CHRIS BANGS & MICK TALBOT - BACK TO BUSINESS ALBUM REVIEWS
June 16, 2022
Back To Business’ is a delightful new collaborative album from two vets of the UK soul and mod scene… MICK TALBOT and CHRIS BANGS. Mick is, of course, a garlanded keyboardist who’s played with everyone and anyone but maybe best known in the mainstream for his key contribution to the Style Council. “Bangsy”, who’s been on the scene for more years than he cares to remember, is an acclaimed DJ/producer/mixer and sometimes percussionist and their ‘Back To Business’ betrays all their years of experience. Apt too that the 12 tracker is being released via Acid Jazz – a label the duo have enjoyed a long relationship with. Indeed Chris actually coined the term ‘acid jazz’ while Mick appeared on one of the label’s earliest and rarest singles as ‘King Truman’ back in 1988.
The upcoming release of ‘Back To Business’ was flagged up by two singles… ‘Sumthin’ Else’ and a cover of ‘How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)’.The former was/is a 60s flavoured sweaty jazz club groove which went down a storm on Acid Jazz head boy’s Eddie Piller’s Totally Wired Radio show. The single all but selling out that very day. The latter was/is an instrumental take on the Marvin Gaye classic and its vibe recalled those great old Earl Van Dyke 60s Motown albums.
And the good news is if that retro soul instrumental and soul-jazz sound is your bag, then there’s plenty more on ‘Back To Business’. Indeed if the LP was presented as some lost 60s Blue Note/Chess album from someone like, say, Brother Jack McDuff, Jimmy Smith or Ramsey Lewis you wouldn’t blink an eye lid! Yep, ‘Back To Business’ is that good.
Here’s a selection of highlights. ‘Jerk Chicken’ has a wild Northern Soul/mod flavour (in the early days of “Northern” those in the know revered people like Jimmy Smith and Ramsey Lewis); ‘Surf and Turf’ offers more of the same – a very “Chess studio sound”. ‘It’s Alright’ is another Earl Van Dyke homage; ‘Leela’s Dance’ mines a 5/4 rhythmic Latino groove (listen up Roger Beaujolais’ jazzy vibraphones); ‘Goody Goody’ is another visit to Spanish Harlem; ‘Pick N Micks’ is a virtuous soul-jazz workout from Talbot featuring our man on three pianos, three Hammonds and three Wurlitzer pianos plus Rhodes Bass; while ‘Blues Walks’ is Chris’ solo composition – a swinging bop-jazz tune fronted by trumpeter Dave Priseman and featuring more sweet vibes from Roger Beaujolais.