![]() Then there’s the crowd-pleasing call and response rhythm & blues holler “Hey Good Lookin’ Woman,” road-tested around the globe to audiences of all cultures and languages that eat up the playful vocal challenge. “Isn’t She Lovely” is a steady grooving cover of Ronnie’s old friend Stevie Wonder’s classic song set to a backbeat shuffle, another full circle moment given that Ronnie played on Songs in the Key of Life. The tropical trinity ends with “After Chicago,” balmy bossa evocations of one especially memorable Windy City gig trip. “Carlos” is a composition inspired by Mexican Rock legend Carlos Santana, an acquaintance who became a close compadre after Ronnie repeatedly came out to see him during his residency at The Hard Rock Café in Las Vegas-so many times that they ultimately gave him his own personal, perennially valid, laminated backstage pass! This features a flamenco guitar intro played by Jerry Lopez, simmers into a suave melody then all-out erupts with fiery solos from trio guitarist Michael O’Neill and Ronnie, spiced with the percussion of Luis Conte and Lenny Castro. “Sultry Song II” is an update of his own tune that he introduced on flutist Nestor Torres’ 1991 album Dance of the Phoenix (which he also produced). Ronnie digs into ‘The Latin Bit’ on three numbers. This is where my head is at now – and where I’m going.” His journey to that destination rides on a winding melody, not one but two bridges, and a rock steady groove kicked down by his son, drummer Chris Foster, one of four cuts he plays on here, rendering Ronnie: One Proud Papa. The album opens with the title track, “Reboot,” which he describes as “organ music…but a little different. The nine-song Reboot marks a fresh start for Foster, who has whipped up an omnidirectional brew of Hammond Organ Groove that, yes, pays homage to the past but more often reflects Ronnie’s restlessness for ushering in the new. The stuff he was playing on The Sermon and Groovin’ at Smalls’ Paradise was crazy! Had me listening on headphones at the Buffalo Public Library.” ![]() And, of course, they brought Jimmy on the scene. From Horace Silver and Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers to Donald Byrd and Herbie Hancock, Blue Note’s roster was the cream of the crop – the center. When something new came out, we’d go to someone’s house and we’d all check it out…together. I had some albums, my friends had other albums. I was exposed to it through my own path and other people’s paths – fans and players. “I grew up on Blue Note, listening to all the greats. “Blue Note has always stood for The Art of Jazz,” Foster marvels. ![]() ![]() To this accord, Ronnie’s re-signing is a bold torch-passing move that brings him full circle. George Butler making him the next in an illustrious lineage of Hammond B3 organ artisans the label had presented which included the legendary Jimmy Smith, Larry Young, and Dr. After Wolff passed away a few months later, Ronnie was officially signed to Blue Note by Dr. The first in a run of five stellar early-70s albums, Two Headed Freap featured Foster’s memorable tune “Mystic Brew,” which would later reach the ears of hip-hop fans around the world when A Tribe Called Quest sampled the track as the foundation of “Electric Relaxation” on their 1994 album Midnight Marauders.įoster first caught the ear of Blue Note co-founder Francis Wolff when he made his first-ever recording as a sideman on jazz guitar legend Grant Green’s searingly funky Blue Note LP, Alive! in 1970. The organ great’s dynamic new album, Reboot, arrives upon the 50th anniversary of his 1972 Blue Note debut Two Headed Freap. Back Into The Groove: The 2022 return of Ronnie Foster to Blue Note Records is an event of synergistic quintessence, completeness, and cool. ![]()
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