
Recorded in1975, this reissue of They Call Us Wild is matched as a two-CD set with The Wild Magnolias, the debut album from 1973, and both discs are a rollicking good time of down home funk. A simmering stew of call and response chanting, gruff boasting vocals, deep rolling baselines, scat guitar and tons of caribo-african polyrhythms. The Magnolias lock onto a grove and don't let go. Imagine Parliament/Funkadelic dispatched from the outer reaches of space and plopped down face-first in the bayou, with as much zany flamboyance as George Clinton can muster, a hint of the barrio groove of War, and a smattering of early Meters bass thumping, and you'll begin to get a feeling for the way Big Chief Bo Dollis leads his Indians through their funk/caribbean pastiches.
Originals like "Handa Wanda," and "Two Way Pak E Way," set the pace with thundering funk bass hooks leading into an African-style call and response that is so mesmerizing it becomes hypontic. Calypso touches flitter across "Meet the Boys (on the Battlefield)," while the rolling funk version of the N.O. classic "When the Saints (come marching home) needs to be heard to be believed. Ol' Louis Armstrong never heard the song played like this before.
Admittedly, The Wild Magnolias would be best seen to be appreciated. With their tribal outfits and the outrageous flamboyance of Big Chief Bo leading a full band of percussionists, one can only imagine what they must be like, parading through the streets of
Buy here: They Call Us Wild
http://www.wildmagnolias.net/
http://www.sunnysiderecords.com/
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