Gil Scott-Heron’s second album, “Pieces Of A Man”, showed that his collaboration with musical partner Brian Jackson was very special. The record contained some of Gil’s most revered songs, including ‘The Revolution Will Not Be Televised’, ‘Home Is Where The Hatred Is’ and the title track. Although not a hit, it was a big enough success to warrant a follow-up, but when the time came Gil was unsure. With more books than albums to his name, he thought his future may have been as a writer, but Brian Jackson and producer Bob Thiele convinced him otherwise, and in March 1972 “Free Will” was recorded.
The record’s first side comprised a set of songs that confirmed how well he and Brian Jackson worked together. The album’s masterpiece is ‘Did You Hear What They Said?’, one of the most effective evocations of war’s ultimate price. It was aimed at the conflict in Vietnam, but is as relevant today as when it was written. Other numbers seem to focus on the apathy or self-
1 view
29
5
7 months ago 00:06:31 1
Eazy E - Boyz-n-the-Hood (Music Video)
7 months ago 00:20:24 1
Hip-Hop & Shakespeare? Akala at TEDxAldeburgh
7 months ago 00:02:33 2
dignify the sense of revolution - who Is gil scott-heron? (dir.: jane pollard)
7 months ago 00:04:09 1
Gil Scott Heron - Johannesburg Live The Whistle Test