Gentleman is a 1973 studio album by Nigerian Afrobeat musician Fela Kuti. It was written and produced by Kuti and recorded with his Afrika 70 band. The cover artwork's depiction of a monkey's head superimposed on a suited body is a reference to the album's title track, which Kuti composed as a commentary on the colonial mentality of Africans who adhered to European customs and clothing.
Gentleman | ||||
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Studio album by Fela Ransome-Kuti and the Afrika 70 | ||||
Released | 1973 | |||
Genre | Afrobeat | |||
Length | 30:52 | |||
Label | EMI | |||
Producer | Fela Ransome-Kuti | |||
Fela Kuti chronology | ||||
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The album's title track is Kuti's commentary on the colonial mentality of Africans who adhere to European customs and clothing, as referenced by the cover artwork's collage of a monkey's head on a suited body.[1] In the song, he ponders why fellow Africans would wear so much clothing in the African heat: "I know what to wear but my friend don't know / I am not a gentleman like that! / I be Africa man original."[2] He solos on his tenor saxophone over most of the song's nine-minute intro, and switches to his electric piano during the vocal sections.[3] Kuti had learned how to play after the departure of Igo Chico from his Afrika 70 band in 1973.[1] "Gentleman" is followed by two jazzy compositions—"Fefe Naa Efe" and "Igbe".[2]
Gentleman was originally released in 1973 by EMI.[4] In a retrospective review, AllMusic's Sam Samuelson gave the album five stars and called it "both an Afrika 70 and Afro-beat masterpiece."[2] In 2000, MCA Records reissued and bundled Gentleman with Kuti's 1975 album Confusion.[5] It was the last installment in a 10-CD, 20-album reissue project for Kuti. Rob Brunner of Entertainment Weekly gave the reissue an "A",[6] while Robert Christgau from The Village Voice gave it an "A−".[7] In Christgau's opinion, while the horn work that introduces the title track "embodies the contradictions of that song's anti-European message", the album is carried "off into the bush" with "two eight-minute Africanisms".[7] He ranked the reissue number 80 on his dean's list for the Pazz & Jop critics' poll in 2000.[8]
In 2010, Gentleman was bundled again with Confusion by Knitting Factory Records as a part their extensive reissue of Kuti's 45-album discography. Paste magazine's Michaelangelo Matos gave it a score of "9.3/10" and cited it as the "essential twofer" in the reissue series.[9] All About Jazz critic Chris May said that Gentleman and Confusion were "the first major masterpieces in Kuti's canon."[10]
All songs written by Fela Ransome-Kuti.
Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[11]
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