Gris-Gris

GRIS-GRIS
 
 
Gris-Gris  is the debut album by Dr. John (Mac Rebennack).  Produced by Harold Battiste, it was released on Atco Records in 1968.  The musical style of Gris-Gris is a hybrid of New Orleans rhythm and blues and psychedelic rock.  Despite the New Orleans style, it was recorded in California, albeit with several native New Orleans musicians.  Gris-Gris failed to chart in the United Kingdom and the United States.  It was re-issued on compact disc decades later and received much greater praise from modern critics, including being listed at #143 on Rolling Stone magazine’s list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.  (More from Wikipedia)
 
 

Even in the context of the late 1960’sKing Crimson’s debut album, In the Court of the Crimson King seemed to come out of nowhere, even after other bizarro albums had already come along (both of which are excellent by the way):  the 1968 debut Gris-Gris by Dr. John the Night Tripper (the stage name of premier New Orleans pianist Mac Rebennack, and later shortened to Dr. John), which features voodoo rhythms and chants; and, in the same year, The Crazy World of Arthur Brown by The Crazy World of Arthur Brown, which spawned the hit single “Fire”.  In the Court of the Crimson King featured powerful music and dense lyrics, particularly on the title song, “In the Court of the Crimson King and “21st Century Schizoid Man”, interspersed with quieter songs like “I Talk to the Wind” and an extended free-form jazzy interlude on “Moonchild”.  I have already discussed this album at length on an earlier post about another UARBTrillion

 
(March 2013)
 
Last edited: March 22, 2021