Album info

Album-Release:
2014

HRA-Release:
29.12.2014

Album including Album cover

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  • 1Street Life11:17
  • 2My Lady06:46
  • 3Rodeo Drive (High Steppin')04:23
  • 4Carnival Of The Night06:22
  • 5The Hustler05:27
  • 6Night Faces05:13
  • Total Runtime39:28

Info for Street Life

One of our favorite albums ever from The Crusaders – a set that really sums up all the tightness they'd forged in the 70s, while still showing a new sense of soul and funk as well – expertly balanced with flawless LA production! The album may well be the group's equivalent of a Steely Dan album – no surprise, given the work they'd done on sessions for that group – and the title cut is the massive extended version of 'Street Life', with killer vocals from Randy Crawford – and other titles include 'My Lady', 'Night Faces', 'The Hustler', and 'Rodeo Drive'.

„Street Life“ was a top 20 album on three Billboard charts and represents the peak of the band's commercial popularity. The title track, featuring singer Randy Crawford, was a Top 40 pop single (#36) and became the group's most successful entry on the soul chart (#17). 'Street Life' also hit the disco chart, peaking at #75.

Randy Crawford, vocals
Arthur Adams, guitar
Roland Bautista, guitar
Oscar Brashear, trumpet
Garnett Brown, trombone
Paulinho Da Costa, percussion
Wilton Felder, saxophone, bass
Barry Finnerty, guitar
William Green, saxophone
Stix Hooper, drums
Paul Jackson Jr., guitar
James Jamerson, bass
Alphonso Johnson, bass
Robert O'Bryan, trumpet
Jerome Richardson, saxophone
Billy Rogers, guitar
Joe Sample, keyboards

Engineered by Rik Pekkonen
Produced by Wilton Felder, Stix Hooper and Joe Sample

Digitally remastered


The Crusaders
In 1961, four fellows from Houston transplanted themselves to Los Angeles and added more distinctly bluesy elements to the soul jazz style with an ear-grabbing album called The Freedom Sound on the Pacific Jazz label. The band, which had been known in turn as the Swingsters, the Modern Jazz Sextet, and the Nighthawks, was now named the Jazz Crusaders. Its four co-leaders were trombonist Wayne Henderson, tenor saxophonist (and occasional bassist) Wilton Felder, pianist Joe Sample, and drummer Nesbert "Stix" Hooper.

The Jazz Crusaders sound caught on big time, and their subsequent Pacific Jazz albums rewarded them with a good deal of exposure. The band performed regularly and got plenty of airplay. One of its signature pieces, the rollickingly fast "Young Rabbits," was even used as the musical background for a Ford Mustang TV commercial. But as times changed, so did the Jazz Crusaders. In the late Sixties, they placed such popular numbers as the Beatles’ "Eleanor Rigby" and "Get Back" in their repertoire, and firm backbeats began to bolster many a selection. By 1971, they decided that the word "jazz" kept them from attracting a wider listener base, and so they emerged anew with The Crusaders, Vol. 1 (Chisa), an album that openly infused jazz with pop, soul, and r&b elements.

If the Jazz Crusaders had achieved some degree of popularity, it was nothing like the crossover success that greeted the Crusaders. Such albums as Scratch, Southern Comfort, Chain Reaction, Those Southern Knights, Free as the Wind, Images, Street Life, and Royal Jam (recorded variously for the Chisa, ABC Blue Thumb, and MCA labels) sold well and brought in a deluge of new fans. Street Life’s title track provided the Crusaders with a Billboard top forty hit, reaching no. 36 in 1979.

The Crusaders’ popularity started to fade in the early Eighties, prompted by Henderson’s departure. Hooper then left as well, and by the early Nineties Sample and Felder had disbanded the group. A few years later, Henderson and Felder began performing together, first as the New Crusaders and, more recently, as the Jazz Crusaders. Excerpted from The Crusaders’ Finest Hour 314 543 762-2 (Zan Stewart).

This album contains no booklet.

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