From a trailblazing band featuring members well-versed in jazz, funk, gospel, and African music, the debut album by the Oneness of Juju displayed a group playing with the dexterity of Kool & the Gang, the forward-thinking musical ideas of Herbie Hancock, and the social consciousness of Gil Scott-Heron. The title track is fiercely kinetic, with vocal choruses prodding listeners to dance and Plunky's echo-drenched saxophone floating serenely over the top of a funky space-jazz backing. Elsewhere, the band lapses into a few dated mid-'70s arrangements (reminiscent of Pharoah Sanders, Lonnie Liston Smith, etc.), but the playing is always wonderful -- Plunky especially distinguishes himself in many different modes -- and the production is crystalline. "Don't Give Up" and "Liberation Dues" are two other highlights, with positive-minded chants and funky arrangements. [In early 2002, the British jazz/funk/world reissue label Strut brought African Rhythms back from the brink, with two bonus tracks: an instrumental version of "Liberation Dues" and the single version of "African Rhythms."]
African Rhythms
Oneness of Juju
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African Rhythms Review
by John Bush
Track Listing
Title/Composer | Performer | Time | Stream | |||
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1 | Oneness of Juju | 07:18 | SpotifyAmazon | |||
2 | Oneness of Juju | 04:20 | SpotifyAmazon | |||
3 |
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Oneness of Juju | 01:13 | SpotifyAmazon | ||
4 |
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Oneness of Juju | 03:55 | SpotifyAmazon | ||
5 |
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Oneness of Juju | 03:25 | SpotifyAmazon | ||
6 | Oneness of Juju | 01:14 | SpotifyAmazon | |||
7 |
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Oneness of Juju | 05:43 | SpotifyAmazon | ||
8 |
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Oneness of Juju | 08:14 | SpotifyAmazon | ||
9 | Oneness of Juju | 03:43 | SpotifyAmazon | |||
10 | Oneness of Juju | 04:36 | SpotifyAmazon | |||
11 | Oneness of Juju | 09:07 | SpotifyAmazon | |||
12 | Oneness of Juju | 03:30 | SpotifyAmazon |