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21.9.07

Sir Joe Quarterman & Free Soul


sirjoequarterman-freesoul1973




Sir Joe Quarterman & Free Soul - Sir Joe Quarterman & Free Soul - 1973 - GSF Records

A funk classic. This one's a killer!-- with a hard funky wah wah sound as good as James Brown's best work on Polydor from the early 70s, and which should have made Joe a millionaire, not a lost legend of soul music. The band is sharp as a knife -- with hard drums, tight bass, and some simply amazing guitar riffing. But the best part is Joe -- as his vocals are hard and emotional, with just the right touches of righteousness to carry off the album's political messages, but not too much as to spoil the party that the band's having in the background! Every single track is a winner.

TRACKS

A1.(I Got) So Much Trouble In My Mind (6:19)
A2.I Made A Promise (4:18)
A3.The Trouble With Trouble (2:46)
A4.The Way They Do My Life (3:06)
Arranged By [Horns, Strings] - Tony Camillo

B1.Find Yourself (2:59)
B2.Gonna Get Me A Friend (2:04)
B3.Give Me Back My Freedom (3:34)
B4.I Feel Like This (2:57)
B5.Live Now Brothers (3:02)

CREDITS

Arranged By - Bill Tate (tracks: A1 to A3, B1 to B4) , Cotter Wells (tracks: A1 to A3, B1 to B4) , Sir Joe Quarterman (tracks: A1 to A3, B1 to B4)
Bass - Gregory C. Hammonds
Drums - Allen Stewart
Guitar - George R. Lee , Willie Parker Jr.
Keyboards - Karissa Freeman
Producer - Bill Tate , Cotter Wells , Sir Joe Quarterman
Saxophone - Leon Rogers
Vocals, Trumpet - Sir Joe Quarterman Notes: All selections composed by Joe Quarterman
Produced by Cotter Wells, Bill Tate and Joe Quarterman for Mantis Recording Corp.

BIO

Joe Quarterman was an unfairly overlooked funk and soul singer influenced by -- but not imitative of -- James Brown. Honing his chops in church choirs and various vocal groups, Quarterman earned the nickname "Sir" in high school while singing with a group called the Knights; he subsequently joined up with a female backing quartet as Sir Joe & the Maidens and cut a few records during the early '60s. Quarterman went on to play trumpet in the El Corols (aka the Magnificent Seven), whose highest-profile gig came as Garnet Mimms' backing band. In 1970, after playing jazz with the Orlando Smith Quintet, he formed a backing group called Free Soul, which featured lead guitarist George "Jackie" Lee, jazz-trained guitarist Willie Parker, fretless bassist Gregory Hammonds, keyboardist Karissa Freeman, drummer Charles Steptoe, and horn player Leon Rogers. Their first single, "(I Got) So Much Trouble in My Mind," was also their biggest, reaching the R&B Top 30 in early 1973. Quarterman's only LP, Sir Joe Quarterman & Free Soul, was released later that year on the small GSF label, and showed Quarterman to be an avatar of the kind of hard, socially conscious funk James Brown often recorded during the early '70s. Further singles followed, including "This Girl of Mine (She's Good to Me)," "I'm Gonna Get You," and "Thanks Dad," before Quarterman moved to Mercury in 1974. Unfortunately, the label issued only two singles, the fine "Get Down Baby" and "I'm a Young Man," before letting Quarterman go. Financial problems broke up the band, and Quarterman quit the business to return to college and earn his degree in architecture. Collectables reissued Quarterman's lone album on CD during the '90s, adding several non-LP singles as bonus tracks. © Steve Huey, All Music Guide