
You've heard of the Ohio Players. Brian Culbertson is
the Chicago Player - a keyboardist, trombonist, writer, arranger,
producer and the most exciting live performing instrumentalist on
the scene today. The proof is all over his milestone tenth project, Bringing
Back The Funk, a historic and completely unprecedented revisiting
to the land of the sho' nuff uncut `70s-style funk of ages. The "historic" declaration
is not hype - for the first time ever, legendary old school funk
masters from nearly every signature soul band and region of the country
have united under Brian and executive producer Maurice
White (founder of Earth Wind & Fire)
to once again lay the righteous and real stuff on a deeply needy
world. Dig this list:
William"Bootsy" Collins and Phelps "Catfish" Collins, members
of the Rubber Band and the Horny Horns (all out of Parliament-Funkadelic), Larry
Graham (of Sly & The Family Stone and his own Graham
Central Station), Larry
Dunn and Sheldon Reynolds (of Earth Wind & Fire), Greg
Adams (from Tower of Power), Tony Maiden and Bobby
Watson (of Rufus), Michael Bland, Cora Dunham and Rhonda
Smith (from Prince's bands), solo stars Ray Parker
Jr., David T. Walker, Ronnie Laws, Gerald Albright, Tom Scott, Paul
Jackson Jr., Perri, Maceo
Parker & Fred Wesley (from James Brown's
JB’s band), and many more L.A. session greats. Add
neosoul stars Ledisi and Musiq
Soulchild, and the vibe becomes
clear:
Ain't nothin' but a party, baby bobba!
"I've wanted to record an album like this for many years," Culbertson
states with pride - "one where I could really cut loose." Consisting
of six slammin' original compositions and four classic `70s jams, Bringing
Back The Funk turned what would have been a "mission: impossible" for
others into a mission most righteously accomplished – with everyone recording
together live in the studio… the way they used to get down! Upon completion
of the project, Maurice White himself declared, "This record is gonna
touch the souls of people because it's musicians playing together and sharing
a feeling."
As
is so colorfully revealed on the CD cover, Brian has been immersing himself
in studies of The Funk from a very young age (that's an `Earth-Wind' LP he's
grooving to with headphones - for direct connection to the soul). So this record
is a dream come true. And since one of Brian's band members – singer/guitarist Sheldon
Reynolds - is a latter day member of EWF, he was able to work with
several of that group's alumni, including Sonny Emory, Morris
Pleasure and the legendary piano and synthesizer master Larry
Dunn - a major influence on Brian.
"I've lived five minutes from Larry for
10 years now but I never met him," Brian shares. "Larry
and Maurice had not worked together in years, so that first day
in the studio was a reunion. Larry came to my studio and we wrote
the song 'The Groove.' You can hear elements of both our writing
styles in it. It was like an out of body experience for me... Actually,
the whole making of this album was like that. Everybody in the
studio was a legend, and fans of each other! And what’s really
cool is that we’ve all become really good friends."
The first single from Bringing Back The Funk is
the feel-good wonder "Always Remember" (co-written by Sheldon
Reynolds). Imagine a Ramsey Lewis melody morphing into a bridge reminiscent
of Michael Jackson's "Rock with You" before cascading into
the sunniest Earth Wind & Fire 'ba-de-ya' vocal chorus you could
conjure - uniting people of all creeds under a heart-warming groove.
That would be "Always Remember." "The title is a gentle
reminder of how precious life is," Brian states. "Like
the Average White Band said, 'Love your life' and enjoy it to the
fullest." The CD’s closing number, "Let's Stay in
Tonight" (co-written with Maurice), also revives this 'happy
feeling'.

Fun
was the directive when Brian matched wits with the whimsically philosophical
wizard of P-Funk, Bootsy Collins for the opener "Funkin'
Like My Father." "When he started coming at me with lyrics
like 'Afrobootical, betabiological, symmetrically-induced,' I said,
'I'm staying
out of this...do your thang!" Similarly, Brian co-wrote the
gospel flavored "The House of Music" over several cell
phone calls with electric bass pioneer Larry Graham (who
he met at one of superstar Prince's all night jam sessions in Vegas).
Then during a chance break in his schedule, Brian flew to Minneapolis
to record the song live with Graham and a first rate band featuring
saxophonist Ronnie Laws (giving the song the distinct
feel of a Jazz Crusaders sermon).
Everybody brought their A-game to the table. Singer Ledisi (a
returning guest who sang "Let's Get Started" on Brian's It's
On Tonight CD) hand-picked the obscure Bill Withers gem "The
World Keeps Going Around" - a rarity from his Live at Carnegie
Hall album. Brian buoyed her awesome
performance with the female rhythm section of bassist Rhonda
Smith and drummer Cora Dunham. Trumpeter Greg
Adams reprised his unforgettable horn arrangement for Tower
of Power's "You Got to Funkifize" (featuring Twin Cities
star Chance Howard on lead vocals, Perri (sisters Lori,
Sharon, Darlene and Carolyn Perry) singing
back-up and Rufus' Tony Maiden adding a searing
guitar solo). And Chick Corea alumnus Eric Marienthal handled
the horn arrangement of Kool & The Gang’s "Hollywood
Swinging," slow cooked to an extra thick perfection to feature Musiq
Soulchild singin', Gerald Albright blowin'
and Brian spiking the brew with demonically distorted bass lines.
But
nowhere does Brian give up the The Funk more than on his 6-minute
version of Chicago soul legend Donny Hathaway's "Voices Inside
(Everything is Everything)" for which he attacks the piano
with a fervor unsurpassed on past recordings. His two choruses
of solos are followed by a guitar turn from studio ace David
T. Walker (whose classic licks include the opening four
notes of Marvin Gaye’s “Let’s Get it On”)
that is a study in cool blues economy. Brian's band mate Eddie
Miller - a ringer for Hathaway - sings the unifying refrain
here. And elsewhere, Brian's road bassist Maurice Fitzgerald and
drummer Chris Miskel rock the 2-minute interlude "Excuse
me...what's your name?" with Detroit rhythm guitar king Ray
Parker Jr. sitting in.
Inspired by his father, music educator Jim
Culbertson, Brian Culbertson has been a fast and fierce
study of music, gravitating to all styles of dynamic music as long
as it was expertly played by artists ranging from Chicago, David
Sanborn and Sting to The Brecker Brothers and Maynard Ferguson.
Since his 1994 debut Long Night
Out,
Brian has been credited with bringing a youthful yet no less masterful
energy to popular instrumental music with hit albums and singles.
His sixth album Nice & Slow (2001) topped Billboard's
Contemporary Jazz chart for six weeks straight. And its follow-up, Come
on Up (2003) included his blazing cover of Earth Wind & Fire's "Serpentine
Fire," impressing Maurice White enough to want to work with
him.
Now Brian is raring to share the spirit of Bringing
Back The Funk with his fans. "I'm taking an 11-piece
band of rhythm and horns on the road," he states - "one
of the biggest bands on the circuit today." Making a final
reflection on the musical statement he's about to unleash on the
planet, Brian concludes, "When you record anything, you have
to live with it a long time. Ask any of the artists who played
on this album. These legends ‘suited up’ and played
their hearts out for me, and I am truly humbled."