Thursday, October 6, 2022

Earth, Wind & Fire - Last Days and Time - LP (1972) Columbia-CD (1988) Columbia - Soul/Funk/Jazz (FLAC)

Earth,Wind & Fire was the brainchild of Maurice White, a drummer raised in Memphis, Tennessee, who moved to Chicago and became a veteran session player at Chess Records and a member of the Ramsey Lewis Trio. He drew upon a wide variety of influences, including his Memphis church-singing roots, his broad recording duties at Chess, and his stint at the Chicago Conservatory of Music, to create a truly original fusion of styles with his innovative group. Capitalizing on his reputation as a session player, White was able to establish the group in Los Angeles as a soul/jazz-fusion act in 1970, recording two albums for Warner Brothers. While on tour in Denver in 1971, the group shared a bill with a local act that featured vocalist Bailey, keyboardist Dunn, and saxophonist Woolfolk, all of whom soon after joined a reconstituted Earth, Wind & Fire that developed a broader musical range encompassing funk, soul, and pop. The group switched labels, and their second album for Columbia, Head to the Sky (1973), sold a half-million copies, setting the stage for the huge success that followed. That’s the Way of the World (1975) lifted Earth, Wind & Fire to superstardom, yielding the hit singles “Shining Star” and “Reasons.” Their phenomenal string of 11 consecutive gold albums (sales of 500,000 copies), 8 of which also attained platinum status (sales of 1,000,000 copies), included Gratitude (1975), Spirit (1976), All ’n’ All (1977), The Best of Earth, Wind & Fire, Vol. 1 (1978), and Raise! (1981). The band went on hiatus in 1984 but returned with the successful Touch the World in 1987. Later albums included In the Name of Love (1997), The Promise (2003), Illumination (2005), and Now, Then & Forever (2013).Part of the band’s appeal was its remarkable versatility, as it delivered soulful ballads, spiritual anthems, Afro-Caribbean jazz, driving funk and rock, and upbeat disco dance hits. Earth,Wind & Fire’s songs offered uplifting poetic lyrics with romantic and playful themes of universal brotherhood, spiritual enlightenment, and sentimental romance. The group was known for spectacular concerts that featured gigantic stage props, elaborate costumes, grand illusions, and frenetic musical energy. The multitalented White and falsetto vocalist Bailey led an ensemble that often reached 15 players onstage. White’s affection for Egyptology and use of African instruments such as the kalimba (thumb piano) further embellished the group’s unique image. Earth,Wind & Fire spawned a number of imitations during the 1970s, as groups adopted mystical three part names, imitated their elaborate dress and choreography, or attempted to reproduce the poetry, lush orchestration, and mysticism of Earth,Wind & Fire’s albums and concerts. Despite the brief hiatus during the 1980s, White’s group remained an international stage attraction well into the 21st century. In 2000 Earth, Wind & Fire was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and the band received a Grammy Award for lifetime achievement in 2016. Earth,Wind & Fire were nothing if not ambitious, and by the time of THIS their third album they had forged an individual sound by absorbing nearly everything that had gone before them in the previous ten years. It was as if they were trying to encapsulate every eclectic foray pursued by Motown, from catchy, rhythmic pop to churning funk, and even from Stevie Wonder singing borrowed folk songs like "Blowin' in the Wind" (here, Philip Bailey did "Where Have All the Flowers Gone") to the schmaltzy, string-filled pop that spelled legitimacy to Motown. Not only that, they wanted to incorporate Sly & the Family Stone's horn-filled, gutbucket R&B and some of the fusion style of Weather Report. On Last Days and Time, they succeeded in pulling all that into their orbit, but they hadn't yet managed one crucial thing: they hadn't learned to write hits. That would come next......So ahead of their time,still sounds amazing, listen to the tasters!

AMM


                                                                       The Tasters!

    





12 comments:

RMstorm said...

Thanks AMM. Always needs some EWF to survive.

PeterH said...

I saw them live once - legendary! Thanks for review, P.

bigcravings said...

Great review of early EWF

soul quinquin said...

An album that is missing from my Earth, Wind & Fire folder. Thank you Collins
Pierre

richsoul said...

Thank you for a great review worthy of this band. Enjoyed seeing the band and their sounds. Thank you for the teasers and of course a great review. Thank you AMM.

Anghellic67$ said...

Great EWF Album Thank you AMM

Big Dave said...

The only EWF album I don't have... many thanks indeed for this review AMM

BigD

hakase said...

many thanks for this early EW&F and also really nice cover art

Little Bill said...

Thanks very much for the booklet AMM, appreciated!

Little Bill said...

Great to see some early EWF nice post amm, thank you!

Rush said...

Thanks for the review AMM the album contains one of my favourite EWF tracks
Where have all the flowers gone

reb.jukebox said...

Many thanks for flac version AMM
Reb