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Lafayette Afro Rock Band

Lafayette Afro Rock Band was an American funk band formed in Roosevelt, Long Island, New York in 1970. Shortly after their formation, they relocated to France. Though little-known in their native United States during their recording period, they have since become celebrated as one of the standout funk bands of the 1970s and are particularly noted for their use of break beats.[2] The band also recorded under the names Ice, Crispy & Co. (Krispie & Co. in Europe), Captain Dax, and others.[3]

Lafayette Afro Rock Band
Lafayette Afro Rock Band in 1978
Background information
Also known asIce
Captain Dax
Crispy & Co.
OriginParis, France
GenresFunk[1]
Years active1970–1978
LabelsAmerica (1972)
Musidisc (1973)
Makossa (1974–1977)
Superclasse (1978)
Past membersBobby Boyd (vocals)
Larry Jones (acoustic guitar)
Michael McEwan (Electric guitar)
Lafayette Hudson (bass guitar)
Frank Abel (keyboard)
Ronnie James Buttacavoli (horns)
Ernest "Donny" Donable (drums)
Keno Speller (percussion)
Arthur Young (horns, percussion)
Audio sample
Darkest Light

Upon their relocation to Paris, the local music scene influenced the group's work, inspiring the addition of rock and African elements. They recorded their debut album as Ice and then adopted the name Lafayette Afro Rock Band. The band's next two albums, Soul Makossa and Malik, included the songs "Hihache" and "Darkest Light" which would be sampled in numerous culturally significant hip-hop compositions. They broke up in 1978.

History edit

The group first formed as the Bobby Boyd Congress in 1970, in homage to their original vocalist Bobby Boyd.[4] In addition to Boyd, the band included guitarist Larry Jones, bassist Lafayette Hudson, keyboardist Frank Abel, horn players Ronnie James Buttacavoli and Arthur Young, drummer Ernest "Donny" Donable, and percussionists Keno Speller and Arthur Young. Jones was later replaced by Michael McEwan.[5] Upon deciding that the funk scene in the United States was too saturated for them to viably compete, they relocated to France in 1971. When Boyd split from the group and returned to America, the remaining band members briefly renamed themselves Soul Congress and then settled on the name Ice.[6]

After regular performances in Paris's Barbès district, an area made up primarily of North African immigrants, they caught the eye of producer Pierre Jaubert and became the house session band at his Parisound studio.[5] The influence of their surroundings led Ice to increasingly weave African rhyme schemes, textures, and beat tendencies into their established funk style. The album Each Man Makes His Own Destiny was released in 1972 under the name Ice, after which the band changed their name to Lafayette Afro Rock Band to reflect their expanded influences.[4]

Now under the name Lafayette Afro Rock Band, they released the album Soul Makossa (also known as Movin' and Groovin' in the United States) in 1973.[4] The title track was a cover version of Manu Dibango's international hit, "Soul Makossa". Though it failed to chart, the album made an impact years later. Its standout song, the oft-covered "Hihache", has been widely sampled by artists as diverse as Janet Jackson, Biz Markie, LL Cool J, De La Soul, Digital Underground, Naughty by Nature, and Wu-Tang Clan.[6]

The band's 1975 album Malik prominently featured the Univox Super-Fuzz and liberal usage of the talk box. This album was equally influential in subsequent decades, with a sample of the song "Darkest Light" being featured prominently in Public Enemy's "Show 'Em Whatcha Got".[7] The original saxophone solo on "Darkest Light" was played by Leroy Gomez, who later became popular as the lead singer of the disco group Santa Esmeralda. After Public Enemy's usage of the song was highly praised,[8] samples of "Darkest Light" appeared in several more notable rap and R&B songs, including "Back to the Hotel" by N2Deep,[9] the multi-platinum 1992 single "Rump Shaker" by Wreckx-n-Effect,[10] and the 2006 single "Show Me What You Got" by Jay-Z.[11]

Mal Waldron, an American jazz and world music composer best known as the long-time accompanist for Billie Holiday,[12] collaborated with Lafayette Afro Rock Band in 1975, employing them to back him on his unreleased Candy Girl album.[5] Shortly later, blues pianist Sunnyland Slim sought out the band's services, resulting in the collaborative album Depression Blues.[13] The group subsequently reverted to the Ice moniker and also used the names Captain Dax and Crispy & Co. on various releases. The 1975 album Tonight at the Discotheque was released as a "various artists" compilation but actually consisted of songs recorded by the same band under multiple monikers.[14]

They released 1976 funky disco single "Dr. Beezar, Soul Frankenstein" under the name Captain Dax in Japan.[5] The band members returned to America and broke up in 1978. Later that year, French record label Superclasse released the album Afon: Ten Unreleased Afro Funk Recordings. In 1999 the same label released Darkest Light: The Best of Lafayette Afro Rock Band, which rekindled interest in the group two decades after they disbanded.[4] More compilations followed, including The Ultimate Collection in 2001,[2] and the 2016 album Afro Funk Explosion! The latter was released under the name "Lafayette Afro Rock Band vs. Ice" and includes songs originally released under those two names plus Crispy & Co. and Captain Dax.[15]

Reception edit

Lafayette Afro Rock Band toiled in obscurity during their years of activity, but have become of interest to critics and music historians due to their characteristic break beats, which in turn influenced future hip-hop and R&B artists.[2] Due to their obscurity, when compared to their contemporaries like Cameo, Funkadelic, or Kool & The Gang, few copies of their studio albums have survived.[2] With the exception of the commonly-sampled songs "Hihache" and "Darkest Light", reviewers and historians have devoted their attention to more recent compilation albums. Music historian Dave Thompson unfavorably reviewed Afon: Ten Unreleased Afro Funk Recordings (1978) as "uninspiring", but praised Darkest Light: The Best of Lafayette Afro Funk Band (1999) as the "ultimate point of entry" for the band.[4] That album also received a flattering review from Melody Maker.[16] AllMusic critic Jason Ankeny has also favorably reviewed the 1999 compilation, stating that it is "one of the great documents of classic funk."[17] The Ultimate Collection (2001) received particular acclaim from AllMusic writer Jason Birchmeier, who asserted that it was "a gem" that "you can't go wrong with."[2] Afro Funk Explosion! (2016) also received positive reviews, with AllMusic's Thom Jurek calling it "essential for fans of '70s funk and musically on par with the best of Mandrill, War, and Osibisa."[15]

Discography edit

Studio albums edit

  • Each Man Makes His Own Destiny (1973, as Ice)
  • Soul Makossa (1973, as Lafayette Afro Rock Band)
  • Voodounon (EP, 1974, as Lafayette Afro Rock Band)
  • Nino and Radiah (1974, as Ice, backing Nino Ferrer)
  • Malik (1975, as Lafayette Afro Rock Band)
  • Tonight at the Discotheque (1975, as "Various Artists")
  • Funky Flavored (1976, as Crispy & Co.)[5]
  • Frisco Disco (1976, as Ice)[4]
  • Afro Agban (1977, as Ice)[4]

Singles edit

  • "Oglenon" (1974, as Lafayette Afro Rock Band)
  • "Brazil" (1975, as Crispy & Co.)
  • "A.I.E. (A Mwana)" (1975, as Ice)
  • "Get It Together" (1975, as Crispy & Co.)
  • "Sunara" (1976, as Crispy & Co.)
  • "Dr. Beezar, Soul Frankenstein" (1976, as Captain Dax)[5]

Compilations edit

  • Afon: Ten Unreleased Afro Funk Recordings (1978)[4]
  • Darkest Light: The Best of Lafayette Afro Rock Band (1999)[16]
  • The Ultimate Collection (2001)[2]
  • Afro Funk Explosion! (2016)

Selected samples edit

Song Sampling recording[4]
"Hihache" (1974)
"Darkest Light" (1975)

References edit

  1. ^ Ankeny, Jason. "Lafayette Afro Rock Band Biography". AllMusic. Retrieved 2023-03-05.
  2. ^ a b c d e f Birchmeier, Jason (2003). Bogdanov, Vladimir; et al. (eds.). All Music Guide to Soul. Backbeat Books. p. 406. ISBN 0-87930-744-7.
  3. ^ "Lafayette Afro Rock Band". Discogs. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i Thompson, Dave (2001). Funk. Backbeat Books. pp. 156–157. ISBN 0-87930-629-7.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Ankeny, Jason. "Lafayette Afro Rock Band: Biography". Allmusic. Retrieved 2008-03-13.
  6. ^ a b Crazy Horse, Kandia (2004). Rip It Up: The Black Experience in Rock'n'roll. Macmillan. p. 209. ISBN 1-4039-6243-X.
  7. ^ Wang, Oliver (2003). Classic Material: The Hip-Hop Album Guide. ECW Press. p. 138. ISBN 1-55022-561-8.
  8. ^ Frere-Jones, Sasha (October 30, 2006). "Top Down; Pop Notes". The New Yorker. Vol. 82, no. 35. p. 22.
  9. ^ "N2Deep's Back to the Hotel sample of Lafayette Afro Rock Band's Darkest light". WhoSampled.
  10. ^ a b Breihan, Tom (May 3, 2007). "On the Continuing Resonance of "Rump Shaker"". The Village Voice. Retrieved 2008-03-13.
  11. ^ Dolan, Casey (October 21, 2006). "Downloads". Los Angeles Times. pp. E8.
  12. ^ Clarke, Donald (2002). Billie Holiday: Wishing on the Moon. Da Capo Press. pp. 403–404. ISBN 0-306-81136-7.
  13. ^ Charters, Samuel Barclay (1977). The Legacy of the Blues: Art and Lives of Twelve Great Bluesmen. Da Capo Press. pp. 133–144. ISBN 0-306-80054-3.
  14. ^ "Various – Tonight At The Discotheque [Ice, Lafayette Afro Rock Band]". Funl-o-logy. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
  15. ^ a b Jurek, Thom. "Ice / Lafayette Afro Rock Band: Afro Funk Explosion!". AllMusic. Retrieved 28 December 2018.
  16. ^ a b Booth, Daniel (October 2, 1999). "Darkest Light: The Best of the Lafayette Afro-Rock Band". Melody Maker. Vol. 76, no. 39. p. 39.
  17. ^ Ankeny, Jason (2008). Woodstra, Chris; et al. (eds.). Old School Rap and Hip-Hop. Hal Leonard Corporation. pp. 129–130. ISBN 978-0-87930-916-9.
  18. ^ Garrity, Brian (November 25, 2006). "Same Sample, Different Ditty". Billboard. Vol. 118, no. 47. p. 9.
  19. ^ Endelman, Michael (December 1, 2006). "Executive Suite". Entertainment Weekly. No. 909. p. 81.

External links edit

  • Lafayette Afro Rock Band discography at Discogs  
  • Lafayette Afro Rock Band at WhoSampled

lafayette, afro, rock, band, american, funk, band, formed, roosevelt, long, island, york, 1970, shortly, after, their, formation, they, relocated, france, though, little, known, their, native, united, states, during, their, recording, period, they, have, since. Lafayette Afro Rock Band was an American funk band formed in Roosevelt Long Island New York in 1970 Shortly after their formation they relocated to France Though little known in their native United States during their recording period they have since become celebrated as one of the standout funk bands of the 1970s and are particularly noted for their use of break beats 2 The band also recorded under the names Ice Crispy amp Co Krispie amp Co in Europe Captain Dax and others 3 Lafayette Afro Rock BandLafayette Afro Rock Band in 1978Background informationAlso known asIceCaptain DaxCrispy amp Co OriginParis FranceGenresFunk 1 Years active1970 1978LabelsAmerica 1972 Musidisc 1973 Makossa 1974 1977 Superclasse 1978 Past membersBobby Boyd vocals Larry Jones acoustic guitar Michael McEwan Electric guitar Lafayette Hudson bass guitar Frank Abel keyboard Ronnie James Buttacavoli horns Ernest Donny Donable drums Keno Speller percussion Arthur Young horns percussion Audio sample source source Darkest LightfilehelpUpon their relocation to Paris the local music scene influenced the group s work inspiring the addition of rock and African elements They recorded their debut album as Ice and then adopted the name Lafayette Afro Rock Band The band s next two albums Soul Makossa and Malik included the songs Hihache and Darkest Light which would be sampled in numerous culturally significant hip hop compositions They broke up in 1978 Contents 1 History 2 Reception 3 Discography 3 1 Studio albums 3 2 Singles 3 3 Compilations 4 Selected samples 5 References 6 External linksHistory editThe group first formed as the Bobby Boyd Congress in 1970 in homage to their original vocalist Bobby Boyd 4 In addition to Boyd the band included guitarist Larry Jones bassist Lafayette Hudson keyboardist Frank Abel horn players Ronnie James Buttacavoli and Arthur Young drummer Ernest Donny Donable and percussionists Keno Speller and Arthur Young Jones was later replaced by Michael McEwan 5 Upon deciding that the funk scene in the United States was too saturated for them to viably compete they relocated to France in 1971 When Boyd split from the group and returned to America the remaining band members briefly renamed themselves Soul Congress and then settled on the name Ice 6 After regular performances in Paris s Barbes district an area made up primarily of North African immigrants they caught the eye of producer Pierre Jaubert and became the house session band at his Parisound studio 5 The influence of their surroundings led Ice to increasingly weave African rhyme schemes textures and beat tendencies into their established funk style The album Each Man Makes His Own Destiny was released in 1972 under the name Ice after which the band changed their name to Lafayette Afro Rock Band to reflect their expanded influences 4 Now under the name Lafayette Afro Rock Band they released the album Soul Makossa also known as Movin and Groovin in the United States in 1973 4 The title track was a cover version of Manu Dibango s international hit Soul Makossa Though it failed to chart the album made an impact years later Its standout song the oft covered Hihache has been widely sampled by artists as diverse as Janet Jackson Biz Markie LL Cool J De La Soul Digital Underground Naughty by Nature and Wu Tang Clan 6 The band s 1975 album Malik prominently featured the Univox Super Fuzz and liberal usage of the talk box This album was equally influential in subsequent decades with a sample of the song Darkest Light being featured prominently in Public Enemy s Show Em Whatcha Got 7 The original saxophone solo on Darkest Light was played by Leroy Gomez who later became popular as the lead singer of the disco group Santa Esmeralda After Public Enemy s usage of the song was highly praised 8 samples of Darkest Light appeared in several more notable rap and R amp B songs including Back to the Hotel by N2Deep 9 the multi platinum 1992 single Rump Shaker by Wreckx n Effect 10 and the 2006 single Show Me What You Got by Jay Z 11 Mal Waldron an American jazz and world music composer best known as the long time accompanist for Billie Holiday 12 collaborated with Lafayette Afro Rock Band in 1975 employing them to back him on his unreleased Candy Girl album 5 Shortly later blues pianist Sunnyland Slim sought out the band s services resulting in the collaborative album Depression Blues 13 The group subsequently reverted to the Ice moniker and also used the names Captain Dax and Crispy amp Co on various releases The 1975 album Tonight at the Discotheque was released as a various artists compilation but actually consisted of songs recorded by the same band under multiple monikers 14 They released 1976 funky disco single Dr Beezar Soul Frankenstein under the name Captain Dax in Japan 5 The band members returned to America and broke up in 1978 Later that year French record label Superclasse released the album Afon Ten Unreleased Afro Funk Recordings In 1999 the same label released Darkest Light The Best of Lafayette Afro Rock Band which rekindled interest in the group two decades after they disbanded 4 More compilations followed including The Ultimate Collection in 2001 2 and the 2016 album Afro Funk Explosion The latter was released under the name Lafayette Afro Rock Band vs Ice and includes songs originally released under those two names plus Crispy amp Co and Captain Dax 15 Reception editLafayette Afro Rock Band toiled in obscurity during their years of activity but have become of interest to critics and music historians due to their characteristic break beats which in turn influenced future hip hop and R amp B artists 2 Due to their obscurity when compared to their contemporaries like Cameo Funkadelic or Kool amp The Gang few copies of their studio albums have survived 2 With the exception of the commonly sampled songs Hihache and Darkest Light reviewers and historians have devoted their attention to more recent compilation albums Music historian Dave Thompson unfavorably reviewed Afon Ten Unreleased Afro Funk Recordings 1978 as uninspiring but praised Darkest Light The Best of Lafayette Afro Funk Band 1999 as the ultimate point of entry for the band 4 That album also received a flattering review from Melody Maker 16 AllMusic critic Jason Ankeny has also favorably reviewed the 1999 compilation stating that it is one of the great documents of classic funk 17 The Ultimate Collection 2001 received particular acclaim from AllMusic writer Jason Birchmeier who asserted that it was a gem that you can t go wrong with 2 Afro Funk Explosion 2016 also received positive reviews with AllMusic s Thom Jurek calling it essential for fans of 70s funk and musically on par with the best of Mandrill War and Osibisa 15 Discography editStudio albums edit Each Man Makes His Own Destiny 1973 as Ice Soul Makossa 1973 as Lafayette Afro Rock Band Voodounon EP 1974 as Lafayette Afro Rock Band Nino and Radiah 1974 as Ice backing Nino Ferrer Malik 1975 as Lafayette Afro Rock Band Tonight at the Discotheque 1975 as Various Artists Funky Flavored 1976 as Crispy amp Co 5 Frisco Disco 1976 as Ice 4 Afro Agban 1977 as Ice 4 Singles edit Oglenon 1974 as Lafayette Afro Rock Band Brazil 1975 as Crispy amp Co A I E A Mwana 1975 as Ice Get It Together 1975 as Crispy amp Co Sunara 1976 as Crispy amp Co Dr Beezar Soul Frankenstein 1976 as Captain Dax 5 Compilations edit Afon Ten Unreleased Afro Funk Recordings 1978 4 Darkest Light The Best of Lafayette Afro Rock Band 1999 16 The Ultimate Collection 2001 2 Afro Funk Explosion 2016 Selected samples editSong Sampling recording 4 Hihache 1974 Nobody Beats the Biz by Biz Markie 1988 Jingling Baby by LL Cool J 1989 No Delayin by Nice amp Smooth 1989 Ghetto Bastard by Naughty by Nature 1991 No Nose Job Remix by Digital Underground 1991 Oodles of O s by De La Soul 1991 Alright by Kris Kross 1993 Buck Em Down by Black Moon 1993 It s For You Shanice 1993 Wu Tang Clan Ain t Nuthing ta F Wit by Wu Tang Clan 1993 2 Cups of Blood by Gravediggaz 1994 Angela Winbush Treat U Rite 1994 Hand on My Nutsac by Coolio 1994 Build amp Destroy by Channel Live 1995 This Is How We Do It by Montell Jordan 1995 Darkest Light 1975 Show Em Whatcha Got by Public Enemy 1988 10 Soul Food by Tuff Crew 1989 5 Justa Lil Dope by Masters at Work 1991 Back to the Hotel by N2Deep 1992 Back against the Wall by Three Six Mafia 1995 Rump Shaker by Wreckx n Effect 1992 18 You Can t See What I See by Heavy D amp the Boyz 1996 Freestyle Noize by Freestylers 1998 Mad Love by Britney Spears 2001 introduction 1 by Ideal J Show Me What You Got by Jay Z 2006 19 Friday by Ice Cube 1995 Slow Down by VanJess 2021 Know Better by Janelle Monae 2023 References edit Ankeny Jason Lafayette Afro Rock Band Biography AllMusic Retrieved 2023 03 05 a b c d e f Birchmeier Jason 2003 Bogdanov Vladimir et al eds All Music Guide to Soul Backbeat Books p 406 ISBN 0 87930 744 7 Lafayette Afro Rock Band Discogs Retrieved 28 December 2018 a b c d e f g h i Thompson Dave 2001 Funk Backbeat Books pp 156 157 ISBN 0 87930 629 7 a b c d e f g Ankeny Jason Lafayette Afro Rock Band Biography Allmusic Retrieved 2008 03 13 a b Crazy Horse Kandia 2004 Rip It Up The Black Experience in Rock n roll Macmillan p 209 ISBN 1 4039 6243 X Wang Oliver 2003 Classic Material The Hip Hop Album Guide ECW Press p 138 ISBN 1 55022 561 8 Frere Jones Sasha October 30 2006 Top Down Pop Notes The New Yorker Vol 82 no 35 p 22 N2Deep s Back to the Hotel sample of Lafayette Afro Rock Band s Darkest light WhoSampled a b Breihan Tom May 3 2007 On the Continuing Resonance of Rump Shaker The Village Voice Retrieved 2008 03 13 Dolan Casey October 21 2006 Downloads Los Angeles Times pp E8 Clarke Donald 2002 Billie Holiday Wishing on the Moon Da Capo Press pp 403 404 ISBN 0 306 81136 7 Charters Samuel Barclay 1977 The Legacy of the Blues Art and Lives of Twelve Great Bluesmen Da Capo Press pp 133 144 ISBN 0 306 80054 3 Various Tonight At The Discotheque Ice Lafayette Afro Rock Band Funl o logy Retrieved 28 December 2018 a b Jurek Thom Ice Lafayette Afro Rock Band Afro Funk Explosion AllMusic Retrieved 28 December 2018 a b Booth Daniel October 2 1999 Darkest Light The Best of the Lafayette Afro Rock Band Melody Maker Vol 76 no 39 p 39 Ankeny Jason 2008 Woodstra Chris et al eds Old School Rap and Hip Hop Hal Leonard Corporation pp 129 130 ISBN 978 0 87930 916 9 Garrity Brian November 25 2006 Same Sample Different Ditty Billboard Vol 118 no 47 p 9 Endelman Michael December 1 2006 Executive Suite Entertainment Weekly No 909 p 81 External links editLafayette Afro Rock Band discography at Discogs nbsp Lafayette Afro Rock Band at WhoSampled Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lafayette Afro Rock Band amp oldid 1176418757, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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