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       Donny Hathaway's 1972 Live album is one of the most glorious of his career, 
        an uncomplicated, energetic set with a heavy focus on audience response 
        as well as the potent jazz chops of his group. The results of shows recorded 
        at the Troubadour in Hollywood and the Bitter End in New York, the record 
        begins with Hathaway's version of the instant soul classic "What's 
        Going On," Marvin Gaye's original not even a year old when Hathaway 
        recorded this version. His own classic "The Ghetto" follows 
        in short order, but stretches out past ten minutes with revelatory solos 
        from Hathaway on electric piano. "Voices Inside (Everything Is Everything)" 
        is another epic (14-minute) jam, with plenty of room for solos and some 
        of the most sizzling bass work ever heard on record by Willie Weeks. Any 
        new Donny Hathaway record worth its salt also has to include a radical 
        cover, and Live obliges nicely with his deft, loping version of John Lennon's 
        "Jealous Guy." The audience is as much a participant as the 
        band here, immediately taking over with staccato handclaps to introduce 
        "The Ghetto" and basically taking over the chorus on "You've 
        Got a Friend." They also contribute some of the most frenzied screaming 
        heard in response to any Chicago soul singer of the time (excepting only 
        Jackie Wilson and Gene Chandler, of course). Hardly the obligatory live 
        workout of most early-'70s concert LPs, Live solidified Hathaway's importance 
        at the forefront of soul music. 
      (by John Bush, All 
        Music Guide) 
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