Funkify Your Life: The Meters Anthology

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Funkify Your Life: The Meters Anthology album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: The Meters (See All Albums by The Meters)
  • Date Released: Mar 29, 2005

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Pop

  • Label: Rhino

Total Tracks: 43   Total Length: 143:38

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The Real Deal

urwelcome2menow

This is an essential part of any music collection. Great songs by the funk pioneers and legends.

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the source

bigsteveno

If you're even thinking about it, you should probably get this.

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easily yhe best

shempboogie

nobody funks like the meters from heavy to groovy.while this comp. is missing a few of my favorites it is by far the most complete collection of their best jams spanning all their changes in sound

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Wow!!

Microbe

On of the finest funk compilations by the band the wrote the book on southern funk, solo, backing up Toussaint, Dr. John, Lee Dorsey, so many more. There is not a bad song on this album. A steal.

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Fantastic New Orleans Funk

SoulStranger

If you like funk, New Orleans music, or the Neville Brothers, you need this album. And it's an incredible bargain!

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They Say All Music Guide

Rhino’s Funkify Your Life: The Meters Anthology was the first truly comprehensive and widely available CD retrospective of the groundbreaking New Orleans funk band’s work. These two chronologically arranged discs run down virtually every important track the band recorded under its own name, finally allowing a more general audience to hear why the Meters had earned such a stellar reputation among die-hard funk collectors and sample-minded hip-hoppers. Disc one, subtitled “The Josie Years,” traces the group’s 1969-1971 beginnings as a Booker T. & the MG’s-like outfit, cutting brief instrumentals with a similar guitar/organ/bass/drums lineup. There were important differences, though; the Meters’ arrangements usually carried the melody in single-note guitar lines, which gave them a distinctive calling card, and their rhythms were notably funkier. In fact, drummer Joseph “Ziggy” Modeliste pretty much establishes himself as a monster groove machine right from the beginning; his is a dominating rhythmic presence. This is the lean, earthy Meters sound most often imitated by latter-day funk revivalists like the Soul Fire label. Group vocals and wah-wah guitars start to pop up over the second half of the disc, setting the stage for their more ambitious major-label sound, which is documented on the second disc (“The Reprise/Warner Bros. Years”). Nearly all of these tracks are vocal numbers, “songs” in the more traditional sense, but the group also opens its sound up, allowing the members to show off their individual chops as soloists. There’s more flash in this music, including plenty of nimble-fingered unison passages demonstrating that the band can be as tight as they are loose. It’s more proof that the Meters were the most telepathic funk ensemble this side of the J.B.’s. Those with a casual interest can safely content themselves with the fine single-disc Very Best of the Meters, but for devoted funk fans, Funkify Your Life should be considered essential listening. – Steve Huey

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