If any bridged the gap between the soul and funk of
Earth, Wind & Fire and the post-bop of
John Coltrane,
McCoy Tyner and
Pharoah Sanders, it was
Lonnie Liston Smith. Like those post-boppers--and like
Earth, Wind & Fire's founder/leader
Maurice White--
Smith had a deeply spiritual, eastern-influenced outlook. He never lost his love of classic 1960s post-bop, and it continued to influence his writing and playing even when he was recording an album as commercial as
Exotic Mysteries. This LP had a minor soul/funk hit in "Space Princess" (a
Marcus Miller tune that features
Donald Smith on vocals and isn't unlike something EWF would have done), but most of the album consists of fusion/crossover instrumentals that fuse elements of post-bop's more mellow side (think of
Charles Lloyd's work or
Coltrane's "Central Park West") with a big dose of soul, funk and pop. To be sure, pieces like "Mystical Dreamer (A Tribute to Miles Davis)" and the enchanting "Quiet Moments" aren't straight-ahead jazz; rather, they meet soul and pop fans half way and do so with some integrity.
Exotic Mysteries isn't among
Smith's essential albums, although its plusses outweigh its minuses. ~ Alex Henderson