MEL BROWN Chicken Fat (Impulse/Verve Music Group BOOO1432-02)[/b] Originally released as Impulse AS-9152 in 1967 CD released on 9 March, 2004
1. Chicken Fat 2. I'm Goin' To Jackson 3. Slalom 4. Hobo Flats 5. Sad But True 6. Home James 7. Shanty 8. Greasy Spoon 9. Blues For The Big Bob
--- Tracks 1-3, 7, and 8: Mel Brown-guitar Gerald Wiggins-organ Herb Ellis-guitar Ronald Brown-bass Paul Humphrey-drums (tracks 2 and 8: Omit Wiggins)
Tracks 4-6 and 9]: Mel Brown-guitar Gerald Wiggins-organ Arthur Wright-guitar Ronald Brown-bass Paul Humphrey-drums Oliver Nelson-arranger
Recorded 1967 in Hollywood: tracks 1-3, 7 and 8 on May 31; tracks 4-6 and 9 on June 1
Original recordings produced by Bob Thiele
Mastered by Bob Irwin and Jayme Pieruzzi at Sundazed Studios, Coxsackie, NY --- David Rickert of All About Jazz When you get a couple of guitar players together you?re often going to get the kind of finger-busting interplay heard on Chicken Fat ; the question is whether it will be interesting enough to listen to or too self-indulgent. For the most part, Mel Brown succeeds in creating a pleasant piece of soul jazz that, on occasion, ventures into straightforward blues tunes.
There?s plenty of guitar solos on this 1967 record, and Brown takes an edgy, almost haphazard approach to soling that leans heavily on blues licks no doubt acquired during a tenure as a sideman with T-Bone Walker. Capable of fusing together riffs and clich?s into interesting solos, Brown also makes use of the latest technology, such as primitive distortion techniques and a wah-wah pedal.
One can clearly see why Brown was sought after as a sideman, but Herb Ellis brings a more sophisticated style of noodling to the record, working from a wider vocabulary than Brown has at his disposal. It?s interesting to see how the two work together to create a unique sound, and this pair creates more attractive moments than when Brown is paired with Arthur Wright on the other selections.
But what really holds this session back is some odd choices in instrumentation. Gerald Wiggins plays the feeblest sounding organ ever to be found in a studio and for some odd reason, Ellis uses a twelve-string for many of the tunes to no particular effect, as if he just bought it on the way to the session and wanted to give it a go.
All this aside, your enjoyment of this session will depend on two things: one, your liking of guitar solos and two, your enjoyment of the blues idiom played with a heavy beat. A fairly enjoyable record, but there?s better stuff like this out there.
Milo Miles of Rolling Stone Guitarist Mel Brown's 1967 solo debut is a perfect soul-jazz workout. Although Gerald Wiggins contributes saucy work on organ, and bassist Ronald Brown and drummer Paul Humphrey provide endless easy-flow beats, Chicken Fat is guitar paradise -- twisting, twirling beneficence from not just Brown but Arthur Wright and veteran Herb Ellis, as well. Add Brown's deep-South blues shouts and his head-down testifying among the choppy, primeval funk rhythms of "Greasy Spoon" and the countrified shuffle of "Sad But True," and you have something truly gooey and succulent - one of the best hunks of barbecue you ever ate in your life.
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