Movement In The City. Movement In The City.
Sharp-Flat Records – SF11.
Vinyl, LP, Album, Limited Edition (500), Reissue.
South Africa. 2022. Original 1975.
Cape Jazz, Soul Funk, Fusion.
Sharp-Flat Records – SF11.
Vinyl, LP, Album, Limited Edition (500), Reissue.
South Africa. 2022. Original 1975.
Cape Jazz, Soul Funk, Fusion.
Sharp-Flat Records – SF11.
Vinyl, LP, Album, Limited Edition (500), Reissue.
South Africa. 2022. Original 1975.
Cape Jazz, Soul Funk, Fusion.
As the 1970s were drawing to a close, the epic Black Disco studio project with its signature pairing of drum machine and organ had run its course. After delivering a killer trilogy of cosmic lounge outings dating back to 1975, the group yearned for funkier grooves and the core trio of composer Pops Mohamed on organ with Basil Coetzee on tenor sax and Sipho Gumede on bass decided to hire a drummer and rebrand as Movement in the City.
In contrast with the New Age detachment of Black Disco, Movement in the City was conceptually grounded in the bleak social realism depicted on its photographic album covers and leaned into the vivid sensibilities of library music from the era. Blending Cape jazz with funk and soul, the group's output evokes a soundtrack for South African city life at the outset of the 1980s while nodding allegorically to the subterranean movements that were in the course of shaking the cage for political change.
With its cast of jazz fusion all-stars, Movement in the City is the manifesto of a band in transition - a bold and slick first offering that delivers a modern South African sound capable of both the funky exuberances of "Mister Lucky" as well as the down-home pathos of "Blue Sunday."
Mastered in 2022 from new generation transfers of the original archival tapes.
ORGAN, ELECTRIC PIANO, PIANO – Pops Mohamed
SAXOPHONES – Basil Coetzee
BASS – Sipho Gumede
DRUMS – Gilbert Matthews
Bass on "Blue Sunday" – Peter Odendaal
Drums on "Blue Sunday" – Monty Weber
Strings arranged by Pops Mohamed
Composed by Pops Mohamed
Produced by Rashid Vally
Cat. No. SRK 786147
℗ 1979 As-Shams/The Sun