Album Reviews
Charles' influence is more muted on the Rebennack disc, a studio date that's all solo piano except for one typically croaking vocal. But it's there in Mac's delicately gospel-sounding right-hand "trickerations" (as he calls them) and in the churchy jazz he dispenses on such numbers as "Mac's Boogie."
Booker's recital was recorded live and features an unusually generous helping of the pianist's rococo, Ray Charles-style vocals. The Huey Smith riff that Mac plays around with on "Pinetop" is also the basis of "Tell Me How Do You Feel," Booker's sparkling New Orleans gem. Anyone who knows Booker's history of musical triumphs and personal tragedies will find the selection of material (i.e., "Black Night," "Come Rain or Come Shine" and the transcendent "Let Them Talk") both moving and utterly apropos. And until you've heard New Orleans' Piano Prince and the original Junco Partner tackle "On the Sunny Side of the Street" and extract emotional resonances from the hoary Sinatra hit "Something Stupid," well, you can jocka-mo-fe-na-nay.
(Posted: Apr 29, 1982)
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- Dorothy
- Mac's Boogie
- Memories Of Professor Longhair
- The Nearness Of You
- Delicado
- Silent Night
- Dance A La Negres
- Wade In The Water
- Honey Dripper
- Big Mac
- New Island Midnight
- Saints
- Pinetop
- Careless Love
- Deep Blues
- Ti-Na-Na
- Dorothy (Take 2)
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- Portions of Album Content Provided by All Music Guide © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC.