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Mtume - Juicy Fruit (CD)

Album Details: Juicy Fruit

Release Date:01/01/1983
Label:Sbme Special Mkts.
UPC:886972407425

Other Available Formats: Juicy Fruit

User Reviews: Juicy Fruit

  • Overall:

    Classic 80's Funk***********************

    By Ronald  Aug 13, 2001

    If you ain't on Mtume, you don't know what the hell you missin'. This is how music should sound.

  • Overall:

    Pronounced em-TOO-may

    By R.R  Mar 28, 2000

    Although I didn't realize it at the time (I was only six years old), I grew up listening to many of these songs . Many are still favorites of Black radio , with title song Juicy Fruit often heard on many a "Quiet Storm" . The rest of the album is en...ergetic funk-pop , falling somewhere in between the hardcore funk of post-Parliament George Clinton and the "Punk-Funk-Rock" stylings of Rick James . Both were contemporaries of this ensemble . Many of these songs get heard in other ways : as samples in R&B and Rap . If you ever heard San Quinn's "Hitz I'm Makin'" you've heard "Hips" . If you've heard Biggie's "Juicy" , then you've heard "Juicy Fruit" . Unfortunately , there were only two more albums to come from Mtume , for reasons still unexplained . If you were under 30 in the early eighties , give Mtume , especially this album , a listen . Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Juicy Fruit

  • All Music Guide

    James Mtume's band Mtume hit its commercial and creative peak in 1983, when Juicy Fruit was released. The infectious, mildly risqué title song -- which contains the controversial lyrics "I'll be your lollipop/You can lick me everywhere" -- soared to number one on ~Billboard's RB singles chart and ended up being sampled by quite a few hip-hoppers, including the late Notorious B.I.G., aka Biggie Smalls (who used the infectious gem on his 1994 hit "Juicy"). Some of the people who heard the "Juicy Fruit" single on the radio back in 1983 bought the single but not the album, which was a mistake because the other tracks are also excellent. In fact, many of Mtume's hardcore fans agree that Juicy Fruit is the band's most essential album. This LP came at a time when funk was becoming increasingly technology-minded. Horn-driven funk bands were going out of style, and funksters were using a lot more keyboards and synthesizers. Juicy Fruit reflects that evolution; although not totally electronic, f...unk/urban pearls like "Hips" and "Ready for Your Love" are very keyboard-minded. Only one horn player is employed on this release: jazz saxophonist Gary Bartz, who did his share of RB sessions in the late '70s and early '80s but eventually returned to being a full-time jazz improviser. Throughout Juicy Fruit, James Mtume takes a very hands-on approach -- in addition to producing the album and co-writing much of the material, he plays keyboards and provides some of the lead vocals (along with the expressive, big-voiced Tawatha Agee). Juicy Fruit isn't the only worthwhile album that James Mtume's band came out with in the 1980s; as a rule, his 1980s output was solid. But if you must limit yourself to one Mtume release, Juicy Fruit would be the best choice. - Alex Henderson, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Mtume

A former jazz percussionist, Mtume moved into urban contemporary and funk in the late '70s and became one of the more successful producers and performers in both styles during the '80s. The son of the great jazz saxophonist Jimmy Heath, Mtume was a conga player and percussionist who recorded and toured with Miles Davis and was featured on albums by the Heath Brothers, S... Read more