jewels santana Wrote:
do you know if there was a friendship there? there seems to be a lot of each others music on both sides.
Not that I'm aware of. The whole samba soul scene that Jorge Ben was a part of in the mid 70's though was heavily influenced by U.S. soul artists though.
A couple of more samba soul albums from 1976:


Hyldon - Deus, A Natureza e a Musica
Tim Maia - Racional, V.2
Hyldon and Tim Maia were two of the biggest stars of the 70's samba soul movement. If you've seen "City of God," then you've heard them before. Tim Maia is funkier and more in debt to american r&b than Hyldon was. Hyldon's music has a slower groove and is almost folky at times. Both are great though.
Here's a little more info on the Maia album:
DustyGroove Wrote:
The rare second volume of Tim Maia's Racional album series from the 70s – even funkier and more harder-edged than the first! The record really follows the heavy soul influence that Tim had been hitting on his early 70s albums for Polydor – a strong dose of American funk and R&B, especially from the east coast indie scene – filtered down beautifully by Maia, one of the few cats in Brazil at the time who really knew how to get the sound right – and how to mix it with the best of his local influences! There's some wonderful grooves here – definitely of the funky Brazilian type you'd know from the Samba Soul generation, but also much more solidly soul, too – given Tim's fantastic vocals, and strong ear for putting over a tune!
I couldn't find much of a description of the Hyldon one but he is backed by some of the most talented samba soul musicians including members of Azymuth and Banda Black Rio.
And back to other stuff:

Iceberg Slim - Reflections
Iceberg Slim was a real life Chicago pimp in the 1940's and 1950's. In the early 60's, he decided to retire from pimping and started writing about it instead. His autobiographical novel, "Pimp: Story of My Life" has sold over 6 million copies. Reflections is his only album and it is basically an album of street poetry about the pimpin' life backed by jazzy, bluesy, and occasionally funky music supplied by the Rod Holloway Quartet. It was a big influence on Ice T and Ice Cube who both choose their names partly in tribute to Slim.
I'm not really a fan of rap but I thoroughly enjoy this and Lightning Rod.
DustyGroove Wrote:
A fantastic album of bad-rapping spoken material from Iceberg Slim – one of the hippest 70s sets of its type, and a great audio tribute to the man who wrote the books Pimp, Trick Baby, and Mama Black Widow! Slim reads his own work in a very laidback style, but one with a slinky, pimpish feel too – kind of a relaxed version of the Lightning Rod mode, with similar themes delivered in rhyming prose. Backings are by the Rod Holloway Quartet – who hit some great bluesy modes on the set – vamping behind Slim's cool vocals, which themselves are recorded with a nicely pointed quality. Titles include "Mama Debt", "Durealla", "The Fall", and "Broadway Sam". Right up there with Watts Prophets, Last Poets, and Lightning Rod for sheer 70s hipness!

Black Renaissance - Body, Mind & Spirit
DustyGroove Wrote:
A spiritual jazz classic – one of the rarest albums of its type from the 70s! This legendary session was recorded by Roy Ayers' keyboardist Harry Whitaker – working here as the leader of the Black Renaissance group, a one-shot ensemble that featured Woody Shaw on trumpet, Azar Lawrence on saxes, Buster Williams on bass, and Mtume on percussion. The session was cut in New York in 1976, but only issued on a rare album that came out briefly in Japan. Yet somehow, the quality of the work and the depth of soulfulness have created a strong aura about the session – making it an oft-cited influence by a generation of DJs and soul jazz listeners. The album only features 2 long tracks – both of them strong ensemble numbers that build modally searching grooves in a Strata East-like style, peppered with voices, both sung and spoken, in a hip, socially conscious mode. Both tracks – "Black Renaissance" and "Magic Ritual" are excellent, on a par with the best 70s spiritual soul jazz!

Phil Ranelin - Vibes from the Tribe
DustyGroove Wrote:
An excellent lost classic from Detroit soul jazz powerhouse Phil Ranelin! Trombonist Ranelin was one of the key figures in the city's Tribe Records scene – and this album is one of the greatest that the label ever issued. The set features Ranelin on trombone, Marcus Belgrave on trumpet, Kenny Cox on electric piano, and Harold McKinney on piano – plus other luminaries from the incredibly strong Detroit scene of the time.
AMG Wrote:
Musically, this is not only a solid portrait of Detroit's jazz scene in the mid-'70s, but is also a definitive portrait of its cultural mentality at the time. While everyone in the nation had written off the city as a wasteland, a space devoid of anything worth celebrating, its residents were in the process of creating some of the most vital jazz, literature, and art in its history...Having grown up in the city and seen this band over a dozen times, I can say that the Tribe was one of the most unique and gifted jazz ensembles that the '70s ever produced. Until techno, the world didn't know how lucky it was to have a post-Motown Detroit; the evidence is now available to suggest that it should have been paying attention all along. If jazz is your thing, then get this. Period.