| | Baby Huey Story: The Living Legend CD Baby Huey Discography of CDs
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Baby Huey's only album, released after his untimely death, is titled The Living Legend with good reason. He was legendary in his appearance, a 400-pound man with a penchant for flamboyant clothing and crowned by a woolly Afro, a look that is best illustrated by one of several rare photos included in the Water Records edition that shows our man in a wide-lapeled polka-dot shirt with a lime-green jacket. Beyond his unusual appearance, though, he was graced with a stunning, fierce voice on par with Otis Redding and Howard Tate, wailing and howling one moment and oddly tender and sentimental the next. Nowhere on Living Legend is his range more apparent than the opening track, "Listen to Me," where listeners are introduced to both the enigma of Baby Huey and his diamond-tough psychedelic funk backing band, the Baby Sitters. The high-energy instrumental workout "Mama Get Yourself Together" is worthy of the J.B.'s and a hazy, spiraling ten-minute rendition of Sam Cooke's chestnut "A Change Is Going to Come" confirms that the Baby Sitters could hold their own with Blood, Sweat & Tears. Further lore that catapults The Living Legend from good to great: the production was helmed by Curtis Mayfield, reason enough to make it near essential, and is highlighted by three of his compositions, "Mighty Mighty," which Mayfield and the Impressions recorded a few years earlier; "Running," a classic Mayfield cut that can only be heard here ripped to glorious bits by a band that is trying to let every member solo; and "Hard Times," which Mayfield himself would revisit on his 1975 album There's No Place Like America Today, although Baby Huey's razor-edged reading remains the definitive version -- no small caveat considering Mayfield not only wrote the tune, but could rightfully be considered one of the architects of soul to boot. ~ Wade Kergan
With a psychedelic brand of soul and a vocal style that drew comparisons to Otis Redding, the 300-400 pound Baby Huey was set to break out of the Chicago scene with the release of his debut album. Unfortunately, his weight and taste for drugs resulted in
Author: Marshal Rosenthall.
Personnel: Baby Huey (vocals).
Liner Note Authors: Marv Stuart; Paul Brookside.
Uncut (p.118) - 5 stars out of 5 - "This, his only album, is regarded as lost classic, especially in hip hop circles, where it has been a sample staple..." Mojo (Publisher) (p.116) - "[H]e had presence to spare....There are terrific moments." Baby Huey Story: The Living Legend Music Baby Huey Story: The Living Legend Songs | 1. | Listen to Me | |
| 2. | Mama Get Yourself Together | |
| 3. | Change Is Going to Come, A | |
| 4. | Mighty Mighty | |
| 5. | Hard Times | |
| 6. | California Dreamin' | |
| 7. | Running | |
| 8. | One Dragon Two Dragon | |
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