eMusic Review
Just as he is an unsung father of rock & roll, Ike Turner was the secret weapon of Sam Phillips 'Sun Records blues roster. As an A&R man/producer, he was behind great records by the likes of Howlin 'Wolf and Little Milton, among others, and he played guitar or piano (the latter was initially his main instrument) on the sessions of numerous others. Plus, his crack R&B band the Kings of Rhythm made many records, usually released under the name of his lead singer at the time, that were as hard-edged and funky as anything being released by anyone. This marauding band could be awfully derivative, basing several songs on a then-current hit like Guitar Slim's "The Things That I Used to Do," but they played with such gutbucket power and conviction that they always commanded the material just the same.
Bonnie Turner, Ike's girlfriend and then his wife, is featured on several tracks, the most curious being her duet on the tempo-shifting "Way Down in the Congo" with Ike's tenor sax fiend Raymond Hill (Ike himself is usually mistakenly identified as the vocalist here). Hill absolutely burns on his instrumental "The Snuggle," alternating between late-night swooning and relentless pounding. Ike's… read more »