Spirits (Gil Scott-Heron album)

Spirits
Studio album by Gil Scott-Heron
Released March 29, 1994
Recorded April 1993
Genre Jazz, poetry, blues
Length 56:34 (CD)
Label TVT Records
Producer Gil Scott-Heron, Ali Shaheed Muhammed, Malcolm Cecil
Gil Scott-Heron chronology
Moving Target
(1982)
Spirits
(1994)
I'm New Here
(2010)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Robert Christgau[2]

Spirits is the 1994 album by Gil Scott-Heron. The title track is an interpretation of the John Coltrane piece, and "The Other Side" is a live version of Scott-Heron's 1971 track "Home is Where the Hatred Is" with a new arrangement and many new verses that expand the original to nearly twenty minutes. It was later sampled for "Home" on the 2011 Jamie XX collaboration album, We're New Here.

In the liner notes, Scott-Heron discusses the new, jazzier tone of the record, and the attempts to define his sound:

What do you call reggae, blues, African vibration, jazz, salsa, chants and poetry?... Seriously trying to define it, I've said it's Black music. Or Black American music. Because Black Americans are now a tremendously diverse essence of all the places we've come from and the music and rhythms we brought with us.

This was Scott-Heron's first album in twelve years, and it would be sixteen more years before he would release another. "Lady's Song" and "Work for Peace" were omitted from the vinyl issue, while other songs were edited slightly for runtime.

Track listing

CD

  1. "Message to the Messengers" (4:57)
  2. "Spirits" (7:49)
  3. "Give Her a Call" (5:44)
  4. "Lady's Song" (3:14)
  5. "Spirits Past" (3:00)
  6. "The Other Side, Part I" (5:25)
  7. "The Other Side, Part II" (6:11)
  8. "The Other Side, Part III" (6:40)
  9. "Work for Peace" (7:33)
  10. "Don't Give Up" (5:58)

LP

  1. "Message to the Messengers"
  2. "Spirits"
  3. "Give Her a Call"
  4. "Spirits Past"
  5. "The Other Side" (parts I-III)
  6. "Don't Give Up"

References

  1. Henderson, Alex. "Spirits". AllMusic. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  2. Christgau, Robert. "Consumer Guide: Gil Scott-Heron". Retrieved 23 August 2016.
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