as a force to contend with on the music scene.That hyperbolic statement is, I believe, intentionally vague and misleading as this was not the drummer's first album, but rather his "album debut" on the Kudu label. He had previously released two albums on the Prestige label.
Nevertheless, this is a good - albeit brief - instrumental album put together with a whole lot of recognizable names from the smooth jazz genre. Recorded at Van Gelder Studios and engineered by Rudy Van Gelder, the album was produced by Creed Taylor, and the pieces were arranged and conducted by Bob James. If you're a fan of Taylor, James, or Grover Washington, Jr., this is an album worth checking out.
2002 reissue liner notes by Didier Deutsch who, in 1974 at the time of this album's release, was publicity director at CTI records.
Idris Muhammad - drums
Grover Washington, Jr. - soprano & tenor saxophones
Bob James - keyboards
Gary King - bass
Joe Beck - guitar
Ralph MacDonald - percussion
Randy Brecker - trumpet & flugelhorn
Ratings/reviews:
- Downbeat (★★★): "quite good"
- Billboard: "a real blockbuster"
- The Virgin Encyclopedia of Jazz (1999): ★★★
- The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide (1985): ★★★
Album chart peaks:
- US Billboard 200: Did not chart
- Billboard Jazz: #15
- Record World Jazz: #9
Tracks: Only four tracks, and three of those four I had heard previously on other recordings prior to purchasing this CD.
- Power Of Soul - a cover of a Jimi Hendrix tune, a.k.a. Power To Love. A tune which is much harder than the remaining tunes. Beck delivers a scorching solo, but is ultimately upstaged by Washington.
- Piece of Mind - a midtempo Bob James original. Silky smooth with tasty work from Washington, Brecker, and, of course, James.
- The Saddest Thing - this track, written by Joe Beck, was rerecorded for the 1975 Beck album and retitled Star Fire. So relaxing and calm with a restrained string arrangement, this is my favorite track on the album.
- Loran's Dance - a Grover Washington, Jr. tune which the saxophonist later recorded on his 1978 album, Reed Seed.
Personal Memory Associated with this CD: None
Previously revisited for the blog:
You Ain't No Friend Of Mine! (1978)













