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===Musicians===
===Musicians===
*[[Buzz Feiten]], [[Eddie Martinez]], Hank Redd: [[guitar]]s
*[[Buzz Feiten]], [[Eddie Martinez]], Hank Redd - [[guitar]]s
*Leroi Conley: guitars, [[percussion instrument|percussion]] ([[conga]]s, [[tambourine]])
*Leroi Conley - guitars, [[percussion instrument|percussion]] ([[conga]]s, [[tambourine]])
*Andre Lewis: [[organ (music)|organ]], [[electric piano]], [[clavinet]], [[bass guitar]], [[drum kit|drums]], percussion, arrangements
*[[Mandré|Andre Lewis]] - [[organ (music)|organ]], [[electric piano]], [[clavinet]], [[bass guitar]], [[drum kit|drums]], percussion, arrangements
*Luther Eaddy: organ
*Luther Eaddy - organ
*[[Carmine Rojas]]: bass guitar
*[[Carmine Rojas]] - bass guitar
*Larry Davis, Emry Thomas: drums
*Larry Davis, Emry Thomas - drums
*Daniel Ben Zebulon: percussion
*Daniel Ben Zebulon - percussion


===Technical===
===Technical===

Revision as of 02:47, 22 January 2017

Untitled

Pressure Cookin' is the third album by American singing trio Labelle, released in August 1973. This release was their first and only for RCA Records, and was critically raved due to the songs that songwriter and member Nona Hendryx composed. The album is also notable for being the first album released following lead singer Patti LaBelle giving birth to her only child, son Zuri Edwards (she recorded the album while still pregnant with Zuri).

Among notable songs were "Something in the Air"/"The Revolution Will Not Be Televised", in which all three bandmates: Patti LaBelle, Nona Hendryx and Sarah Dash each shared a rap, the biographical "(Can I Speak to You Before You Go to) Hollywood", which was inspired by the events following former member Cindy Birdsong ditching the group during its Blue Belles tenure to join The Supremes and which featured all three members having notable lead vocal parts, mainly from Dash, while Hendryx sung in the beginning and Patti LaBelle sang the following verses, the soulful ballad "Last Dance" and the bossa nova-inspired "Let Me See You in the Light".

Despite RCA releasing the Stevie Wonder composition, "Open Your Heart", the album failed to become a success. In spite of its initial failure, the album has gone on to become a cult classic and is considered a revolutionary album because few female groups talked so openly about social issues and other topics. Wonder was uncredited due to contractual reasons - the production credit was listed as "Vicki Wickham and friend". Musicians on this track included members out of a Philadelphia-based band, Buff, and others from a Latin-black band from Queens called Harlem River Drive. Several of them would morph to become Labelle's road band, including guitarist, Eddie Martinez.

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
Robert ChristgauB link
Wilson & Alroy's Record Reviews link

Track listing

All songs written and composed by Nona Hendryx, except where noted.

Side A

  1. "Pressure Cookin'" - 3:00
  2. "Medley: Something in the Air/The Revolution Will Not Be Televised" (Speedy Keen/Gil-Scott Heron) - 5:50
  3. "Sunshine (Woke Me Up This Morning)" - 3:18
  4. "(Can I Speak Before You Go To) Hollywood" - 6:38

Side B

  1. "Mr. Music Man" - 4:05
  2. "Goin' On a Holiday" - 3:21
  3. "Let Me See You in the Light" - 6:13
  4. "Open Up Your Heart" (Stevie Wonder) - 3:25
  5. "Last Dance" - 4:15

Personnel

LaBelle

Musicians

Technical

  • Mike Moran, Tom Brown - recording engineers
  • Roger Williams - artwork, design
  • Bob Gruen - photography