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Rufus Thomas - Do the Funky Chicken

Do the Funky Chicken
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Album Details: Do the Funky Chicken

Release Date:06/01/1969
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Track List: Do the Funky Chicken

  1. Do the Funky Chicken
  2. Let the Good Times Roll
  3. Sixty Minute Man
  4. Old MacDonald Had a Farm, Pt. 1
  5. Old MacDonald Had a Farm, Pt. 2
  6. Rufus Rastus Johnson Brown
  7. Soul Food
  8. Turn Your Damper Down
  1. Preacher and the Bear
  2. Funky Mississippi [*]
  3. So Hard to Get Along With [*]
  4. Funky Way [*]
  5. I Want to Hold You [*]
  6. Itch and Scratch (Pt. 2) [*]
  7. Boogie Ain't Nuttin' (But Gettin...
  8. Boogie Ain't Nuttin' (But Gettin...

Pro Reviews: Do the Funky Chicken

  • All Music Guide

    Thomas' first album following Stax's break from Atlantic had "Do the Funky Chicken" at its centerpiece, so the emphasis upon good-humored dance tunes was unsurprising. There were some weird moments, particularly the down-and-bestial seven-minute update of "Sixty Minute Man" (on which Rufus sounds like he's singing in tongues), a remake of "Bear Cat," and a two-part version of "Old McDonald Had a Farm." Still, the slightly goofy uptempo arrangements can get a little tiresome, and as his best hits from the period are better than the album-only tracks, almost everyone should just stick with a compilation. The CD adds seven bonus tracks from 1968-74 singles, which are OK but not essential; Eddie Floyd's "Funky Mississippi" (from 1968) is about the best.

    - Richie Unterberger, All Music Guide

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Biography

Rufus Thomas

Few of rock roll's founding figures are as likable as Rufus Thomas. From the 1940s onward, he has personified Memphis music; his small but witty cameo role in Jim Jarmusch's Mystery Train, a film which satirizes and enshrines the city's role in popular culture, was entirely appropriate. As a recording artist, he wasn't a major innovator, but he could always be depended... Read more