Les McCann
Talk To The People
Play Talk To The People
| Song | Lyrics | Save | Buy |
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| 1 What's Going On | ![]() |
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| 2 Shamading | ![]() |
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| 3 Seems So Long | ![]() |
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| 4 She's Here | ![]() |
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| 5 North Carolina | ![]() |
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| 6 Let It Lay | ![]() |
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| 7 Talk To The People | ![]() |
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AMG Review of Talk to the People
Richard S. Ginell
All Music GuideWhile Invitation to Openness was Les McCann's progressive statement of 1972, this was his populist sermon, with a title to match. With four vocals among the seven tracks, Talk to the People preaches earthily in the funky soul/jazz and R&B languages of the time, with some social comment besides. Having gone completely over to the Rhodes electric piano and Hohner clavinet, McCann became a fervent convert -- indeed, he and Stevie Wonder were the funky-butt champs of the clavinet in the 1970s -- and he could beat on them with the rhythmic snap of a conga drummer. "Shamading" may be the funkiest, hip-shaking thing McCann has ever recorded; the cool, swaggering funkathon "North Carolina" runs a close second; and the best of the vocals is a very gritty and convincing treatment of Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On." Although there are some weak links in this chain of tunes, the highs are sky-high, and they represent some of McCann's peak studio performances.






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