Super Freak

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Super Freak album cover
Album Information
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Total Tracks: 6   Total Length: 36:23

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'salrite.

RobG

This album starts off fine with the Curtis Mayfield medley (though it's in mono for some weird reason.) Judy's Moods is a nice latin jazz thing, and Oak Hursts Art is some decent boogaloo. But then the second half kind of peeters out for me and strikes a groove a little too mellow. Also, the second half is clearly taken from a record. (What's up with the rather sizeable amount of stuff on eMusic taken from records? I could do that myself. That's not what I'm paying for here!)

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They Say All Music Guide

The opening track on 1972′s Super Freak is a brilliant, nearly side-long medley of three tracks from Curtis Mayfield’s Superfly: the title track, “Pusherman,” and, of course, “Freddie’s Dead.” Heavy, druggy, and psychedelic, with thick organ and wah-wah guitars, the medley sounds more like the psychedelic soul of War or even Funkadelic than the sparkling Latin jazz of Pucho’s earlier albums. The rest of Super Freak is a little lighter in tone, but this is still the most groove-oriented and least overtly Latin jazz-oriented of this group’s albums, trafficking instead in shuffling grooves like “Oak Hurst’s Art” and vibes-led ballads like “Judy’s Moods” and “One More Day.” Latin jazz purists may balk, but this later became a classic of the ’90s acid jazz movement, which some sources date to the U.K. hip-hop group Galliano pinching a sample from this album’s version of “Freddie’s Dead” for the 1989 single “Frederick Lies Still.” – Stewart Mason

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