HiRez Poll Washington Jr, Grover - SOUL BOX [SACD]

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Rate the SACD of Grover Washington Jr. - SOUL BOX

  • 6

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 5

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 4

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 3

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 2

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 1: Terrible Content, Surround Mix, and Fidelity

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    27
I'm with @Simon A on this one! Before i found surround music and QQ, my only exposure to Washington was his 1982 release, The Best Is Yet To Come, which i received as a Secret Santa gift from a co-worker. At the time, i was into Ornette Coleman and John Coltrane (still am!), so i basically dismissed Washington. When i found QQ and read the POLL thread for Winelight, i picked up the Audio Fidelity SACD and was instantly won over. But Washington's work on that disc and Scheiner's mix did nothing to prepare me for the wonders inside this magnificent Soul Box! Maybe i'm just a sucker for a 70's Quad mix, or maybe it's the Creed Taylor production with full-blown orchestral swells, or the killer Bob James-led jazz band, or . . . ALL of the above combine to make me love, Love, LOVE this release!

It starts off so soft and sweet with Washington's poignant and delicate take on "Aubrey," given wonderful support around the quad horn from the work of Taylor and James (and check out all of the luminaries in the band that back Washington throughout: Ron Carter, Richard Davis, Idris Muhammad, Billy Cobham, Hubert Laws, Richard Tee, Airto, Eric Gale, Randall Brecker, . . . et al!). The 3:50 run of "Aubrey" is followed by an absolutely epic take (13:25) on Norman Whitfield's "Masterpiece," and masterpiece it is! The quad mix drops me right into the midst of the deep funk swirl with Washington delivering his own soulful take in wave after wave up front; the whole is a discrete sonic bliss trip! And when i didn't think it could get any better: next up is nearly 16 minutes of Marvin Gaye's "Trouble Man"–DAMN! Despite the previous song's title, for me this is really the album's masterpiece! Some of Washington's best work, spinning smoldering and soulful chorus after chorus, taking his game to the next level all behind great accompaniment and interspersed with stellar solos from Eric Gale on guitar and Richard Tee on organ. Truly the album's centerpiece, but that's not to say the rest is not worth your time–this release is ALL killer, NO filler! Next up is the second shortest cut at 6:06–a mercurial and masterful take on Stevie Wonder's "You Are The Sunshine Of My Life." Washington demonstrates his depth by next taking on two ballads. "Don't Explain" clocks in at just over 11 minutes, and Washington's majestic and lyrical lines in the midst of the deep, dark, brooding accompaniment really shine. This is followed by nearly 10 minutes of a nearly otherworldly"Easy Living," on which Washington picks up the soprano saxophone to deliver some lush wonderfulness as Taylor and James take the accompaniment on some unexpected turns (the cut is actually a medley with "Ain't Nobody's Business If I Do") with more great support from Gale and Tee. Billy Cobham takes over on the kit for his composition, "Taurian Matador." A great, funky 8:10 workout to bring this big, beautiful Soul Box to closure--put a lid on it, baby!

So, yeah, as @Simon A notes, a perfect 10, and–watch me riff on his latest avatar–this SACD has fast become a staple for me! Stay Surrounded, Comrades!
 
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Changed my vote to a 10. This **** is simply off the hook! Besides the already mentioned superlative one-two punch of Masterpiece and Trouble Man, the emotional and majestically building Don’t Explain has to be heard to be believed. Mind blowing is an understatement.
 
I was going to buy the LP but realised that there was a DV release, so I bought it instead. I was a bit concerned reading the disclaimer that the Quadraphonic masters were long gone. Still the discrete sources found for this release sound very good indeed, I needn't have worried! This reminds me a lot of Deodato and Airto. All were produced by Creed Taylor!
 
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