
Boscoe
Chicagoâs South Side in the early â70s was an epicenter of African-American musical creativity: Art Ensemble of Chicago, Sun Raâs Arkestra, Phil Cohranâs Artistic Heritage Ensemble, and others led the charge away from mainstream, commercial music. Many followed: The Pharaohs, Pieces of Peace, and Earth, Wind & Fire would attain local, national, and then international acclaim. An outsider even in an outsider subculture, Boscoeâboth band and self-titled albumâhas been denied a place in the Great Black Music only by its own profound obscurity. Issued in a pressing of just 500 copies, 1973âs Boscoe documents an explosive live act unclouded by the passage of time. Free of studio polish or perfectionism, every bass run booms, every vocal rumbles over a patina of reverb. Before Side A ends, we witness the invocation of death, a war for peace that black America must fight, Malcolm Xâs violent passing, brains already in the grave, Godâs damning of us all, and a glib parody of âThe Star Spangled Banner,â all delivered by a crawling funk fusion as eager to blast us awake with harsh words as with insistent horns.
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Chicagoâs South Side in the early â70s was an epicenter of African-American musical creativity: Art Ensemble of Chicago, Sun Raâs Arkestra, Phil Cohranâs Artistic Heritage Ensemble, and others led the charge away from mainstream, commercial music. Many followed: The Pharaohs, Pieces of Peace, and Earth, Wind & Fire would attain local, national, and then international acclaim. An outsider even in an outsider subculture, Boscoeâboth band and self-titled albumâhas been denied a place in the Great Black Music only by its own profound obscurity. Issued in a pressing of just 500 copies, 1973âs Boscoe documents an explosive live act unclouded by the passage of time. Free of studio polish or perfectionism, every bass run booms, every vocal rumbles over a patina of reverb. Before Side A ends, we witness the invocation of death, a war for peace that black America must fight, Malcolm Xâs violent passing, brains already in the grave, Godâs damning of us all, and a glib parody of âThe Star Spangled Banner,â all delivered by a crawling funk fusion as eager to blast us awake with harsh words as with insistent horns.















