| 
Early reviews of Amnesty
Free Your Mind album
from Toronto's NOW
Magazine:
Perlich's Picks
A weekly dig through the crates for the stuff
you really need to hear
By Tim Perlich
[LINK]
Amnesty let loose
Compilations of 70s funk are so common now, it's no longer sufficient
to simply dig up a couple of 7-inch tracks that Tobias Kirmayer
hasn't yet posted to www.funk45.com. You've got to deliver stuff
like "the only known acetate, on loan from Cut Chemist, who
won it from Dante Carfagna in a Texas hold 'em showdown."
Or better yet, how about an entire unreleased album
like Amnesty's Free Your Mind: The 700 West Sessions, which Stones
Throw ace Egon just dug up for his Now Again imprint. It's a stone-cold
prog-soul thriller that comes packed with a powerful political punch
recalling the early work Funkadelic. The funkiest lesson in black
history you'll hear this month.
...
from paperthinwalls.com:
AMNESTY - “Love Fades”
By DON ALLRED
[LINK]
War! What is it good for? Well, the last time we
checked, still good for restless, bracing grooves and breaks, daring
to resist the temptations of merely marketable stasis-as-boogie,
and of “progressive” display of servicable book learnin’,
a.k.a. yet another slow fade into the Quality Street parade. Good
for tramping, vamping and ramping through many shades. Good for
all the wiser children of James Brown (including thee late-’60s
prodigies, like Sly & The Family Stone, and contemporaneous
cross-cultural cousins, like the Electric Flag and the tighter side
of Al Kooper-era Blood, Sweat & Tears). Good, certainly, for
the better jams of War, with and mostly without Eric Burdon; for
the better, earlier incarnations of Earth, Wind & Fire, the
Commodores, Tower Of Power, and of Kool & The Gang; good also
for Brass Construction, Mandrill, youngsters like Slave and the
ever-flexing FunkaParliadictment/ParliaFunkadelictment Thang. (Not
to mention the massively see-and-raise-ya African response, as very
eventually documented on The Best Best Of Fela Kuti and Luaka Bop’s
comp, Love’s A Real Thing.) The early-to-mid-’70s muthalode
of funk is still being excavated, and now Now-Again Records’
Egon follows his revelatory raising of the Kashmere Stage Band’s
Texas Thunder Soul with Amnesty’s Free Your Mind: The West
700 Sessions. Only a couple of the Indianapolis-based Amnesty’s
tracks were released during the band’s lifespan. But whatever
the reason, it wasn’t a lack of engagingly professional proficiency.
Although Free Your Mind isn’t quite up to the divertingly
subtle details and quirky POV of, say, the also-recently exhumed
Black Merda’s The Folks From Mother’s Mixer, there’s
a thoughtful intensity to Amnesty’s suave sweep, chop and
flow of horns, wah-wah, bass, conga, trap set and other percussion.
The lead singing isn’t quite as strong as the playing, and
some of the lyrics aren’t up to the tunes, but iridescent
gospel-and-jazz-associated harmonies rally the troops, especially
on the last few tracks, where vocals are accompanied by what sounds
like hollow-bodied (but full-figured) electric guitar, rather than
being set in the preceding songs’ nest of funkfest. The transition
of arrangement style isn’t jolting, nor are the changes between
political songs and love ballads, because everything sounds like
personal and collective expression, simultaneously. Indeed, those
last tracks, especially “We’ve Come A Long Way”
and “Liberty” are both political and love ballads, love
of we the people in me and thee. And, if anything, “Mr. President”
is sharper than their usual up-tempo slice; they never rely on mere
attitude, unlike many musical editorialists, then and now.
Such commitment pays off: all these sessions do work
as an album, as a whole, but that’s also the payback: no one
track jumps out, beyond the expected bounds of Amnesty’s basically
familiar approach, and whatever taste you may have for that. But
on its own, “Love Fades” nicks a niche, shines a while,
like a bright little eye that catches yours, passing through. Broadened
syllables slyly ride the wah-wah, working it like a lever on the
roller coaster of party ripples. Seems like scat-singing at first,
til the teaming phonemes form a few phrases, like “you got
a thang, I got a thang,” and “get it up, tear it up,”
but/and oh yeah, “Love fades.” Funny how that fits in.
Sprinkles and hot rivets of punctuation take the punchline for a
ride, and vice versa. “Lahv fayydes,” but not too quickly,
not yet. “Gitit Gitit Gitit” some more.
Feb 8
|

Amnesty Free
Your Mind: The 700 West Sessions
|