Alligator Bogaloo

Alligator Bogaloo is an album by jazz saxophonist Lou Donaldson recorded for the Blue Note label in 1967 and featuring Donaldson with Melvin Lastie, Lonnie Smith, George Benson, and Leo Morris (later to be better known as Idris Muhammad).[2]

Alligator Bogaloo
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 1967[1]
RecordedApril 7, 1967
StudioVan Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ
GenreJazz, Soul Blues
Length35:38
LabelBlue Note
BST 84263
ProducerAlfred Lion
Lou Donaldson chronology
Lush Life
(1967)
Alligator Bogaloo
(1967)
Mr. Shing-A-Ling
(1967)

The success of the title track surprised Donaldson: "[W]e made the date and we were three minutes short. I said we don't have no more material. And the guy said just play anything for three minutes so we can fill out the time. So I just made the riff and naturally the guys could follow it. That's the only damn thing that sold on the record."[3]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[4]

The album was awarded 4 stars in an Allmusic review by Al Campbell who states "Alligator Bogaloo is one example of Lou Donaldson's successful combinations of hard bop and soul-jazz".[5]

Track listing

All compositions by Lou Donaldson except as noted

  1. "Alligator Bogaloo" - 6:57
  2. "One Cylinder" (Freddie McCoy) - 6:48
  3. "The Thang" - 3:34
  4. "Aw Shucks!" (Lonnie Smith) - 7:23
  5. "Rev. Moses" - 6:27
  6. "I Want a Little Girl" (Murray Mencher, Billy Moll) - 4:29

Personnel

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gollark: Or, well, they can except they lose a minimum of 1KST there *or* I have to add tons of irritating code for fractional billing and interfacing with everything with that and it probably breaks in horrible ways.
gollark: SC and krist itself don't have companies, meaningfully.
gollark: If you had, I don't know, a service which takes krist and sends it back to you a day later for whatever unfathomable purpose, then if someone wants to just feed that 5KST, they can't due to the fee.
gollark: It would make it not very usable as a way to do small transactions.

References

  1. Billboard Sept 16, 1967
  2. Lou Donaldson discography accessed December 8, 2009.
  3. Donaldson, Lou (2009). "Let's Cool One" (Transcript). Portland Jazz Festival ("Before & After"). Interviewed by Larry Appelbaum.
  4. Allmusic Review
  5. Campbell, A. Allmusic Review accessed December 11, 2009.
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