Lyrics from Brother Jug
All Music Guide Review
A swinging soul-jazz set from just before the point where soul-jazz turned once and for all into fusion, 1970's Brother Jug is very much an album of its time. (Note Billy Butler's funky-cheesy wah-wah guitar underpinning "Jungle Strut.") That said, while the album doesn't have the classic timelessness of Gene Ammons' best '50s and early-'60s work, Brother Jug is one of Ammons' better albums released soon after the tenor saxophonist's release from a seven-year prison sentence. Ammons' playing on this album has an unaccustomed grit; even on ballads like "Didn't We," there's an R&B-style honk to Ammons' tone that suits the funky, electric arrangements well. Brother Jug is not an all-time classic -- the closing take on "Son of a Preacher Man," with Sonny Phillips' in-your-face wah-wah organ, is hampered by a too-sluggish rhythm section and some unimaginative, braying solos by Ammons -- but even the weakest tunes have a certain historical interest. ~ Stewart Mason, All Music Guide
Brother Jug Track Listing
Credits of Brother Jug
- Junior Mance
- Piano
- Bernard "Pretty" Purdie
- Drums
- Buster Williams
- Bass
- Billy Butler
- Guitar
- Frankie Jones
- Drums
- Candido
- Conga
- Bob Bushnell
- Bass, Bass (Electric)
- Gene Ammons
- Sax (Tenor), Main Performer
- Sonny Phillips
- Organ

















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