If Lonnie Jordan's 2007 long-player War Stories is to believed
that and a couple of thousand other 12" singles and albums by other
artists around the globe the era of nu soul has given way to soul,
and acid jazz has given way to genuine jazz-funk once more. It's not so
much that he makes a claim for these things, it's that the evidence is
in the grooves themselves. Jordan is, of course, a founding member of
Bay area legends War. His singing and keyboard playing helped to define
that group's brave (and very successful) attempts at combining jazz, funk,
soul, Latin groove and polyrhythmic pop. War Stories is Jordan's third
album as a leader, and his first since 1982. It is also easily the best
of his own recordings. Of course there are elements of War's sound here
and the synthesis that was their trademark is, as expected, all over this
14-song set. Vocally, Jordan is as strong as ever. He has his full range,
from falsetto to gritty shout. His writing skills are sharp, and he's
not given to the excesses he once was as a solo artist, though he's more
adventurous now. There are a number of covers on this set as a well, most
notable among them is a slow-burning mambo reading of the Rolling Stones'
"Paint It Black" with Jordan's funky Cuban piano leading the
charge, and a gorgeous jazz version of Jimi Hendrix's "Third Stone
from the Sun," complete with acoustic piano and Rhodes, berimbau,
and a funky bassline yeah, yeah, there are guitar parts too. And
before you roll your eyes, these are not gimmicky side tracks; they are
visionary re-interpretations that only a master musician could pull off.
It might as well be stated that there are a couple of War tunes here as
well, including "The World Is a Ghetto," and "Deliver the
Word." The former doesn't touch the original (but then, how could
it?) the latter reinvents and improves upon the root tune. As fine as
these are, however, they are simply parts of a much larger story. The
album title reveals what's in store for the listener. Jordan simply recounts
through the music his experiences as a musician from running in the Oakland
ghetto in the late '50s and '60s to jamming with Hendrix on the night
before he passed away, and partying and playing with Bob Marley ("Rock
and Roll Days.") Like the best tunes in the genre of socially conscious
roots music, Jordan allows the personal into his tunes, as on the soulful
opener "Don't Let No One Get You Down" and in the tragic balladry
of "Baby Brother," which recounts the shooting of his sibling
by police; there's the rent-party funk of "Get That Feeling"
and the Fela-centric, James Brown-grit, pop and groove in another War
tune, "Get Down," that's much faster than the original version.
Love songs, such as "Out of Sight," with its ethereal late night
groove, and the closer "Theresa," a paean to Jordan's wife of
32 years all intertwine with the message tunes, and the covers are given
poetic weight and become multidimensional by their presentation in this
context. Jordan claims that these tunes were recorded in a studio with
a live band playing, and that the only thing he really over-dubbed were
some layers of keyboards (but backing vocals have been overdubbed to be
sure as well). Given the seamless, warm sound of the disc, that feels
mostly right; but it is also a testament to the other players on the date,
from guitarist JB Eckl and Pancho Tomasselli's bass playing to the polyrhythmic
attack of the numerous drummers and percussionists, to backing vocalist
Tara Ellis. This feels like Jordan with an honest to goodness band, playing
his tunes, not a group of studio hacks. War Stories is a fine recording,
period, and deserves to be heard by anyone who was ever interested in
War, sure; but more than this, it's an assemblage and directory of roots
music from R&B, soul and funk as it is being made right
here and now. War Stories is right now.
(by Thom Jurek, All
Music Guide)
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