Rise Up!

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Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 62:08

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Amelia Raitt

eMusic Contributor

Amelia Raitt is a former writer for the television program Mr. Belvedere and has been writing about pop music of all colors and stripes for eMusic since 2005. S...more »

02.17.09
Dr. Lonnie Smith, Rise Up!
2009 | Label: Palmetto / Iris

The groove on Hammond B-3 jazz organist Lonnie Smith's latest is a lazy, steady simmer, one which feels always deliciously on the verge of boiling over. He and his masterful crew here — Donald Harrison on alto sax, Peter Bernstein on guitar, and Herlin Riley on drums — rove through a spectacular set of selections from the modern songbook, ranging from a fluttering, light-footed take on Erykah Badu's "Tyrone" to a driving, wah-guitar-and-funk-organ version of "Come Together," which is completed by Lonnie Smith's basso profundo Captain Beefheart vocalizing.

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Great Album

phlloyd

Dr. Smith at his best!

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rise up

emusic-0126098d

absolutly fantastic cant ask for more.. a surprise for me never heard of this artist

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Not the late 60s but still pretty good

Titus-Groan

Well worthy of attention, and better than the others on eMusic. Not in his late 60s-early 70s pomp but still very good, and if you get a chance to see him live, go - it's a funky treat.

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The best B-3 player alive!

galen1973

The album is great stuff. Go see Dr. Lonnie live,what creativity! The audience is often made up of other first rate musicians there too to see the best B-3 player around.

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The Doctor is In, and how.

JazzNBluesLover

Dr Lonnie just seems to get better with age. How on earth can he be so funky? This is a must. No "ifs", no "buts".

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Tyrone

djdaf

A Raitt, WHAT are you talking about! That is Larry Young's Tyrone, written for his son and premiered on the classic "Into Somethin'", Blue Note 1964. Erykah Who, wasn't even born then (I checked). Once again, The Doctor is not only IN the house, he OWNS the house!

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Sweet & Hot

funkendub

Awesome funky tight and fun: this is the shiz.

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get COME TOGETHER

ToddusofKnox

This whole record is fine- but Come Together is the coolest Beatles cover I have heard since Joe Cocker did his.

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They Say All Music Guide

Who says you have to slow down as you get older? The honorable B-3 master, Dr. Lonnie Smith, has been on a renaissance tear since the beginning of the 21st century. Rise Up! is the fifth new recording since 2000, and there have been a number of reissues of his older work to boot. Given that some artists issue a record a year, this may not seem like such a terrific feat — but appearances are deceiving. Smith recorded only 13 albums between 1966 and 1996, so five in nine years is actually prolific. It’s not only the quantity, however, it’s the consistency of the quality of the records Smith has been releasing that is outstanding, and Rise Up! is no exception.
Ever since 2000′s Turbanator and 2003′s Boogaloo to Beck: A Tribute, Smith has packed his records with covers and originals that accent the “soul” in the deep, wide tradition of soul-jazz. Sure, he’s funky, he’s got chops, grooves, and tricks, and he’s surrounded himself with compelling musicians from Jimmy Ponder to David “Fathead” Newman to great effect. Since 2003 he’s been working with guitarist and producer Matt Balitsaris and the results have been, and remain, electrifying. This set, with guitarist Peter Bernstein, saxophonist Donald Harrison, and drummer Herlin Riley — with extra help on a couple of cuts from Balitsaris and percussionist James Shipp — is one of his most realized, funky, and resonant dates yet. The set jumps off with Smith’s original “Matterapat,”showcasing the smoking Latin percussion of Shipp and taut, off-kilter breaks from Riley, the front line is all knotty soul and blues. The theme is greasy and in the pocket; Harrison’s solo moves effortlessly from post-bop to soul. The cover of the Beatles’ “Come Together” that follows is even nastier, with Smith’s below-the-basement vocal growl on the first verse all but indecipherable except as a snarling rap. It’s another instrument in this band’s arsenal. This is a slow bump and funky grind with a big payoff. “Pilgrimage” begins as a ballad but quickly asserts itself as a cooker thanks to Riley playing counterpoint breaks to Smith’s B-3. Other covers that appear — and are reinvented in Smith’s musical vocabulary — are the Eurythmics’ “Sweet Dreams,” which commences, seemingly, as an astral afterthought but finds a deep percussive bottom end and a spooky articulation of the melody that is all rhythm based. One can guarantee that the version of “People Make the World Go ‘Round” found here is unlike any other that exists. It’s the longest cut on the set and builds itself right from a lithe, breezy funk groove with a poppin’ set of rimshot breakbeats from Riley. Harrison is the perfect foil for Smith because of his lyric sensibility; it is the perfect counter to the percussive groove quotient of Smith. The solos here are wonderfully complex and sophisticated and the use of harmonic extension in the ensemble’s reading is pure magic. The set ends on an atmospheric blues tip with Smith’s “Voodoo Doll,” where Harrison’s alto plays it straight out of the noir-ish dark and into the shadows where traces of light emerge. Smith’s comping and eventually structural form for the tune transforms it into a swirling, shimmering heat with Bernstein’s guitar erecting a pulsing bridge for Riley. It’s a killer way to end a record. For B-3 fans, Rise Up! is nothing but solid in terms of tunes, arrangements, and heat. – Thom Jurek

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