Mr. Natural Bee Gees Artist
2024-07-26 09:59:06
Their previous album having scarcely made a ripple and, now, hitless for two years, {|the Bee Gees|} went for a new sound in the hands of producer {|Arif Mardin|}. The result was {|Mr. Natural|}, the sultriest and most soulful record they had ever de...
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Their previous album having scarcely made a ripple and, now, hitless for two years, {|the Bee Gees|} went for a new sound in the hands of producer {|Arif Mardin|}. The result was {|Mr. Natural|}, the sultriest and most soulful record they had ever delivered up to that time. Shedding their pop sensibilities here and singing in a freer, more soulful idiom (with a strong {|Philadelphia soul|} influence) on songs such as {|Throw a Penny,|} and with a funky beat backing them up on a lot of this record, the group is scarcely recognizable in relation to their previous work. {|Mr. Natural|} was the liveliest, most invigorating body of music to come from the group since their debut, but it also had moments of extraordinary sensuality, most notably {|Charade|} and {|Had a Lot of Love Last Night.|} In between those two bookends were the beginnings of the sound that would reach maturity on {|Main Course|}, the {|Saturday Night Fever|} soundtrack, and {|Children of the World|}. Most of it is extraordinarily lively and upbeat, which was also a major change for the group; there are still some ballads here in their old style, such as {|Down the Road|} (which includes the extensive use of a Mellotron), but even these have a subtlety and freshness that had been lacking in the group's work since their debut. The main virtue throughout is, of course, the singing, which is some of the finest that all three {|Gibb|} brothers had ever turned in on a single LP up, mated to some of their loveliest and liveliest songs. {|Mr. Natural|} generated no hits, but it was their best original album since {|Odessa|} (though also very different from that progressive-oriented double LP. ~ Bruce Eder
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