eMusic Review 0
Calling your own album Black Moses — to say nothing of wrapping said album in an expensive package that folded out in the shape of a crucifix — might seem to the uninitiated like the very height of artistic hubris. But in 1971, when this double album was first released, Isaac Hayes was far more than just a soul superstar; he was the pre-eminent icon of musical achievement within the black community. The massive success of 1969's Hot Buttered Soul (and its 1970 follow-ups, The Isaac Hayes Movement and …To Be Continued) had already established Hayes as the first black "album artist" of the era, whose long-players were in even higher demand than his hit singles; and his film score for Gordon Parks 'Shaft (also released in 1971) not only forged the template for all blaxploitation soundtracks to follow, but would also eventually net him an Oscar for Best Original Song, making him the first African-American ever to be thusly honored. Taken in that context, the title Black Moses seemed neither sacrilegious nor presumptive; it seemed, frankly, about right.
But rather than lead his followers into the Promised Land with this record, Hayes drew them instead into an extended conversation about… read more »