James Brown: Gettin' Down To It
Label: Polydor
James Brown recorded the pet project Gettin' Down to It
in Cincinnati, OH, at King Studios, between December 1968 and March
1969. Although you can't tell by the album's title, it reflects Soul
Brother Number One momentarily stepping back from the fiery racial and
political atmosphere of the times. Following the murder of Martin Luther King, Jr.,
the riots sparked by that event, and his calming effect on it, Mr.
Dynamite replaced "Say It Loud (I'm Black and I'm Proud)" with his love
of standards utilizing the melancholy phrasing of his favorite male
vocalist, Frank Sinatra. Aided by the acoustic piano trio led by Dee Felice, Brown
tackles such romantic chestnuts as "Strangers in the Night," "That's
Life," "It Had to Be You," "Willow Weep for Me," and "All the Way."
Although laid-back could be applied to the album's overall tone, these
12 tracks are by no means "mellow." After all, this is James Brown! For instance, "(I Love You) For Sentimental Reasons," clocking in at 7:40, combines pianist Frank Vincent's percussive vamping with James
testifying as if he had this tune confused with "Ain't It Funky Now."
While the disc is made up of mainly standards, that doesn't stop Brown
from including two of his compositions, "Cold Sweat" and an
instrumental take of "There Was a Time," reworked to fit the album's
easygoing mood with jazzy elements intact. - All Music Guide



