Problems

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Problems album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 34:16

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Explorers or Expressions

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I'm pretty sure the backing band is called the Expressions. Perhaps they recorded the album with a different group, but the singles were billed as Lee Fields and the Expressions. Looking through the credits, this does look like a different line up from the Expressions with Homer Steinweiss as the only overlap on drums. Its cool to see Martin Perna of Antibalas appearing here, great stuff! Olu Owudemi brings that Daktaris vibe to a couple of tracks too!

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No problems.

daxwaite

You could do a lot worse than checking this man out !!

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OH YEAH!

SCHOBOTS

MUTHAFUCKIN' RIGHT MUTHAFUCKAHS'

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They Say All Music Guide

After the terrific retro-funk label Desco split into the Soul Fire and Dap-Tone camps, flagship artist Lee Fields recorded for both but issued his next full-length on the former, which preferred a distinctly lower-fidelity grit to its product. That recording approach informs Problems, Fields’ second album of unadulterated James Brown worship aimed at the burgeoning deep-funk revival scene, though it isn’t as scratchy-sounding as much of Soul Fire’s output. Initially, Problems might be a bit of a letdown after the blazing funk firestorm that was Let’s Get a Groove On. It’s just as raw and organic, to be sure, but lacks a certain immediacy in comparison. The Soul Fire house band is a crackerjack unit, grooving with a trippier vibe than Fields’ previous outing — more guitar effects, electric piano, flute, and African-flavored percussion. While the music is terrific on its own terms, it sometimes seems a little laid-back and slow-paced for Fields’ irresistible James Brown Disciple Number One act, and as a result Problems doesn’t feel like the super-bad statement of purpose that its predecessor was. Plus, with just over half an hour’s running time, it’s disappointing that two of the ten tracks are band-only. But given time, Fields’ infectious enthusiasm and the quality musicianship behind him are too winning to end up really dissatisfying. And there are plenty of great moments for Fields fans: Fields confessing his dirty past on “You Made a New Man Out of Me”; the humorous, age-old advice on women dispensed on “Rapping With Lee”; the funked-up ballad “Honey Dove”; the percolating mid-tempo grooves of “The Right Thing” and the philosophical title track. Even if Problems winds up a cut below Let’s Get a Groove On, it shows that Fields is still a vital and dynamic funk force to be reckoned with. – Steve Huey

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