Wednesday, August 31, 2016

Johnny "Hammond" Smith - Gettin' Up (1967) [re-rip]


Smith came right out and declared it in the liner notes: "I'm thinking more commercially and I don't care what the critics say." That meant covering soul hits like "Knock on Wood," "Stand By Me," and "The 'In' Crowd," presumably, in addition to throwing in standards like the title cut and "Summertime," as well as three Smith originals. So what does this critic say? Good job, Johnny! This is superior organ-soul-jazz with a feistier edge than much of the genre, evident right from the opening "The Sin-In," which has riffs worthy of a TV detective show and some fine stuttering keys from the leader. The feistiness in this combo is in large part down to drummer John Harris, who really bashes it out; on "Knock on Wood," for instance, he sounds rather more like a rock drummer than a jazz one. Prestige stalwart Houston Person is on hand with tenor sax, while Virgil Jones' trumpet lends the arrangements some good complementary color. In some respects this is more of the same as far as mid- to late-'60s soul-jazz goes, particularly in repertoire ("Summertime" certainly isn't the most imaginative cover choice), but there's a brash energy that makes it a cut or two above the norm for the genre.  ~ by Richie Unterberger, AMG.

Prestige Records, PRST 7494, 1967
Recorded 3rd March, 1967 at Rudy Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey

Personnel:
Johnny "Hammond" Smith - Organ
Virgil Jones - Trumpet
Houston Person - Tenor Saxophone
Thornel Schwartz - Guitar
Jimmy Lewis - Electric Bass [Fender]
John Harris - Drums

Track Listing:
A1. The Sin-In {Johnny "Hammond" Smith} (4:22)
A2. Stand By Me {Ben E. King, Jerry Leiber, Mike Stoller} (2:44)
A3. Knock On Wood {Eddie Floyd, Steve Cropper} (2:43)
A4. The Soulful Blues {Johnny "Hammond" Smith} (7:30)
B1. Ebb Tide {Robert Maxwell, Carl Sigman} (2:44)
B2. Summertime {George Gershwin, Ira Gershwin, DuBose Heyward} (3:33)
B3. Gettin' Up {Johnny "Hammond" Smith} (6:15)
B4. The ‘In’ Crowd {Billy Page} (3:16)

Credits:
Producer - Cal Lampley
Recording Engineer - Rudy van Gelder - RIP
Liner Notes - Chris Albertson

A sweetly funky set from Johnny “Hammond” Smith - a date done right at the start of the jazz funk era on Prestige - and one that marks a nicely heavy Soul Jazz groove.

7 comments:

  1. Many thanks Chris. A very welcome upgrade for me.

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  2. thanks for this. I appreciate you highlighting the special B3 soul-jazz albums from this period that have gotten lost in the shuffle (for me, at least).

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  3. Almost this one. Many thanks Chris.

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