Listen:
Details
Format: CD
Label: Soul Jazz Records
Year: 2018
Media Condition: New
Sleeve/Cover Condition: New
TRACKS:
1 Art Ensemble Of Chicago With Fontella Bass - Theme De Yoyo
2 The Har-You Percussion Group - Welcome To The Party
3 The Pharaohs - Damballa
4 Baby Huey - Hard Times
5 James Mason - Sweet Power Your Embrace
6 Byron Morris And Unity - Kitty Bey
7 Funkadelic - Nappy Dugout
8 Rashied Ali & Frank Lowe - Exchange Part 2 (II)
9 Gary Bartz NTU Troop - Celestial Blues
10 Oneness Of Juju - Space Jungle Funk
11 Sarah Webster Fabio - Work It Out
12 Tribe (Wendell Harrison & Phillip Ranelin) - Beneficent
13 Gil Scott-Heron - Whitey On The Moon
14 Don Cherry - Brown Rice
Original recordings 1969-1975
"Soul of a Nation 2: Jazz is the Teacher, Funk is the Preacher" is a powerful collection of radical jazz, street funk and proto-rap made in the era of Black Power.
Featuring ground-breaking African-American artists exploring new Afro-Centric poly-rhythmical styles of music alongside Black Power and civil-rights inspired notions of self-definition, self-respect and self-empowerment in their own lives.
Label: Soul Jazz Records
Year: 2018
Media Condition: New
Sleeve/Cover Condition: New
TRACKS:
1 Art Ensemble Of Chicago With Fontella Bass - Theme De Yoyo
2 The Har-You Percussion Group - Welcome To The Party
3 The Pharaohs - Damballa
4 Baby Huey - Hard Times
5 James Mason - Sweet Power Your Embrace
6 Byron Morris And Unity - Kitty Bey
7 Funkadelic - Nappy Dugout
8 Rashied Ali & Frank Lowe - Exchange Part 2 (II)
9 Gary Bartz NTU Troop - Celestial Blues
10 Oneness Of Juju - Space Jungle Funk
11 Sarah Webster Fabio - Work It Out
12 Tribe (Wendell Harrison & Phillip Ranelin) - Beneficent
13 Gil Scott-Heron - Whitey On The Moon
14 Don Cherry - Brown Rice
Original recordings 1969-1975
"Soul of a Nation 2: Jazz is the Teacher, Funk is the Preacher" is a powerful collection of radical jazz, street funk and proto-rap made in the era of Black Power.
Featuring ground-breaking African-American artists exploring new Afro-Centric poly-rhythmical styles of music alongside Black Power and civil-rights inspired notions of self-definition, self-respect and self-empowerment in their own lives.
