Funk Spectrum: Real Funk for Real People

RELEASE
April 05, 1999
LABEL
BBE
GENRES
Rhythm & Blues, Funk

Album Review

Compiled by Josh Davis (aka DJ Shadow) and Keb Darge, Funk Spectrum is yet one more addition to the stable of essential BBE label collections, a virtual primer in old-school funk that assembles 20 tracks likely familiar to only the most diligent of rare groove collectors. According to Davis' liner notes, the omission of artist credits from the sleeve is in homage to the code of B-boy secrecy, although it makes the disc damn hard to critique; that said, the opening "Party Time" conjures the spirit of James Brown to uncanny perfection, "Let's Do It Today" could be a lost Charles Wright & the Watts 103rd Street Band track, and "Clap Your Hands" imagines an alternate reality where the Jackson 5 comprised sisters, not brothers. Darge's ten selections are excellent as well, most of them slavish in their devotion to the genius of James Brown -- some are actual covers (Lou Pride's up-tempo reading of the perennial "It's a Man's Man's Man's World") and some are just mirror images (Ricky Caloway's "Tell Me," with its "Good God!" interjections), but all boast the funk in spades.
Jason Ankeny, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. Part Time
  2. Let's Do It Today
  3. Roadrunners - Do It Again
  4. The Dead Dont Die Alive , Pt. 1
  5. Getting Down for Xmas
  6. The Road
  7. Mr. Chicken Shit
  8. Clap Your Hands
  9. RDM Band - Butter That Popcorn
  10. What's Going On?
  11. Can't Stop Now
  12. It's a Man's World
  13. Every Man for Himself
  14. Tell Me
  15. It Ain't Fun But It's Fun
  16. Backtalk
  17. Mr. Machine
  18. Who's the King
  19. We Oughta Get Together
  20. The World