DR LONNIE SMITH — Afro-Desia (review)

DR LONNIE SMITH — Afro-Desia album cover Album · 1975 · Fusion Buy this album from MMA partners
3/5 ·
Sean Trane
Umpteenth album from de Hammond Doctor, Afrodesia sometimes spelled Afro-Desia is more of a collaboration between Joe Lovano, George Benson, Ron Carter and Ben Riley. Released in the second half of the 70’s, it represents fairly well the days’ jazz survivors, and it mixes all kinds of influences, but can be safely labelled funk-soul-jazz. NB: this album has seen a few re-issues with changed track titles and different lengths, including the LRC release that adds a few bonus tracks with plenty of added musicians and even including choirs and vocals. A difficult album to review properly, since you’re likely to find three of four versions, all sporting the orange artwork

Most of the music on the album consists of the usual Hammond-dominated funk-fusion-soul-jazz. Indeed, if Straight To The Point (re-titled Apex) is more of a Latin-jazz piece with Caribbean-sounding percussions, it features Lovano’s sax soaring over Smith’s drooling and underlying organ, the lengthy Favors (later re-titled Flavors, but reportedly an adaptation of a Coltrane piece) features Benson taking a cool solo, fighting Smith’s Hammond in a Homeric duel and duet. Another track that had to suffer a name change is The Awakening (later called Good Morning)

Opening the album is the 9-mins+ Afrodesia, one that comes with Hopkins helping Lovano’s sax and features vocals and choirs and features a funky rhythm and guitar, which is anice change from the rest of the album. Where the LRC reissue goes slightly awry is that it adds two bonus tracks (this is relative, but they don’t sound like they really belong) – both Hohenberger piece in the middle of the album, at the expense of the 15-mins Spirits Free. The first is the more standardier-jazz (everything being relative) It’s Changed and the almost mushy When The Night Is Right, but neither are majorly shocking. The third “bonus”, All In My Mind is much more out of the frame of the original album though, with that mid-tempo sung blues that sticks out like a sore thumb from the album’s cohesiveness.

A confusing and slightly frustrating review to write, but the original album is an enjoyable mid-70’s artefact. You could even be enjoying that strange LRC CD-release if they hadn’t suppressed the 15-mins Spirits track, because there was plenty of space to include it, but it isn’t and that final track is a turn-off. Avoid the LRC release and the Laserlight one as well (you don’t even get the original artwork) and go for the vinyl.

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