Bobby Shad and the Bad Men: I Want You Back and No Time
From A 65-Piece Rock Workshop [Mainstream, 1973]
I picked this record up recently on a whim, attracted by the fact that it was on the Mainstream label and that it was a record of jazz artists covering rock hits of the period. What really interested me were the covers for “Whole Lotta Love” and “I Want You Back,” and with a $5 price tag I was all about it.
I got home and was pleasantly surprised with my find. Turns out Bobby Shad was a producer and worked with a number of artists to put this project together, very much in big band fashion with lots of instrumentation and fast percussion beats. As I hoped, the covers were spot on with the opening “Whole Lot of Love” setting up a nice tempo for the rest of the album. However, I was drawn to Shad’s version of The Guess Who’s “No Time,” which starts off with a killer drum break leading into further musical exploration. What I seem to like about Shad’s work are the various movements, breakdowns, and solos found scattered throughout each piece. They catch you off guard, but make sense and more importantly sound good.
The icing on the cake is The Jackson 5’s “I Want You Back” featuring a couple of trumpet duets by Burt Collins and Joe Newman, and then Mel Davis and Snooky Young with Mel Davis on piccolo trumpet. The pace here is fast and furious, and a drum breakdown greets you midway through followed by an ensemble of solos.
I’m really glad I picked this one up, and if you can find it for under $10 it’s a worthy addition to anyone’s collection.




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Quality little find you got there – never heard of them before, love the energy of Want You Back with the bass and drums halfway through.
Cool… joyous and groovy indeed… Thanx!
WOW. hideous. really.
big band isn't for everybody
I suppose this type of thing is one of my guilty pleasures: the R&B groove gives the jazz a repetitive structure that really gets me into the songs and I love the way the players can fly away from the familiar.