
It would take several volumes of a biography to detail Don Was’s extensive and celebrated career in music.
Highlights include his band Was Not Was, the countless sessions he’s played on, and the high-profile albums he’s produced. If that wasn’t enough, he has been the president of Blue Note Records since 2012. In an industry where lawyers, agents, accountants, and executives who couldn’t even carry a tune in their shower head labels, Was brings a wealth of musical knowledge and experience to a historic label, and his tenure there has been nothing short of successful on every level.
Not content to just run one of the most esteemed record labels in the world, Was has continued to perform, produce, and stay involved in day-to-day music-making. Somehow, amidst all that activity, he has a new album out: the debut album of his new group, Don Was and the Pan-Detroit Ensemble Groove in the Face of Adversity, on the Michigan-based Mack Avenue Records, is a heady stew of soul, funk, and jazz with touches of reggae, pop, rock, and R&B. This is no solo album and is truly a group project. Was anchors the affair with his stand-up bass playing, but this large, nine-piece ensemble is an all-star lineup.
The opening track, with subtle dub reggae grooves, features lead vocalist Steffanie Christi’an. “Nubian Lady,” a sprawling soul-funk epic written by jazz keyboardist Kenny Barron that features Dave McMurray, has the kind of spiritual flute feel of vintage Yusef Lateef mixed with the groove of the Brian Jackson, Gil Scott-Heron, and the Midnight Band recordings. “I Ain’t Got Nothing But Mine,” surprisingly a cover of a Hank Williams song, is a powerful jazz workout that, like “Nubian Lady,” was recorded live.
Side two starts with the moving soul of “This Is My Country,” written by Curtis Mayfield. “You Asked I Came” is an instrumental written by Was that highlights the deft interplay of this large group. The album closes with the funky “Insane.”
There is a joy to this music that’s a real tonic for the troops weary of the current sad state of politics. Let’s hope this is the group’s first of many albums.
GRADED ON A CURVE:
B+











































