Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

King Curtis|Soul Meeting

Soul Meeting

King Curtis

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

Soul Meeting makes for a good album title, as various performers who bring lots of soul to any gathering can attest. The only thing that might make for a better Soul Meeting than this 1960 King Curtis side would be an actual meeting of everyone that has indeed utilized this particular album title, including Ray Charles, Milt Jackson, and Billy Preston. For the final comment about this album title, it should be pointed out that the Prestige two-fer reissue of this session was also entitled Soul Meeting but contains an entire additional King Curtis album as well. As originally released, Soul Meeting featured a half-dozen tracks from one early fall date, the sublime Rudy Van Gelder manning the recording controls. King Soul! had been tracked the previous spring, both albums falling into a certain category in the discography of this important rhythm and blues instrumentalist as in the stuff he did that wasn't exactly rhythm and blues. Prestige was more of a jazz label, so albums such as this are generally thought of as King Curtis' attempts to play jazz.
Patterns of accepted critical thought regarding this situation eventually shifted when genres such as acid jazz and hip-hop lifted ideas as well as entire passages from the soul-jazz many of the players that traipsed through Van Gelder's studios were into. As a result , there is less and less possibility of someone commenting "Well, King Curtis isn't much of a jazz player" when auditing a program that includes covers of Duke Ellington and Sammy Cahn material mixed in with originals by the leader that inevitably have the word "soul" in their titles. To be appreciated is the quite special meeting of musical minds, one man on the verge of what would be a groundbreaking commercial instrumental style in the company of players whose open attitude involved an embrace of many expressions, roots basic to the most complex. The saxophonist's invited collaborators changed significantly from the previously mentioned earlier recording date with a shift in only one man. Instead of Paul Chambers on bass, it is Sam Jones. It is still King Curtis with a walking acoustic bass instead of funky electric bass. The connection with the popular Miles Davis rhythm section with Chambers and pianist Wynton Kelly is gone, however.
Kelly is still around and it is true that Curtis can either ignore or completely miss the implications of his pianist, as if someone was shouting instructions at him in a foreign language. Belton Evans is the drummer, his name sounding like instructions following a TSA scanning and not that well known despite having served on at least three dozen recording sessions between the '50s and '80s.
It is an efficient, at times groovy rhythm section. Curtis is joined on the front line by the affable Nat Adderley, back for another romp alongside a saxophonist with whom his sound blends in a way that can be difficult to understand exactly, a possum wrapped in burlap, dropped into a lazy river. No relation to the "Ode to Billie Jo" incident, nonetheless the program ends with a pair of musical questions as if an interrogation was in process: "Do You Have Soul Now?" and "What Is This Thing Called Love?." The former title is a Curtis original, one of three, all of which along with "Jeep's Blues" are the most satisfying performances on this date.

© Eugene Chadbourne /TiVo

More info

Soul Meeting

King Curtis

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From 12,49€/month

1
Soul Meeting
00:07:01

King Curtis, Composer, MainArtist - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher

1960 Jazz Roots Records 1960 Pyramid 3 Ltd

2
Lazy Soul
00:07:15

King Curtis, Composer, MainArtist - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher

1960 Jazz Roots Records 1960 Pyramid 3 Ltd

3
All the Way
00:05:31

King Curtis, MainArtist - Cahn, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher

1960 Jazz Roots Records 1960 Pyramid 3 Ltd

4
Jeep's Blues
00:06:57

King Curtis, MainArtist - Duke Ellington, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher

1960 Jazz Roots Records 1960 Pyramid 3 Ltd

5
What Is This Thing Called Love
00:05:42

King Curtis, MainArtist - PORTER, Composer - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher

1960 Jazz Roots Records 1960 Pyramid 3 Ltd

6
Do You Have Soul Now?
00:06:25

King Curtis, Composer, MainArtist - Copyright Control, MusicPublisher

1960 Jazz Roots Records 1960 Pyramid 3 Ltd

Albumbeschreibung

Soul Meeting makes for a good album title, as various performers who bring lots of soul to any gathering can attest. The only thing that might make for a better Soul Meeting than this 1960 King Curtis side would be an actual meeting of everyone that has indeed utilized this particular album title, including Ray Charles, Milt Jackson, and Billy Preston. For the final comment about this album title, it should be pointed out that the Prestige two-fer reissue of this session was also entitled Soul Meeting but contains an entire additional King Curtis album as well. As originally released, Soul Meeting featured a half-dozen tracks from one early fall date, the sublime Rudy Van Gelder manning the recording controls. King Soul! had been tracked the previous spring, both albums falling into a certain category in the discography of this important rhythm and blues instrumentalist as in the stuff he did that wasn't exactly rhythm and blues. Prestige was more of a jazz label, so albums such as this are generally thought of as King Curtis' attempts to play jazz.
Patterns of accepted critical thought regarding this situation eventually shifted when genres such as acid jazz and hip-hop lifted ideas as well as entire passages from the soul-jazz many of the players that traipsed through Van Gelder's studios were into. As a result , there is less and less possibility of someone commenting "Well, King Curtis isn't much of a jazz player" when auditing a program that includes covers of Duke Ellington and Sammy Cahn material mixed in with originals by the leader that inevitably have the word "soul" in their titles. To be appreciated is the quite special meeting of musical minds, one man on the verge of what would be a groundbreaking commercial instrumental style in the company of players whose open attitude involved an embrace of many expressions, roots basic to the most complex. The saxophonist's invited collaborators changed significantly from the previously mentioned earlier recording date with a shift in only one man. Instead of Paul Chambers on bass, it is Sam Jones. It is still King Curtis with a walking acoustic bass instead of funky electric bass. The connection with the popular Miles Davis rhythm section with Chambers and pianist Wynton Kelly is gone, however.
Kelly is still around and it is true that Curtis can either ignore or completely miss the implications of his pianist, as if someone was shouting instructions at him in a foreign language. Belton Evans is the drummer, his name sounding like instructions following a TSA scanning and not that well known despite having served on at least three dozen recording sessions between the '50s and '80s.
It is an efficient, at times groovy rhythm section. Curtis is joined on the front line by the affable Nat Adderley, back for another romp alongside a saxophonist with whom his sound blends in a way that can be difficult to understand exactly, a possum wrapped in burlap, dropped into a lazy river. No relation to the "Ode to Billie Jo" incident, nonetheless the program ends with a pair of musical questions as if an interrogation was in process: "Do You Have Soul Now?" and "What Is This Thing Called Love?." The former title is a Curtis original, one of three, all of which along with "Jeep's Blues" are the most satisfying performances on this date.

© Eugene Chadbourne /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

Hier... Encore

Charles Aznavour

Hier... Encore Charles Aznavour

Olympia Février 1976

Charles Aznavour

Olympia Février 1976 Charles Aznavour

Idiote je t'aime...

Charles Aznavour

Idiote je t'aime... Charles Aznavour

La Bohème

Charles Aznavour

La Bohème Charles Aznavour
More on Qobuz
By King Curtis

Live at Fillmore West

King Curtis

Plays Great Memphis Hits

King Curtis

King Size Soul

King Curtis

King Size Soul King Curtis

Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year from King Curtis

King Curtis

That Lovin' Feeling

King Curtis

Playlists

You may also like...

The Köln Concert (Live at the Opera, Köln, 1975)

Keith Jarrett

Getz/Gilberto

Stan Getz

Getz/Gilberto Stan Getz

Orchestras

Bill Frisell

Orchestras Bill Frisell

We Get Requests

Oscar Peterson

We Get Requests Oscar Peterson

Kind Of Blue

Miles Davis

Kind Of Blue Miles Davis