Groovin' With Groove

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (7 ratings)
Groovin' With Groove album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 65:38

Write a Review 1 Member Review

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

you need this.

suitandtieguy

this CD is actually two seperate Groove Holmes albums jumbled up: New Groove and some other record i can't remember. "the Red Onion" is one of the most badass grooves ever. on a side note, much of this record was done with Groove's own heavily modified B3. it had the lower manual and pedals going direct out of the organ, bypassing the chorus vibrato, expression control and the preamp ... and the upper manual (with percussion, chorus vibrato, expression control, etc) went into a fuzzbox and wah pedal. he doesn't use the fuzz much ... in fact i only hear it at one point in Come Together (the groove vs mcgriff studio joint) ... but it is was seriously bad setup. very punchy and aggressive. a good match for Groove's take-no-prisoners approach to bass playing.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

This killer little Groove Holmes date was produced by the mighty Sonny Lester, and features a big band arranged and conducted by Manny Albam. Other than Holmes, the only other soloist credited here is Eddie Daniels on tenor and flute. The material here is curious upon first glance, with covers of Gerry Goffin’s “Go Away Little Girl,” Stevie Wonder’s “You’ve Got It Bad,” and Carole King’s “It’s Going to Take Some Time” situated around some hard soul-jazz numbers by the organist, including “Groove’s Groove,” along with Norman Gimbel’s sweet ballad “How Insensitive” and slippery little soul tune “Meditation.” Add to this deep soul readings of Al Hague’s standard “Young and Foolish” and Armando Manzanero’s Latin bouncer “It’s Impossible,” and you have a program that might not work at all. But it does. Holmes is in fine form, slippery and breezy as ever, never bogging down. Albam’s arrangements are not overly ornate and Daniels, normally a pristine and very studied player, lets loose a bit here — especially on tenor. One would wish for credits on who the session’s guitarist is, but alas, it’s not to be — but whoever he is, he’s a burner too, able to trade licks with Groove without seams or cracks. For Holmes fans, this is a taste of something different to be sure, but it’s also a great listen. – Thom Jurek

more »