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Charlie Apicella & Iron City: The Business
By
Mayra Casales
percussionThis record owes a lot to some of the great proto-funk and soul bands of the 1960s. In places, the roots of

Booker T & the MG's
band / ensemble / orchestraThe band touches on a lot of rhythms, with "64 Cadillac" featuring a solid Latin beat and "Cantaloupe Woman" tossing a boogaloo into the mix, but the instrumentation, particularly the backing drone of the organ, ensures that everything hangs together. In places it seems as much indebted to rock 'n' roll as to jazz, with Korzin pumping out solid groovesplaying with the same economy as Apicella, sticking with keeping time, but almost never throwing in so much as an accent roll.
It's that restraintthe precedence of the group over the individualsthat makes The Business a good record. This is simple, toe-tapping, head-nodding musicmostly blues and R&B-based. It's not flashy or especially innovative, but it is fun, and that seems more to the point. ">
Track Listing
The Business; 64 Cadillac; Donny Brook; Ironicity; Can't Help Falling In Love; Cantaloupe Woman; Blue String; The Shaw Shuffle; Stanley's Time.
Personnel
Charlie Apicella
guitarCharlie Apicella: guitar; Dave Matlock: organ; Alan Korzin: drums; Stephen Riley: tenor saxophone; Mayra Casales: congas, percussion.
Album information
Title: The Business | Year Released: 2011 | Record Label: Carlo Music
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