Freedom Flight

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (22 ratings)
Freedom Flight album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Shuggie Otis (See All Albums by Shuggie Otis)
  • Date Released: Apr 3, 2007

  • Genre: Hip-Hop/R&B, Style: Pop, R&B

  • Label: Epic/Legacy

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 41:40

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We Didn't Come To Sit Down, We Came to Get Down!!!

iamesp

@ All you haters, Those who look to be offended will be! This is a Bad ass album at any price!!! So, Let's stop bitchin' and start reviewing. I am newly acquainted with Shuggie but immediately recognized his Genius. Thanks,this album is a must!

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Worth it, easy

StayHungry

To the two eMusics...Ice Cold Daydream, Strawberry Letter, Purple, One Room Country Shack, and Freedom Flight are worth the price of admission themselves. You could download a crappy album for less, but why? Not even for less, just less per download, but it's quality, not quantity, yes? (And to Microbe, Jurek apparently meant to say Albert King, but it came out wrong)

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19 years old

Microbe

Born Johnny Otis, Jr. on November 30, 1953. In 1972 he was 18-19 years old. Still amazing, but I have no idea what Thom Jurek is talking about with the 15 y.o. references. And what does SRV have to do with Shuggie Otis? AMG needs a new reviewer.

user avatar

!!!

emusicsincemay2002

I agree. Asking 12 downloads for an 8 cut 37 year old album, even a legendary one like this, is a rip. I know this new setup means I can get some 15 to 27 track albums for 12 dl's, but still...

user avatar

wtf?

elpoopo

The only way to get the track Freedom Flight is to waste 12 credits on an 8 track album? Nice work emusic. You now officially suck.

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It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

They Say All Music Guide

1971′s Freedom Flight is perhaps, in its own way, every bit as adventurous and regal as Shuggie Otis’ masterpiece, Inspiration Information. Produced by Shuggie’s father, R&B legend Johnny Otis, the album features seven stellar, genre bending cuts, most of which were written or co-written by Shuggie. Oh yes, he was 15 was the time. Shuggie not only arranged the date, he played everything from guitars and bass organ to various percussion instruments. Additional musicians include Wilton Felder, Stix Hooper, Aynsley Dunbar, Preston Love, George Duke, and a trio of backing vocalists — Clydie King, Venetta Field, and Shirley Matthews — all of whom would grace Bob Dylan’s Street Legal a few years later. In addition, Johnny employed a full string section for these sessions. Upon listening to Freedom Flight, the influence of Jimi Hendrix is everywhere. Not so much in Shuggie’s playing, but in its texture and production. He and Johnny had obviously spent a lot of time listening to Axis: Bold As Love and Electric Ladyland. In addition, the recordings of Taj Mahal, Fred McDowell, and Frank Zappa figure in here, too. Freedom Flight boasts Shuggie’s single greatest composition: “Strawberry Letter 23,” a monster platinum single for the Brothers Johnson. But it’s Shuggie’s version that stands the test of time best. It’s slower, much more baroque and paisley than the cover. The tenderness in Shuggie’s voice as he intones the lyrics is a real draw. “Me And My Woman,” is one of the funkiest blues tunes ever recorded, with its dirty keyboard bassline that George Clinton stole wholesale three years later. In addition, two long instrumental works that end the album, “Purple” (just try to convince someone that Prince didn’t listen to this tune in particular, and this album in general, over and over again before forming his aesthetic), and the title tracks are visionary and expansive with jaw-droppingly virtuoso guitar playing that is so tastefully, soulfully, and elegantly executed it’ still hard to believe after all these decades that a 15 year old ever played them: Stevie Ray Vaughan had nothing on Shuggie. Freedom Flight is just as important as Inspiration Information. It’s a bit rawer, not quite as lush, but it is every bit as visionary and groundbreaking. – Thom Jurek

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