Inner City Blues cover

Inner City Blues

Released

The recording session that produced saxophonist Grover Washington Jr.’s debut album was originally intended for label mate and fellow sax player Hank Crawford but, reportedly detained in Memphis for possession of marijuana, he couldn’t make the date. Washington, who was working a day job at the time, was booked to play on the session behind Crawford and stepped in, beginning the career of Kudu Records’ most commercially successful artist. 

Recorded in Van Gelder’s New Jersey studio in 1971 and featuring a star-studded line-up of musicians including drummer Idris Muhammad, Eric Gale on guitar, Ron Carter on bass and percussion from Airto Moreira, the six tracks are all covers of popular songs, tastefully arranged into gently grooving jazz instrumentals and sweetened with rich, opulent orchestration. The standout tracks are the pair of Marvin Gaye covers, which sound like almost ostentatiously lavish, wealthy relatives of the originals, and a brooding, steaming take on Bill Withers’ “Aint No Sunshine,” while Gershwin’s “I Loves You Porgy” is reworked into a swooning, romantic album finisher. Seventies jazz in a rich, smooth and sumptuous style.

Harold Heath

Suggestions
Street Lady cover

Street Lady

Donald Byrd
Iapetus cover

Iapetus

Hadley Caliman
Cosmos cover

Cosmos

Lou Donaldson
Starting Today cover

Starting Today

Joe Armon-Jones
Mama Wailer cover

Mama Wailer

Lonnie Smith
Funky Music Machine cover

Funky Music Machine

Maceo & All the King's Men
Vibes of Truth cover

Vibes of Truth

The 3 Pieces
Power of Soul cover

Power of Soul

Idris Muhammad
Astral Signal cover

Astral Signal

Gene Harris
The Beauty Room cover

The Beauty Room

The Beauty Room, Kirk DeGiorgio