eMusic Review 0
Forty years after Mahal's sophomore effort was released, it sounds as fresh and original as it did back in 1968. The Harlem-born musician, trained in African rhythms, certainly offers a unique take on the blues, using an integrated band to transpose the oft-wearied call-and-response formula that dominates the Southern musical style into a playfully upbeat sound.
When The Natch'l Blues surfaced, the hippie counterculture was in full swing. Electric bluesmen like Albert King — a southpaw famous for wrangling psychedelic chord changes from his Flying V — headlined the Fillmore Auditorium, while pre-war acoustic purveyors such as Furry Lewis and Son House were experiencing unlikely renaissances on the coffeehouse circuits. Mahal, true to form, elected to forge his own trail, employing an electric combo that included organist Al Kooper, the legendary Earl Palmer on drums, and sessions guitarist Jesse Ed Davis, best known for his work on Gene Clark's White Light album.
Originally composed of nine tracks, The Natch'l Blues includes renditions of Yank Rachell's classic country blues number "She Caught the Katy And Left Me A Mule To Ride," the Delta-styled vamp "Going Up To The Country, Paint My Mailbox Blue," and a pair… read more »