Soul Strut 100: # 29 - Ray Barretto - Acid

RAJ

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I will slowly be unveiling the Top 100 Soul Strut Related Records as Voted by the Strutters Themselves.

# 29 - Ray Barretto - Acid

ray-barretto-acid.jpg


The list so far:

# 100 - Jr. and His Soulettes - Psychodelic Sounds
# 99 - Sir Joe Quarterman & Free Soul
# 98 - Donny Hathaway - S/T (1971)
# 97 - Bernard Wright - ???Nard
# 96 - Tom Scott - Honeysuckle Breeze
# 95 - People Under the Stairs - Question in the Form of an Answer
# 94 - Harlem River Drive
# 93 - Black Moon - Enta Da Stage
# 92 - Marvin Gaye - Here, My Dear
# 91 - Muddy Waters - Electric Mud
# 90 - Les McCann - Layers
# 89 - Jimi Hendrix - Electric Ladyland
# 88 - Leroy Hutson - Hutson (1975)
# 87 - ESG - S/T (1981)
# 86 - Can - Tago Mago
# 85 - Bohannon - Stop & Go
# 84 - WILLIAM DEVAUGHN - Be Thankful For What You Got
# 83 - Power of Zeus - The Gospel According to Zeus
# 82 - Gang Starr - Hard To Earn
# 81 - The J.B.???s - Doing It to Death
# 80 - Parliament - Osmium
# 79 - McNeal & Niles - Thrust
# 78 - The Lafayette Afro Rock Band - Malik
# 77 - Earth, Wind, and Fire (1971)
# 76 - Dr. Dre - The Chronic
# 75 - Black Sabbath (1970)
# 74 - Trap Door / An International Psychedelic Mystery Mix (2006)
# 73 - Bob James - One
# 72 - Matthew Larkin Cassell - Pieces
# 71 - The Beginning Of The End - Funky Nassau
# 70 - Big Bear - Doin??? Thangs
# 69 - Steely Dan - Aja
# 68 - Quasimoto - The Unseen
# 67 - Curtis Mayfield - Curtis/Live! (1971)
# 66 - Al Green - Im still in love with you
# 65 - The Beatnuts - Street Level
# 64 - Archie Whitewater - Archie Whitewater (1970)
# 63 - Pete Rock & C.L. Smooth - Mecca & the Soul Brother
# 62 - Notorious B.I.G. - Ready to Die
# 61 - The J.B.???s - Food For Thought
# 60 - Don Blackman (1982)
# 59 - Niagara - (Tiddies)
# 58 - Can - Ege Bamyasi
# 57 - Whatnauts - On the Rocks
# 56 - The Mohawks - Champ
# 55 - McDonald and Giles (1971)
# 54 - Darondo - Let My People Go
# 53 - Dorothy Ashby - Afro Harping
# 52 - Beastie Boys - Paul???s Boutique
# 51 - Mulatu Astatke - Mulatu of Ethiopia
# 50 - Lyman Woodard Organization - Saturday Night Special
# 49 - Isaac Hayes - Hot Buttered Soul
# 48 - Lyn Collins - Think (About It)
# 47 - James Brown - In The Jungle Groove
# 46 - Bill Withers - Still Bill
# 45 - Stevie Wonder - Innervisions
# 44 - Silver Apples - S/T
# 43 - Mobb Deep - The Infamous
# 42 - Lyn Christopher (1973)
# 41 - Serge Gainsbourg - Histoire de Melody Nelson
# 40 - Gang Starr - Step in the Arena
# 39 - Diamond D - Stunts, Blunts, & Hip Hop
# 38 - Terry Callier - What Color is Love
# 37 - David Axelrod - Song of Innocence
# 36 - The Invaders - Spacing Out
# 35 - Leo Sayer - Endless Flight
# 34 - Public Enemy - It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back
# 33 - DJ Shadow & Cut Chemist - Brainfreeze (Mix)
# 32 - Michael Jackson - Thriller
# 31 - DJ Shadow - Endtroducing
# 30 - De La Soul - 3 Feet High and Rising

Please discuss your reactions to this record. The thread will be archived later here.

About


By the time 1968 rolled around, Ray Barretto was a celebrated studio session player whose hard-driving conga rhythms could be heard all over the records of Dizzy Gillespie, Cal Tjader, Cannonball Adderley, and countless others. Once he dropped Acid onto the music world, Barretto firmly established a reputation for himself as an innovator in his own right.

Like the drug itself, Acid had a mind-expanding influence on everyone, allowing for a far more adventurous and eclectic edge to slip into New York's Latin music scene. A lot less psychedelic than its title and cover might lead you to believe, Acid remains one of the most far-out fusions of Latin and soul music ever conceived.

Catchy as hell, the records four original Latin/soul numbers ("Mercy, Mercy Baby", "The Soul Drummers", "A Deeper Shade of Soul" and "Teacher of Love") are obscure classics loaded with plenty of vintage '60s soul references???punchy James Brown and Stax Records sounding horns, thickly grooving bass lines, fat-back drums, and clich?? soul catch-phrases such as "What I say," "Lord have mercy," "Come on, come on baby" and "Sock it to me!"

El Nuevo Barretto (The New Barretto)" opens the album on familiar ground, with its high-energy boogaloo-styled salsa sung passionately in Spanish. With the second track, "Mercy, Mercy Baby," the sound shifts dramatically as soul gets a serious drenching in hot sauce. The band chants "Mercy, Mercy Baby" behind Memphis-styled horns, catchy lyrics, timbales, and Barretto's kicking congas. The title track, "Acid," opens up sparsely with a lazy hypnotic bass and percussion groove over which stretches the muted trumpet sounds of Rene Lopez (who was soon to be drafted and shipped off to Vietnam). After a rock-steady timbales solo by Orestes Vilato, the band begins calling out "Barretto, Barretto," and master Ray steps forward, obliging them with one of his most fiery and intense conga solos ever. The lyrics on "The Soul Drummers" totally sums up the record: "Have you heard them cooking / The Soul Drummers / well they play so cool / Soul Drummers / so hard to resist / Soul Drummers / with the African twist."

The album's most psychedelic soul sounds can be heard on its closing track, the appropriately titled "Espiritu Libre (Free Spirit)." This instrumental opens with some pretty far out-there trumpet statements that sound as if they could've come straight off of Bitches Brew???pretty advanced stuff for a 1968 Latin record! The track builds into a full blown drum-heated jam flavored with odd rhythmic time-signatures, passionate brass, and feverish bass lines, bringing the album to a satisfying peak that leaves you in bad need of a smoke.

Acid turned on a lot of important players with its irresistible blending of Latin and soul music, significantly helping to bring about the rise of the Afro-Latin funk revolution.


http://www.allaboutjazz.com/php/article.php?id=771#.UTn1k6UaB8w

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Media



 
now this is a real "soulstrut" record for me...heard about it on here and then a fellow strutteur hooked me up with a gold label. a record that really opened up my ears.
 
My first experience with Latin music...heard about it on the strut. Still bumpin' a multi colored label...perhaps a mono gold label with cross my path one day...
 
I have cheap reissues of this and Hard Hands. I'm not mad though, fucking LOVE this record. First latin record I ever bought, iirc. Kinda felt obligated to get into latin music after hearing it.
 
This is always the first album I play for anyone who needs an introduction to Latin music from that era. Such a perfect album, and my favorite Fania release.
 
cover > music





wouldn't make my top 100 anything, there are so many better latin records from the era. Hell, there are better Barretto records from the era.





This list needs more hate and I am here to provide it.
 
Jonny_Paycheck said:cover > music





wouldn't make my top 100 anything, there are so many better latin records from the era. Hell, there are better Barretto records from the era.





This list needs more hate and I am here to provide it.




what barretto album do you rank higher? i rate acid the highested, followed by "power" and "latino con soul"
 
Jonny_Paycheck said:cover > music





wouldn't make my top 100 anything, there are so many better latin records from the era. Hell, there are better Barretto records from the era.





This list needs more hate and I am here to provide it.




Johnny, could you recommend some examples? I am an absolute latin noob for sure but I love love love this record. It's great from beginning to end, IMHO. I don't believe Hard Hands is as good.....
 
crabmongerfunk said:Jonny_Paycheck said:cover > music





wouldn't make my top 100 anything, there are so many better latin records from the era. Hell, there are better Barretto records from the era.





This list needs more hate and I am here to provide it.




what barretto album do you rank higher? i rate acid the highested, followed by "power" and "latino con soul"




Hard Hands


Together
 
Jonny_Paycheck said:crabmongerfunk said:Jonny_Paycheck said:cover > music





wouldn't make my top 100 anything, there are so many better latin records from the era. Hell, there are better Barretto records from the era.





This list needs more hate and I am here to provide it.




what barretto album do you rank higher? i rate acid the highested, followed by "power" and "latino con soul"




Hard Hands


Together




I don't know that I'd rank either one of those higher than Acid. But I'll always rank any Eddie Palmieri higher than Ray Barretto.
 
there's nothing on Acid even remotely fucking with "Love Beads" or "Together"





Palmieri made some different level stuff, agreed. And Harlem River Drive was somewhere in the 80s or 90s?





I am not a big fan of the boogaloo sound, shit is wilde cheesy to me. But considering how most of this list are kind of desert-isle, genre-defining records this choice seems pretty uninspired. "My First Groovy Latin Record" territory.





To me the imagery of the record and what it represents to your average 35 year old "digger" are way more crucial to its placement than the music
 
Jonny_Paycheck said:These here today gone tomorrow voters more hate and I am here to provide it.
 
@ FaceSD here are a few records that I am looking at right now on the counter that all kick Acid's ass:





Willie Rosario and his Orchestra featuring Frankie Figuroa "Two Too Much"


Chollo & The Latin Soul Drives "By Chollo"


Joey Pastrana "Let's Ball"


The Lebron Brothers "Brother"


Me??ique Y Kako "Sock It To Me Latino"





maybe I'm just extremely bored with Acid, so there's a novelty factor with some of these.





but I cannot listen to that DEEPER SHADE OF SOUL shit with a straight face.
 
Jonny_Paycheck said:I am not a big fan of the boogaloo sound, shit is wilde cheesy to me. But considering how most of this list are kind of desert-isle, genre-defining records this choice seems pretty uninspired. "My First Groovy Latin Record" territory.





To me the imagery of the record and what it represents to your average 35 year old "digger" are way more crucial to its placement than the music




I actually quite enjoy teh boogaloo/latin soul thing, which is part of why I like Acid so much.





To someone whose only impression of latin music is hearing shitty bachata being blasted out of your Dominican neighbor's car a record like Acid is pretty mind-blowing. Once you parse it out though, there are better boogaloo records, better salsa records, and better latin jazz records out there. But I think it's already been established that's not necessarily the point of this list, and I can see how Acid gets on here as "My First Groovy Latin Record." It's either this or Watermelon Man, right?





also, Deeper Shade of Soul: a case of a sample ruining the original song?











although that's the weakest song on the record.





is there any sort of Fania vs. Discos Fuentes discussion?
 
rape_donkeys said:

One time I talked to this one girl at a waterslide while this song was playing in the background. I almost never miss the 90s.





I used to have Acid on cd, and it's one of those records where after a very short while I'd look up from whatever I was doing and say, "Damn, this is still on?"
 
To someone whose only impression of latin music is hearing shitty bachata being blasted out of your Dominican neighbor's car a record like Acid is pretty mind-blowing.




that is like saying "compared to Carly Rae Jepsen coming out of my daughter's iphone this Superfly TNT record sounds amazing"