Gentleman

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Gentleman album cover
Album Information
ALBUM ONLY

Total Tracks: 3   Total Length: 31:01

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Richard Gehr

eMusic Contributor

Richard Gehr has been writing about international music -- and many other things -- for more than two decades. After moving to Los Angeles from Portland, OR, vi...more »

12.01.09
Fela begins his romance with the saxophone
2009 | Label: Knitting Factory

The rough and gritty tenor sax solo that kicks off "Gentleman," following a teasing vamp, marks Fela's first solo on the instrument, which he learned quickly after Igo Chico split Afrika 70 earlier in 1973. The song wraps a classic Afrika 70 arrangement around Fela's disquisition on the colonial mentality of Africans who cling to inappropriate European customs and clothing (as suggested by the terrifically non-PC cover collage of a monkey's head on a suited body). "Africa hot, I like am so," sings Fela scornfully. "I know what to wear but my friends don't know." Two jazzy eight-minute instrumentals provide killer filler.

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And now 12??

acc13

I get that they're long songs, but...

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Happy It's Available

Nyabinghi

I am very happy that some of Fela's vast catalog has returned. Although it takes 6 credits to acquire each, it is well worth it. Can't say that for much of emusic's new arrangement.

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6 credits for 3 songs?

pjmunson

How ya figure, Emusic?

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They Say All Music Guide

Gentleman is both an Africa 70 and Afro-beat masterpiece. High marks go to the scathing commentary that Fela Anikulapo Kuti lets loose but also to the instrumentation and the overall arrangements, as they prove to be some of the most interesting and innovative of Fela’s ’70s material. When the great tenor saxophone player Igo Chico left the Africa 70 organization in 1973, Fela Kuti declared he would be the replacement. So in addition to bandleader, soothsayer, and organ player, Fela picked up the horn and learned to play it quite quickly — even developing a certain personal voice with it. To show off that fact, “Gentleman” gets rolling with a loose improvisatory solo saxophone performance that Tony Allen eventually pats along with before the entire band drops in with classic Afro-beat magnificence. “Gentleman” is also a great example of Fela’s directed wit at the post-colonial West African sociopolitical state of affairs. His focus is on the Africans that still had a colonial mentality after the Brits were gone and then parallels that life with his own. He wonders why his fellow Africans would wear so much clothing in the African heat: “I know what to wear but my friend don’t know” and also points out that “I am not a gentleman like that!/I be Africa man original.” To support “Gentleman,” the B-side features equally hot jazzy numbers, “Fefe Naa Efe” and “Igbe,” making this an absolute must-have release. [In 2000, MCA released Confusion and Gentleman as a two-fer.] – Sam Samuelson

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