From Wikipedia - Reading time: 5 min
| Provocative Percussion Vol. III | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by Enoch Light and the Light Brigade | ||||
| Released | 1961 | |||
| Label | Command | |||
| Producer | Enoch Light | |||
| Enoch Light and the Light Brigade chronology | ||||
| ||||
Provocative Percussion Vol. III is a studio album by Enoch Light and the Light Brigade. It was produced by Light and released in 1961 on Light's Command Records label (catalog no. RS 821-SD).[1] The featured musicians included Tony Mottola (guitar), Doc Severinsen (trumpet), Bobby Byrne (trombone), Urbie Green, Bob Haggart, Phil Bodner, Stanley Webb, Moe Wechsler and Joe Wilder.[1][2][3] The arrangements were by Lew Davies.[4] The album cover artwork is by abstract painter Josef Albers.[5]
Hi-Fi/Stereo Review praised the engineering and the musicians selected for the recording, but panned the percussion arrangements whose gimmicks prevented the music from "really swinging."[6] On the other hand DownBeat cited a "minimum of drum tricks", praising the melody-centric performances and naming the track Exodus Theme as worthy of attention.[3] Naming it a "Billboard Pick", Billboard called the album a "gas", praising the arrangements, engineering, and overall danceability.[4] United Press International critic William D. Laffler also praised the engineering and the arrangements as "imaginative", singling out "April in Portugal" as the best song on the album.[2]
[1] Side A
Side B