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Ronnie Foster
Two Headed Freap

Two Headed Freap
Two Headed FreapTwo Headed FreapTwo Headed FreapTwo Headed FreapTwo Headed Freap

Catno

4535203 4535203 84382 BST-84382 00602445352036 00602445352036

Formats

1x Vinyl LP Album Reissue Stereo

Country

Worldwide

Release date

May 27, 2022

Media: Mi
Sleeve: M

$60*

Sold out

*Taxes included, shipping price excluded

A1

Chunky

4:50

A2

Drowning In The Sea Of Love

4:05

A3

The Two Headed Freap

4:19

A4

Summer Song

5:20

B1

Let's Stay Together

4:50

B2

Don't Knock My Love

4:30

B3

Mystic Brew

4:13

B4

Kentucky Fried Chicken

5:00

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On the fourth album of his fusion cycle for the man from the Black Forest, George Duke substantially expanded the number of his colleagues. As before, drummer Leon “Ndugu” Chancler beats as the heart of the rhythm section, and the Brazilian couple, Airto and Flora are again on board. The ten tracks perform a stylistic balancing act. The jittery funk of Chariot and the smooth ballad Someday show off Duke’s soulful vocal flair. Flora Purim crowns the complex Look Into Her Eyes with her spheric sound as she and guitarist George Johnson take care of business on this stratospheric piece with its bluesy electric shuffle. With two high-voltage guitarists (Daryl Stuermer and Byron Miller), That’s What She Said points to the tie between rock and funk. The most eye-opening outing occurs with star guitarist Lee Ritenour stomping on Rokkinrowl, I Don’t Know, and its Hendrix parody. Sister Sirene shows that, naturally, the typical dreamy Duke instrumentals are not left off the album. An almost animistic soundscape is woven into the fabric of Mashavu, and Giant Child Within Us – Ego is a small fusion suite encompassing the spectrum from the classical to the Zappaesque finale. The title piece is indeed a blues, dished out pure and simple – a far cry from the sounds of the preceeding piece with its mountains of synthesizers. Rather, the sultry delta heat, the acoustic simplicity and raw truth of the song prevail – the blues.